Power v. Robertson

93 So. 769, 130 Miss. 188
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 15, 1922
DocketNo. 23128
StatusPublished
Cited by31 cases

This text of 93 So. 769 (Power v. Robertson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Power v. Robertson, 93 So. 769, 130 Miss. 188 (Mich. 1922).

Opinions

Ethridge, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

On the 5th day of August, 1922, certain citizens, called sponsors, filed in the office of the secretary of state an assembled petition, consisting of numerous separate petitions, under chapter 159, Laws of 1916, known as the Initiative and Referendum Amendment, which petitions purport on their face to contain the signatures of more than seven thousand five hundred qualified electors of the state of Mississippi, asking for an election to initiate under said amendment a measure proposing a change in the compensation of the state revenue agent. On the 7th day of September, 1922, Stokes V. Robertson, as such state revenue agent, and as a taxpayer and a qualified elector of the state of Mississippi, filed with the said secretary of state his formal sworn petition and protest against the submission of the said proposed law to a vote at said election, challenging the sufficiency and legality of the said petition upon many grounds, charging that the said petition and every part thereof is illegal, void, and of no effect, and that the requirements of the law as to the initiation were not complied with in the proposing, circulating, and signing of said petition; that the petitions were circulated throughout the state of Mississippi, and were assembled and filed with the said secretary of state by certain persons as sponsors; that the entire petitions are fraudulent and void, and that each of the said petitions is likewise fraudulent and void, and that the persons circulating them, called the “sponsors” hereinafter, knew at the time they filed the petition that they contained the names that were not the signatures of qualified electors, and that they [215]*215knew that many of the names on said petitions were forgeries ; and that one of the said sponsors has admitted that many of the names contained on the petitions were forgeries, yet he presented the same as petitions containing only genuine signatures of qualified electors.

It is also charged that other sponsors had similar knowledge aud were guilty of similar practices, and yet that such sponsors filed affidavits which do not state the truth, and it is charged that each of the petitions and each affidavit thereto was false and untrue, in this: That no inquiry or investigation whatever was made as to whether or not the proposed signers were qualified electors, and in fact many of the purported signers were not in fact qualified electors; that in many instances the petitions were not signed in the presence of the sponsors as required by law, and that many of the names of the petitioners were signed not in the presence of the sponsors, but that petitions were left in many instances on counters in drug stores and other places of business, were circulated through proxies and offices where they were not permitted to go themselves, and passed from hand to hand in public gatherings, where many people who were present were not only not qualified electors, but some of whom were not residents of the state of Mississippi; that many signatures on each and every petition were forged, and the circulators of said petitions knew of such forgeries, and the said sponsors had positive knowledge that said petitions as a whole contained many names of persons who were not qualified electors, and had knowledge that many names were forged and not genuine signatures of said petitioners; that some of the names signed to said petitions were names of corporations; that the said sponsors falsely and fraudulently obtained signatures by falsely and fraudulently representing to the signers thereof that the proposed law was passed by an overwhelming majority of the legislature, but reached the governor’s office too late to require him to return' the same with his approval or disapproval, and that the gover[216]*216nor had pigeonholed the said bill until the legislature assembled in 1924; that the sponsors knew of the falsity of this statement, and without such false representations the requisite number of signatures to call an election could not have been obtained; that it was falsely represented by some of the circulators of said petitions to those whom they solicited to sign that the revenue agent favored the proposed statute, which representations they well knew were false and untrue, but on account of such representations the signatures of many persons were obtained; that many of the signers signed two or more of such petitions circulated in separate parts, and that their names appeared on two or more such petitions, making it appear that such person was more than one qualified elector; that the petitions filed do not contain the required number of qualified electors, and are fraudulent and void, both as a whole and as a separate part.

It is further charged that the circulators of said petitions fraudulently represented the amount of the compensation received by the said revenue agent, and that they knew, when making such representations, that the revenue agent paid out of the moneys received by him large expenses to deputies, agents, and attorneys, and had to make many investigations, costing large sums of money, from which he received no recovery or compensation, and had to pay the entire expenses of running the office, as well as the traveling expenses of various officers and others employed by him throughout the state. It is further charged that of the genuine signatures of qualified electors to the said petitions more than enough have requested the secretary of state to withdraw their names from such petitions to reduce the number of genuine signatures thereon below seven thousand five hundred, if in truth and in fact said petitions had ever contained seven thousand five hundred qualified electors, which upon information and belief is denied.

It is further charged that chapter 159, Laws of 1916, under which the initiative petitions were filed, was not [217]*217legally submitted to and not legally adopted by tbe people of Mississippi as an amendment to the state constitution, and that the said amendment did not receive a majority of the qualified electors voting, and was not legally adopted by the people, and was not a proper part of the state constitution, inserted in the constitution by the legislature of 1916 in violation of section 273 of the constitution. It is further charged that, if said amendment is a part of the constitution, it is crude, uncertain, vague, and not self-executing, and that it is necessary for the legislature to enact laws providing a proper machinery for the execution of said provision, especially some definite mode in which the sufficiency of the petitions may be contested. It is further charged: That section 273 of the constitution of Mississippi is violated by the alleged Referendum Amendment, in that it provides that, if more than one amendment shall be submitted at one time, they shall be submitted in such manner and form that the people may vote for or against each amendment separately, and that the alleged amendment inserted by the legislature of 1916 contains, among other things, the following:

“The word ‘measure’ as used herein means any law, bill, resolution, constitutional amendment, or any other legislative measure. All elections on general, local and special measures referred to the people of the state shall be held at the general state or congressional elections, except when the legislature shall order a special election: Any measure submitted to the people, as herein provided, shall take effect and become law when approved by a majority of the votes cast thereon, and not otherwise.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
93 So. 769, 130 Miss. 188, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/power-v-robertson-miss-1922.