Melerine v. Democratic Parish Executive Committee

114 So. 711, 164 La. 855, 1927 La. LEXIS 1830
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedNovember 28, 1927
DocketNo. 28987.
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 114 So. 711 (Melerine v. Democratic Parish Executive Committee) 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
Melerine v. Democratic Parish Executive Committee, 114 So. 711, 164 La. 855, 1927 La. LEXIS 1830 (La. 1927).

Opinions

ST. PAUL, J.

The Democratic parish ex-écutive committee for the parish of St. Bernard, defendant herein, called a primary election pursuant to the provisions of Act 97 of 1922, the primary election law, for the purpose of nominating a party candidate for the office of sheriff of St. Bernard parish, and Adam Melerine, plaintiff herein, in due form and in due time, filed notice with the committee of his intention to become a candidate.

One of the members of said committee, in due form and in due time, filed an objection to plaintiff's candidacy on the ground that plaintiff was not a duly qualified elector of the parish of St. Bernard because “Mr. Melerine has no domicile in the parish of St. Bernard, but, on the contrary, maintains a domicile in the parish of Orleans.” The committee heard the objection, sustained it, and declared plaintiff disqualified.

Plaintiff then appealed from the decision of the committee to the competent court, to wit, the Twenty-Fifth judicial district court, in and for the parish of St. Bernard-. The district court reversed the decision of the committee and declared plaintiff duly qualified. The committee thereupon took an appeal to this court.

I.

Plaintiff moves to dismiss the appeal on the ground that appellant has no right of appeal under the Constitution and laws of the state. His contention is: (1) That since under section 11 of the Primary Law, a. decision by the committee in favor of plaintiff’s candidacy would have been final, therefore a like decision by the court of first, instance must also be final; (2) that the primary law provides for no appeal when,the decision of the committee is reversed; and (3) that the Constitution of 1921, art. 8, § 5, forbids an appeal in such cases.

The constitutional provision relied upon has not the remotest application to contests involving primary election contests, as a mere reading thereof will show. It relates exclusively to contests involving the registration of a voter and the striking from the rolls of a name illegally thereon; wherein, in certain cases, the verdict of-a jury shall be final. As to the proposition that the primary law provides for no appeal when the decision of the committee is reversed, the answer is that section 11 provides that in such cases the procedure shall be the same (as far as practicable) as is provided in section 27, and section 27 provides that in contests over primary elections, the party cast in the lower court shall have the right to appeal. As to the first proposition advanced, it is a manifest non sequitur, since the Legislature has provided otherwise as we have just said. The motion to dismiss is without merit.

II.

Defendant filed an exception to the jurisdiction of the lower court, .based (apparently) on the ground that the action of the committee on the objection to plaintiff’s candidacy is final and not reyiewable bjr the *859 courts. Section 11, abovesaid, provides that when the action of the committee is against the objection and favorable to the candidacy, its decision is final.; but it expressly provides that where the decision of the committee sustains the objection and is against the candidacy, such decision shall be reviewable by the courts.

III.

Defendant filed an exception of no cause of action based on the proposition that plaintiff!' does not allege in his petition facts sufficient to show that he is duly qualified to hold the office to which he aspires. It was not necessary for him to do so; it sufficed for him to allege that he filed his application with the committee in due time and in due form, that his candidacy was objected to, and that said objection was sustained by the committee. For the aforesaid section 11 requires that any objection to a candidate shall set forth “in detail” the reason why said candidate is not qualified; so that the only question before the committee is whether said objections be well founded. And since the court can only review the decision of the committee, it follows that any other 'objections which might have been made, but were not made, are wholly immaterial to the issues before the court. And since new objections cannot be urged before the court which were not set up “in detail” before the committee, it follows that this plaintiff was not called to anticipate any such new objections by setting forth in his petition, and later on proving, that he has all the qualifications required for the office which he seeks: To hold otherwise would amount, in effect, to allowing objections to plaintiff’s candidacy to be 'made-for the first time in the court's and not before the committee, and to allow such objections to be made not “in detail,” but in the most general manner conceivable, to wit, that his petition “shows no cause of action.”

IV.

The “residence” necessary to constitute a qualified voter has thus been defined by this court:

“The term, ‘actual bona fide resident,’ * * * cannot reasonably be interpreted to mean that, in order to acquire, and, still less, to retain, such status, one must remain continuously in the town, or upon the premises, of the residence, and the status described is not therefore affected by temporary absences, occasioned by considerations of duty, business, health, or pleasure, unless, being voluntary, they extend beyond prescribed periods, or, are accompanied by the acquisition of residence elsewhere.” Caufield v. Cravens, 138 La. 283, 70 So. 226, citing Estopinal v. Michel, 121 La. 879, 46 So. 907, 19 L. R. A. (N. S.) 759, and State ex rel. Hodges v. Joyce, 128 La. 434, 54 So. 932.

In Hall v. Godchaux, 149 La. 733, 90 So. 145, that definition was made more explicit, thus:

“An ‘actual bona fide resident,’ * * * need not have occupied his place of abode every moment during the required period of time, but must have maintained such a relation with the place or premises as will entitle him at his will, without mailing new arrangements therefor on each return, to occupy such place whenever his necessities or pleasure required, without asking permission of some one else.” (Italics ours.)

.And when the conditions are as above stated, “the question is one largely of intention.” Caufield v. Cravens, supra.

V.

There is no doubt whatever of plaintiff’s intention in the premises. He was born in St. Bernard parish, and resided there from the age of 10 to the age of 26, when he married, to wit, July, 1925. He has always claimed to reside there, even since his marriage and to the present day, by registering as a voter, and by paying poll taxes and voting in said parish and nowhere else.

The question is, Are the other conditions present necessary to make him “an actual ■bona fide, resident” ;of St. Bernard parish?

*861 VI.

Nor is there any doubt that' plaintiff's aged father (6S years) and mother aré actual bona fide residents ? of St. Bernard parish, residing at Violet in said parish; nor thát they ¿re absolutely dependent on plaintiff, who pays the rent of the house they live in and furnishes them the wherewithal to live, the father being unable to do any work and having done -none for -ten years- past.

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Bluebook (online)
114 So. 711, 164 La. 855, 1927 La. LEXIS 1830, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/melerine-v-democratic-parish-executive-committee-la-1927.