Osborne v. Zimmerman

105 P.2d 1097, 165 Or. 92, 1940 Ore. LEXIS 11
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 10, 1940
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 105 P.2d 1097 (Osborne v. Zimmerman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Osborne v. Zimmerman, 105 P.2d 1097, 165 Or. 92, 1940 Ore. LEXIS 11 (Or. 1940).

Opinions

KELLY, J.

This is a proceeding instituted by Mr. W. R. Osborne, plaintiff, for the purpose of contesting the nomination, at the primary election held on May 17, 1940, of Mr. Peter Zimmerman, defendant, as a republican candidate for representative from Yamhill county, in the House of Representatives in the state of Oregon. *94 Both Mr. Osborne and Mr. Zimmerman were candidates for that nomination at snch primary election.

The proceeding was dismissed by the trial court upon motion of defendant for the reason notice of such contest was not served upon defendant within the time required by section 36-802, Oregon Code 1930.

From the order of dismissal plaintiff appeals.

1. In order to determine the time within which notice of contest herein should have been served, we are required to construe the section of the code, above cited, which is as follows:

“36-802. Notice of contest — Time limit. — Any person wishing to contest the nomination of any other person to any state, county, district, township, precinct or municipal office, may give notice in writing to the person whose nomination he intends to contest that his nomination will be contested, stating the cause of such contest briefly, within five days from the time said person shall claim to have been nominated. [L. 1905, ch. 1, § 34; L. O. L. § 3382; O. L. § 3992.]

It seems clear that with reference to candidates for nomination at a primary election the time when any one of them claims to have been nominated must be the day of the primary election.

It would lead to confusion worse confounded to construe the statute to mean that the notice could be made within five days after a claim by one or the other of the parties had been asserted, or declared. If it were construed that the date of the assertion of such a claim by plaintiff should be the time after which the prescribed five-day period should begin, such party by merely repeating his assertion could indefinitely prolong the prescribed period. If, on the other hand, the time when the defendant makes such a claim is to control, all that would need to be done to accomplish *95 the same result would be to have some one ask him if he claimed the nomination. Unquestionably the answer would be a claim to that effect.

The parties hereto seem to construe that statute as if the words “from the time” were omitted, and in lieu thereof the word, after, inserted; and the word, first, inserted between the words ‘ ‘ shall ’ ’, and ‘ ‘ claim ’ making the clause read “within five days after the said person shall first claim to have been nominated”. We think that such a construction is not warranted.

Similar language was construed in the ease of Whitney v. Blackburn, 17 Or. 564, 566, et seq. 21 P. 874, 11 Am. St. Rep. 857. There the election law was being considered. [Section 36-1801, Oregon Code 1930]. This court, speaking through the late Mr. Justice Lord, said:

“It will be noted that the provision is silent when the notice of contest shall be filed.
The defendant contends that the notice must not only be served, but must also be filed within thirty days. It was not filed until the twenty-third day of August, nearly fifty days thereafter.
By reference to the cases decided in this court, the practice has been to file the notice within thirty days, and such undoubtedly has been the construction given to the statute by the profession.
In Minnesota there was a like statute, and from which it is supposed our statute was taken, although it may have been from some other state, and the only construction which the courts of that state has (have) ever given to the provision (sec. 2544) just cited, which has been brought to our observation, is found in Waller v. Bancroft, 4 Minn. 110, wherein Flandrau, J., said: ‘This proceeding is instituted by the service of a notice by the party desiring to contest, upon the party in possession, within thirty days after the election/”

*96 In the Oregon case it is declared that in the opinion of the court the notice must be served and filed within thirty days; and it will be seen from the foregoing quotation that the period of thirty days is held to begin from the date of the election. This holding was declared “for future guidance in such proceedings.”

The name of the plaintiff in the Minnesota case is misspelled in the quoted portion of the Oregon case. The Minnesota case is Whallon v. Bancroft, 4 Minn. 109, 110.

It is interesting to note that in 1851, the territorial legislature of Minnesota adopted the statute construed in Whallon v. Bancroft, supra, while the Oregon territorial legislature of 1853 enacted a similar statute. Stat. of Minn. 1851, p. 54; Stat. of Or. 1853, p. 60.

The election law construed in Whitney v. Blackburn, supra, was enacted by the state legislature of Oregon in 1870. The decision in Whallon v. Bancroft, supra, was rendered in 1860.

Whatever prompted the territorial legislature to use the phrase “from the time said person shall claim to have been elected,” certainly it may be plausibly suggested that the framers of the Direct Primary Nominating Election law preferred to employ that language rather than to say from the time of the primary election or the filing of the nominating petition, or the holding of the nominating assembly, or the meeting of the central committee, as the case may be, at which said person shall claim to have been nominated.

Nomination by petition and by assembly was authorized thirteen years before the enactment by the voters of the Direct Primary Nominating Election law. Laws of Oregon, 1891, p. 8, et seq. Chap. 10, Oregon *97 Code 1930. Nomination by the central committee of a political party in case of a vacancy caused by death, resignation or removal is authorized by the Direct Primary Nominating Election law. (See. 43, ibid.)

The statute to which we are giving consideration was enacted by the voters of the state at the general election held on June 6, 1904. It is section 34 of the Direct Primary Nominating Election law. General Laws of Oregon, 1905, p. 7, et seq. We adhere to the construction announced in Whitney v. Blackburn, supra.

Our attention has been called to section 7-109,, Oregon Code 1930, which, among other things, provides that the time within which an act is to be done, as provided in this code, shall be computed by excluding the first day and including the last unless the last day fall upon Sunday, Christmas, or other nonjudicial day, in which case the last day shall also be excluded.

As stated, the primary election occurred on May 17, 1940. The notice of contest was served on May 23,1940.

Within five days after primary election day the plaintiff was required to serve and file his notice of contest.

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Bluebook (online)
105 P.2d 1097, 165 Or. 92, 1940 Ore. LEXIS 11, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/osborne-v-zimmerman-or-1940.