Porter v. Conway

159 So. 725, 181 La. 487, 1934 La. LEXIS 1617
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedDecember 5, 1934
DocketNo. 33147.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 159 So. 725 (Porter v. Conway) 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
Porter v. Conway, 159 So. 725, 181 La. 487, 1934 La. LEXIS 1617 (La. 1934).

Opinions

The petition of the relator in the above entitled and numbered case having been duly considered,

It is ordered that a writ of certiorari issue herein, directing the Honorable W. Carruth Jones, judge of the Nineteenth judicial district court for the parish of East Baton Rouge, to transmit to the Supreme Court of Louisiana, on or before the 26th day of November, 1934, the record, or a certified copy of the record, of the proceedings complained of by the relator herein, to the end that the validity of said proceedings may be ascertained.

It is further ordered that the aforesaid judge of said court and the respondent, Thomas F. Porter, shall show cause, in this court, on the date aforesaid, at 11 o'clock a.m., why the relief prayed for in the petition of the relator should not be granted.

It is further ordered that in the meantime and until the further orders of this court, the orders, writs, and judgments issued against E.A. Conway, secretary of state in said district court shall be stayed and suspended.

Granted at New Orleans, September 26, 1934.

H.F. BRUNOT, J.R. LAND, A.T. HIGGINS, Associate Justices. This matter comes before us on an application by the Secretary of State for remedial writs whereby he asks to be relieved from the effect of two preliminary writs of injunctions, which are said to have been illegally and improvidently issued by the district judge. *Page 490

Plaintiff, claiming to be the Democratic nominee for Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the State of Louisiana for the Third Supreme Court District for a full term of fourteen years, sought a prohibitory injunction from the district judge of the Nineteenth judicial district for the parish of East Baton Rouge, to restrain the defendant, the Secretary of State, from issuing ballots to be used in the primary election called by the Democratic Executive Committee for the Third Supreme Court District for October 9, 1934, and to restrain the defendant from printing on the official ballots to be used in the general election of November 6, 1934, the name of any person other than that of plaintiff as Democratic nominee for the said office; and a mandatory injunction commanding the defendant, Secretary of State, to recognize plaintiff as the nominee of the Democratic Party for the said office and commanding him to compile and canvass the returns of the election of September 11, 1934, and promulgate the same, and to declare plaintiff the Democratic nominee for the said office, and commanding the defendant, the Secretary of State, to print on the official ballots to be used in the said general election, the name of the plaintiff as the Democratic nominee for the office of Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of Louisiana from the Third Supreme Court District.

Plaintiff alleges that the Third Supreme Court District, under article 7, § 9, of the State Constitution, is composed of the parishes of Calcasieu, Jefferson Davis, Allen, Arcadia, Evangeline, Cameron, Beauregard, Lafayette, Avoyelles, Rapides, and Grant; that under section 6 of Act No. 97 of 1922, *Page 491 the State Central Executive Committee of the Democratic Party, on July 3, 1934, called a primary election to be held on September 11, 1934, for the purpose of nominating a Democratic nominee for Associate Justice of the Supreme Court from the Third Supreme Court District, to serve the term from January 1, 1935, until fourteen years from that date; that plaintiff and Justice Winston Overton duly qualified as sole candidates for nomination for the said office; that on September 9, 1934, Justice Winston Overton died, leaving plaintiff as the sole candidate for the nomination for said office; "that under section 30 of Act No. 97 of 1922, whenever it shall be found there is but one candidate for any particular office for which a primary has been called, the committee ordering the said primary must be immediately convened, and the person so entering and being thus unopposed shall be declared to be the nominee of the party that ordered the said primary for the particular office for which he has offered, without the necessity of holding a primary election for said office;" "that under the said section of the said act, if, after the date has passed on which candidates are allowed to enter and file their notification in a primary, one or more of the rival candidates for any particular office dies, additional candidates for that office are permitted to enter and file their notification for a period of 5 days after such death, but not when death occurs within 7 days from the day fixed for the primary election, and that the death of the Honorable Winston Overton occurred within 7 days before September 11, 1934, and it thereupon became the mandatory duty of the said committee to immediately convene and declare your petitioner the nominee of the *Page 492 Democratic party for Associate Justice of the Supreme Court from the Third Supreme Court District, without the necessity of holding a primary election for the said office;" "that a meeting of the said committee was held on September 15, 1934, whereupon the said chairman, T. Arthur Edwards, notified the committee of the law, and a resolution declaring your petitioner the nominee of the Democratic party for the said position was duly made and seconded, but, in spite of that fact, the said committee declined to pass the said resolution, ignoring the clear provisions of the law, and passed a resolution calling a second primary for said position for October 9, 1934;" "that the powers of that committee to call a first primary election were exhausted by the committee's call on July 3, 1934, and that under said primary law, and especially section 27 thereof, the said committee has no power to call a second primary under any circumstances whatsoever;" "that by reason of the fact above set forth and independent of the illegal action of the said committee in refusing to declare your petitioner the nominee for said office and in ordering the second primary, your petitioner is, in truth and fact, the legal nominee for said office and entitled to have his name placed upon the ballots to be used in the general election to be held on November 6, 1934;" that, in the alternative, it was physically impossible for the chairman of the Third District Supreme Court Executive Democratic Committee to immediately convene the committee and declare him the nominee, and stop the primary election of September 11, 1934, from being held, because the members thereof were scattered throughout the eleven parishes constituting the district, with the result that the *Page 493

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Bluebook (online)
159 So. 725, 181 La. 487, 1934 La. LEXIS 1617, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/porter-v-conway-la-1934.