McLyman v. Molloy

162 A. 849, 53 R.I. 4, 1932 R.I. LEXIS 99
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedNovember 2, 1932
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 162 A. 849 (McLyman v. Molloy) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McLyman v. Molloy, 162 A. 849, 53 R.I. 4, 1932 R.I. LEXIS 99 (R.I. 1932).

Opinion

Per Curiam.

Petitions for writs of certiorari and injunction. In each of the above cases the persons on whose relation the petition was brought are seeking to restrain the Board of Canvassers and Registration of the city of Provi *5 deuce from placing upon the official ballot, under the emblem of the Democratic party, the names of certain candidates for city offices to be voted for at the general election to be held November 8, 1932.

Said persons and the relators are opposing candidates, some for the office of alderman and others for the office of councilman for said city. Each group have duly filed nomination papers and their names will appear upon said ballot. The question is whether the names of the persons who are the real respondents may also be legally placed upon said ballot under the emblem of the Democratic party. Said persons will hereinafter be referred to as the respondents.

In each case the relators and the respondents were opposing candidates in their ward caucus. In each case the respondents were declared by the caucus officials to be the nominees of the caucus. In each instance, protest having been made, said board decided and declared that the caucus, by reason of irregularities, was null and void and that no person or persons were nominated at the caucus. Thereafter the State Democratic Committee, assuming to act under authority of Chapter 1515, P. L. 1930 — known as the Caucus Act — filed with said board the names of the respondents as the candidates of the Democratic party. Said board decided and determined that said names be printed upon the official ballot under the emblem of the Democratic party as candidates of said party for the offices for which they were respectively candidates for nomination at their respective ward caucuses. Citation was issued to said board which has without order certified its records to us.

At the hearing before us it was argued on behalf of the board that, the caucuses having failed to make nominations, the State Democratic Committee was authorized by Section 2 of Chapter 1515 to make and file party nominations. On behalf of said committee it was argued that, if said chapter provided no authority to said committee to act, it had authority, under the circumstances, at common law to make and file party nominations.

*6 Is a state committee of a political party authorized by said section 2 to file a list of party candidates where it has been duly declared that a caucus is null and void and that by reason thereof no candidates were nominated?

The pertinent provisions of said section are as follows: “The state committee of a political party . . . may make rules not inconsistent with law for the guidance and control of the several town and city committees, and may act in their stead in case.of failure to make nominations, or to hold caucuses, or to fill vacancies. . . . The state committee, or the executive committee acting under such delegated authority, may file party nominations for any public office, whether in town, city, ward, voting district, senatorial district, representative district, or congressional district, where the town, city, ward, voting district, senatorial district, representative district, or congressional district committee, or other party committee authorized to act, has failed or neglected to file such nominations with the proper officials. Said state committee or the executive committee, shall also have like authority in filling vacancies where party conventions have failed or neglected to file proper nominations. Said committees shall also fill vacancies caused by withdrawals or for any other cause where a time limit is involved, in case of failure on the part of the regular party committee to act at the proper time. The state committee, or the executive committee, may appoint a new town or city, or other committee, to act in such cases, where time is sufficient to enable them to do so within statutory limits, if the regular committee fails to perform the usual duties of such committee. Any other contingency that arises under the provisions of the statutes where there is a failure on the part of the party committee to act, may be met by vote of the state committee, or the executive committee of a political party.”

A careful reading of said section discloses that the right of a state committee to act in any of the circumstances — except one — mentioned in the section is predicated upon the fact *7 that the proper committee has failed in if;s duty in neglecting to do an act which said committee might legally perform and that the state committee is merely authorized to do the act which the proper committee could and should have done.

The first sentence of said section, in addition to other provisions not pertinent, which constitute the exception above mentioned, provides that: “The state committee . . . may act in their stead in case of failure to make nominations, or to hold caucuses or to fill vacancies.” Section 11 of said act sets forth the nominations which the local committees may make. Said section contains a provision as follows: “The respective ward, district and town committee of each political party in each town or city shall file its list of the names of the delegates, officers, committees or nominees to be voted upon at any caucus.” The vacancies which said committees may fill are vacancies in the local committees and vacancies in caucus officials. See Sections 5 and 15 of said act.

In regard to the second sentence it is sufficient to say that the local committees are by said act vested with no authority, at least when no nominations have been made by a caucus, to select candidates to be voted for at an election or even to file with' the proper officials the results of a caucus. The results of a caucus together with the ballots cast must be forwarded to the proper official by a caucus official and not by the local committee. See Section 16 of said act.

The third sentence authorizes a state committee to fill vacancies “where party conventions have failed or neglected to file proper nominations.” This provision does not, apply to a caucus.

As to the fourth sentence, it is sufficient to say that it does not appear that the regular party committee had any authority which they failed to exercise.

The final sentence is: “ Any other contingency that arises under the provisions of the statutes where there is a failure on the part of the party committee to act may be met by vote of the state committee, or the executive committee of a *8 political party.” Here again the state committee is authorized to act only when the regular committee has failed to act, and as we said above the act confers no authority upon the subordinate committee to select candidates to be voted for at an election, except perhaps when the caucus has assumed to confer upon such committee authority to fill vacancies which may occur in the list of candidates nominated at the caucus. The latter contingency, covering the cases of death or resignation of caucus or convention nominees, has been provided for by Section 19, Chapter 11, G. L. 1923.

In the cases before us the local committees acted in so far as they could or should have acted. In accordance with Section 9 of said act the city committee called the caucuses.

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Related

State Ex Rel. Copenhaver v. Jack
153 P.2d 149 (Wyoming Supreme Court, 1944)
State Ex Rel. Van Schoyck v. Board of County Com'rs
131 P.2d 278 (New Mexico Supreme Court, 1942)

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Bluebook (online)
162 A. 849, 53 R.I. 4, 1932 R.I. LEXIS 99, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mclyman-v-molloy-ri-1932.