Long v. Martin

194 So. 896, 194 La. 797, 1940 La. LEXIS 1024
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedMarch 12, 1940
DocketNo. 35752.
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 194 So. 896 (Long v. Martin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Long v. Martin, 194 So. 896, 194 La. 797, 1940 La. LEXIS 1024 (La. 1940).

Opinions

O’NIELL, Chief Justice.

The matter in contest in this suit, between Earl K. Long and James A. Gremillion, is the nomination by the Democratic party for the office of Secretary of State, to be voted on in the general election to be held on the 16th of April.' The nomination of a candidate for a state office by the Democratic party in Louisiana assures his election. And it is so stated in the pleadings of the parties to this suit. But the big question in the case, in which the people generally are concerned, is whether a recognized political party, acting through its state central committee, shall be allowed to manage its own affairs, without interference by the courts, so long as the committee is acting within the scope of its authority, and within the law.

The facts of the case are not disputed. In the Democratic primary election held on the 16th of January, E. A. Conway and James A. Gremillion were candidates for the nomination for the office of Secretary of State. Conway, who was the incumbent, received a majority of the votes. At a meeting of the State Central Committee on January 25th, Conway was declared the nominee. At the same time the committee called a second primary to be held on February 20th, for the nomination of a candidate for Governor, and candidates for other state offices, in the cases where no one had received a majority .of the votes cast in the first primary. Conway died on February 19th; and Earl K. Long, being Governor of Louisiana, appointed Conway’s son, E. A. Conway, Jr., to serve during the unexpired part'of his father’s term of office. It *802 became the duty then of the State Central Committee, under the provisions of Section 31 of Act No. 97 of 1922, known as the primary law, to select a candidate for the Democratic party for the office of Secretary of State, for the full term, of four years, to be voted for in the general election to be held on the 16th of April. Wade O. Martin, who was then chairman of the committee, on Friday, the 23rd of February, called a meeting of the committee to be held in Baton Rouge on the next day, Saturday, the 24th of February, at 8 p. m., for the transaction of such business as might be brought lawfully before the committee. The committee met, pursuant to the call, and adopted a resolution selecting Earl K. Long as the nominee of the Democratic party for the office of Secretary of State. Of the 104 members composing the committee, 94 members voted, either personally or by proxy; and the vote stood 3 for Conway, 40 for Gremillion, and 51 for Long. The chairman of the committee issued his certificate of the selection of Long as the nominee, and it was filed in the office of the Secretary of State on the 25th of February. The Secretary of State, in due course, tabulated the returns of the second primary, promulgated the result, and sent his certificate thereof to Wade O. Martin, Chairman of the State Central Committee. On the 29th of February, Martin, as chairman of the committee, and under the authority vested in him by the primary election law, called a meeting of the committee to be held in Baton Rouge on Saturday, the 2nd of March, at 9:30 a. m., for the purpose of declaring and certifying to the Secretary of State the names of the persons nominated in the second primary. At the meeting, as soon as the roll was called and it was found that a quorum was-present, a motion was made and adopted amending the call for the meeting so that the committee might act upon “such other and further matters as may [might] come before the committee.” Thereupon, a resolution was adopted, rescinding and annulling the selection which had been made on the 25th of February of Earl K. Long as the nominee of the party for the office of Secretary of State, and directing the Secretary of State not to have the name of Earl K. Long printed on the official ballot for the general election to be held on the 16th of April. The resolution was opposed by members who adhered to the selection of Long as the party nominee, on the ground — stated substantially — that after the selection of Long as the nominee was certified to the Secretary of State the committee had no authority in law to rescind the selection and select another nominee for the office. The committee then adopted a resolution selecting James A. Gremillion as the-nominee for the office of Secretary- of State, and directing the incumbent Secretary of State to have the name Of James A. Gremillion printed on the official ballot to be voted in the general election on the 16th of April, as the nominee of the party for the office of Secretary of State. That resolution was opposed also by the adherents to the nomination of Long, on the same ground on which the resolution rescinding the selection of Long was opposed, and on the further ground that Gremillion was ineligible by reason of his being defeated in the primary. It appears that the adherents to the nomination *804 of Long, being then the minority faction, announced their withdrawal from the meeting, so that they could not be considered as acquiescing in the result, during the voting o.n the resolution rescinding the nomination^ of Long, and the resolution nominating Gremillion. For that reason it appears as if the resolutions were adopted without objection.

On the 2nd of March, Earl K. Long filed a suit against Wade O'. Martin, Chairman of the Committee, and James A. Gremillion, E. A. Conway, Secretary of State, and H. Carey Cornish, Assistant Secretary of State, praying for a writ of injunction to prevent the printing of the name of Gremillion as the party nominee for the office of Secretary of State on the official ballot to be voted in the general election to be held on the 16th of April. Long prayed also for a mandatory injunction to compel the printing of his name on the official ballot as the party nominee; and he prayed for a temporary restraining order to prevent the chairman of the committee from certifying the name of Gremillion as the party nominee, and to prevent the Secretary of State from printing Gremillion’s name on the official ballot as . the party nominee; and Long prayed finally that the writs of injunction should be perpetuated. Judge James D. Womack, one of the two judges of the district court for the parish of East Baton Rouge, signed an order granting a rule on the defendants to show cause at 10 o’clock a. m. on the 11th of March, why the writs of injunction should not be issued; and at the same time the judge granted the restraining order as prayed fon

On the 7th of March, Gremillion filed a petition in this court for writs of certiorari, prohibition and mandamus, and the court issued the writ of certiorari, and a rule on Judge Womack and Earl K. Long to show cause in this court on the 11th of March why the judge should not be prohibited from proceeding further with the trial of the case.

Meanwhile, that is, on the 2nd of March, the new State Central Committee, whose members were elected in the primaries held on January 16th and February 20th, to serve during the next four years, met also in Baton Rouge, after the meeting of the old committee had adjourned; and the new committee was formally organized by the election of Frank J. Looney, Chairman, A. W. Newlin, Secretary, and Francis J. Whitehead, Assistant Secretary. Newlin was secretary of the'old committee, but was absent from the meetings on account of illness. The new committee adopted a resolution declaring that James A. Gremillion was thereby selected as the nominee, of the Democratic party for the office of Secretary of State, to be voted for in.

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Bluebook (online)
194 So. 896, 194 La. 797, 1940 La. LEXIS 1024, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/long-v-martin-la-1940.