Murphy v. Curry

70 P. 461, 137 Cal. 479, 1902 Cal. LEXIS 590
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 14, 1902
DocketS.F. No. 3355.
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 70 P. 461 (Murphy v. Curry) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Murphy v. Curry, 70 P. 461, 137 Cal. 479, 1902 Cal. LEXIS 590 (Cal. 1902).

Opinions

HENSHAW, J.

Plaintiff's pray for a writ of mandate, directing the secretary of state to certify to the registrar of voters of the city and county of San Francisco the nomination of Edward J. Livernash as the candidate of the Democratic party for member of the House of Representatives from the fourth congressional district. Mr. Livernash had received the nomination from the Union Labor party, and also from the Democratic party. Each of the parties filed with the secretary of state, as required by law, a certificate in due form of the nomination of Mr. Livernash. The Union Labor party’s certificate was the first filed. The certificates were in accord and complied with the provisions of sections 1189 and 1192 of the Political Code. Section 1197 of the same code contains the following provisions: . . . “Where a nominee has been assigned to or has chosen another column, pursuant to the provisions of this act the title of such office shall be printed in such party column, and underneath such title shall be printed in brevier capital type the words ‘No nomination. ’ . . . The name of a candidate shall be printed only once upon the ballot, and if any candidate is nominated by more than one certificate of nomination, he must by a writing, signed and verified by him and filed with the officer where the cértifieate of nomination is filed, choose which of such party designations he desires to have his name printed under. Such writing, if filed with the secretary of state, must be filed at least twenty-seven days before the day of election. . . . and if any such *481 candidate shall not have so chosen, his name shall he placed upon the ballot under the designation of the party named in the certificate of his nomination which was first filed.” Mr. Livernash declined to make the election contemplated by the law,, and the secretary of state, relying upon the plain language of the statute, has refused to certify to the registrar of voters that Mr. Livernash has been nominated by the Democratic party. If the provisions of the law above quoted are valid, Mr. Livernash’s name will appear upon the ballot but once, and that under the party designation of the “Union Labor Party”; while under the party designation “Democratic Party,” and in the space set apart for the printing of the name of the nominee for the House of Representatives, will be printed “No nomination.” It is insisted by petitioner that the provisions of the law which work this result are illegally discriminating and violative of sections 11 and 21 of article I of the constitution of this state.

The course of the secretary of state, respondent herein, is justified not only by the letter of the law, but by the decisions; of the courts of last resort of at least three states which have had the same question under consideration. The Michigan supreme court, in Todd v. Election Commissioners, 104 Mich. 474, the Ohio supreme court, in State v. Boyd, 55 Ohio St. 224, 1 and the supreme court of Wisconsin, in State v. Anderson, 100 Wis. 523, have one and all decided that statutes essentially similar to ours were not unconstitutional, unreasonable, or discriminating. The only difference of consequence between our law and that which those courts had under review is, that ours requires the printing in the blank space reserved for the name of the candidate the words “No nomination,” while by the other statutes the space is left blank. In the one case, therefore, the law puts before the voter the positively misleading, and indeed untruthful, statement that the party has made no nomination, while in the other, by a vacancy, it merely ignores the fact of such nomination. This, however, is a minor consideration, and the legal principles which should govern are as applicable to the one statute as to the other.

*482 Notwithstanding the great respect justly owing to the decisions of the courts to which we have referred,—a respect which is here fully accorded,—we cannot yield assent to the reasoning upon which their conclusions are based. It is said that the law is uniform in its operation, because it applies equally to each and every candidate; that as no candidate can have his name placed upon the ballot but once, and that as no candidate can come before the people as having received, the nomination of more than one political party, therefore the uniformity required by law is observed and preserved. Such discrimination as may be shown to exist is said to be inevitable and not necessarily objectionable; while, as to the qualification feature, the qualification which compels the nominee to elect the party under whose designation his name shall be placed, it is said that the right of the individual to vote for :the candidate of his choice is in no way interfered with. The ■conception of the court in reaching these conclusions is best ■expressed by the following quotation from the carefully considered case of State v. Anderson, 100 Wis. 523, above cited. There it is said: “Mere party fealty and party sentiment, which influence men to desire to be known as members of a particular organization, are not the subjects of constitutional care. It deals with individual right of the citizen to vote for the candidate of his choice, and, if that be not impaired, and reasonable opportunity be furnished for equal representation on the official ballot under a party designation, no unjust discrimination can successfully be claimed. Men are supposed to stand for principles when placed in nomination by political parties, and when the candidates of one party are identical with those of another, it is supposed, and not unreasonably, that for the time being at least, though there be two organizations, there is but one platform of principles, and that one party designation on the official ballot will satisfy all legitimate requirements of both. The confusion and uncertainty that would arise in such a case from the double printing of names furnishes a strong reason for prohibiting it, and that, with the other reasons mentioned, strongly supports the wisdom of the prohibition as a proper legislative regulation.” Throughout the opinions in all these cases it would seem that attention has been paid to the right of the individual voter, which, after all, is only incidentally here involved, to *483 the exclusion of the rights of political parties and. of the rights of the nominees whom they have selected. If it be conceded that there is no vital impairment of the right of the individual voter in prohibiting the name of the nominee from ! being placed upon the ballot more than once, even when the j nominee is the chosen candidate of more than one recognized * political party, this by no means disposes of the rights of the j political parties, or of the rights of the nominees of such j parties, with the exercise of which the legislature has seen fit ¡¡ to interfere. It may be that in the ideal democracy, where" intelligence is universal and knowledge wide-spread, the state, if it adopted the secret ballot, would do no more than print the designation of the offices to be filled, leaving blank spaces for the voters within which they could indicate the man or men of their choice. But under our system the state has gone much further than this.

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Bluebook (online)
70 P. 461, 137 Cal. 479, 1902 Cal. LEXIS 590, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/murphy-v-curry-cal-1902.