Norcop v. Jordan

17 P.2d 123, 216 Cal. 764, 1932 Cal. LEXIS 640
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 30, 1932
DocketDocket No. S.F. 14771.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 17 P.2d 123 (Norcop v. Jordan) 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
Norcop v. Jordan, 17 P.2d 123, 216 Cal. 764, 1932 Cal. LEXIS 640 (Cal. 1932).

Opinions

'THE COURT.

This is an application for a writ of mandate to compel the respondent as Secretary of State to certify and declare the petitioner to be the duly nominated candidate of the Democratic party for the office of representative in Congress for the fourteenth congressional district of California, and to place the name of petitioner as such candidate on the official ballot to be used at the general election to be held on November' 8, 1932. In view of the necessity for an immediate decision in this matter, judgment *765 was rendered without written opinion on the day oral argument was held, it being stated that an opinion would be filed later.

The petitioner was' registered as a member of and was thereafter affiliated with the Democratic party. At the primary election held on August 30, 1932, he was a candidate for the Democratic nomination for Congress in said district and his name appeared on the Democratic ballot as such. ITe did not seek the nomination of any other party. George W. Rochester was affiliated with the Republican party and sought the nomination for Congress in said district on both the Republican and Democratic tickets. At the primary election Rochester failed to receive the nomination of bis own party, but he received the highest number of votes cast on the Democratic ballot. Since he failed to receive the nomination of his own party he is not entitled to be the candidate of any other party at the ensuing general election. (See. 23, Direct Primary Law; Stats. 1917, pp. 1341, 1357; Heney v. Jordan, 179 Cal. 24 [175 Pac. 402].) On the foregoing facts and the law, the petitioner concedes, and properly so, that by reason of the ineligibility of Rochester to receive the Democratic nomination, a vacancy now exists in the matter of the nomination of a Democratic candidate for representative in Congress, in said district. (Heney v. Jordan, 179 Cal. 24 [175 Pac. 402]; Edwards v. Jordan, 183 Cal. 791 [192 Pac. 856].) The petitioner received the next to the highest number of votes on the Democratic ballot and it is alleged in the petition that the newly elected Democratic state central committee desires to appoint the petitioner to fill such vacancy. The attorney-general makes no point of the fact that the state central committee has not already acted, inasmuch as the controversy has reached the stage where the Secretary of State has notified the petitioner that he will not certify him as the Democratic nominee, nor will he place the name of the petitioner on the general election ballot, even if the state central committee should appoint him to fill the vacancy.

The respondent refuses to take action in the petitioner’s favor because of the provisions of subdivision (1) of section 5 and section 25 of the Direct Primary Law. Subdivision (1) of section 5 provides: “Nothing herein shall be considered as prohibiting the independent nomination of *766 candidates as provided by section 1188 of the Political Code, as said section reads at the time of said nomination; except one whose name has appeared upon the ballot as a candidate of any political party at a primary election held under the provisions of the act, and who is defeated for such party nomination at such primary election, shall be ineligible for nomination as an independent candidate, or as a candidate named by a party central committee to fill the vacancy as provided in section 25 of this act for the same or any other office at the ensuing general election. ...” Section 25 provides that the vacancy created on account of the ineligibility of a person to qualify as a candidate because of the inhibitions of subdivision (1) of section 5 of the act, or for any other cause, shall not be filled except in the following cases: “1. By reason of the death of a candidate occurring at least twenty-five days before the date of the next ensuing November election. 2. By reason of the disqualification of a candidate occurring on account of the failure of such candidate to secure nomination in his own party as required by section 25 of this act.”

The question to be determined is whether the petitioner is a defeated candidate within the meaning of subdivision (1) of section 5. If so, he is ineligible for nomination as a candidate to be named by the party state central committee, and the latter is without power to name him under the inhibitions of section 25.

In Narver v. Jordan, 173 Cal. 424 [160 Pac. 245, 246], it appeared that Henry Stanley Benedict was a candidate for the Republican nomination for representative in Congress from the tenth congressional district. At the primary election he failed of that nomination. No candidate for the Progressive party nomination for that office appeared on the ballot. Benedict’s name was written in for such nomination in the blank spaces provided therefor by a sufficient number of electors to make him the Progressive party nominee for the office, if he was eligible as such. A proceeding in mandamus was initiated to compel the Secretary of State to omit his name from the certification of nominees. The court stated: ‘‘It must be held that he filed nomination papers as a candidate for the Republican party nomination, and he was defeated for such party nomination at the primary election. ...” There was nothing, however, in *767 the then state of the law, to prevent a “write in” nomination for the office by the electors of another party and the peremptory writ was denied. The declaration by this court in 1916 that under circumstances identical with those presented in the present proceeding Benedict was “defeated” for his own party nomination is persuasive that the word “defeated” was employed by the legislature in the same sense and to the same effect as used by this court when in 1919 the term “defeated” was incorporated in an amendment to the Direct Primary Law. (Sec. 5, subd. 9, Stats. 1919, pp. 39, 48.)

It is argued that in order that the petitioner be declared defeated there must have been a nomination on the Democratic ticket; that Rochester was not nominated, and that therefore there was no candidate who was defeated for the Democratic nomination. There would seem to be at least two answers to the argument. First, it seems clear that a candidate who was not nominated was for all purposes defeated for such nomination. The petitioner submitted his name to the Democratic electors for nomination. Those electors assembled at the polls and rejected him by casting more votes for one of his opponents on that ticket. The petitioner concededly was not nominated. No other conclusion seems reasonable or possible than that he was defeated for that nomination. Secondly, considerable confusion has arisen by failure to distinguish between nomination and eligibility. Mr. Rochester was eligible as a candidate for the Democratic nomination. His name was lawfully on the primary ballot. He was eligible to receive the Democratic nomination conditionally. (Heney v. Jordan, 179 Cal. 24, 30 [175 Pac. 402].) He received that conditional nomination, and by reason thereof no one else received such nomination, conditional or otherwise. But the condition was not fulfilled by reason of his failure to receive the nomination of the party with which he was affiliated.

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Bluebook (online)
17 P.2d 123, 216 Cal. 764, 1932 Cal. LEXIS 640, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/norcop-v-jordan-cal-1932.