Republican Executive Committee v. County Court

69 S.E. 522, 68 W. Va. 113, 1910 W. Va. LEXIS 94
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 20, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 69 S.E. 522 (Republican Executive Committee v. County Court) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Republican Executive Committee v. County Court, 69 S.E. 522, 68 W. Va. 113, 1910 W. Va. LEXIS 94 (W. Va. 1910).

Opinions

Miller, Judge:

Upon the petition of H. E. Wise, chairman, P. D. Morris, secretar}', and eleven others claiming to be the regular Republican executive committee for Wetzel county an alternative writ of mandamus was awarded against the county court of said .county, and against A. E. MeCaskey, chairman, L. V. McIntyre, secretary, and others; also claiming to be such regular executive committee, commanding them to ajjpear in this Court and show cause, if any they could, why a peremptory writ should not issue commanding county court to appoint as election commissioners the several persons nominated .by them, through II. E. Wise, chairman, to represent said party at the various voting precincts in said county at the November election.

For convenience of designation the two contesting committees will be referred to as the Wise committee, and the MeCaskey committee.

The defendants in their return to the alternative writ controvert the claim of petitioners to be such regular Republican executive committee, and, on the contrary, represent that the said A. -E. MeCaskey, chairman, and others, constitute such committee, and allege that upon their nomination the said county court, in the exercise of its powers and duties in that behalf, had already appointed as election commissioners, to represent the said Republican party at the various voting precincts in said count}', the nominees and persons designated by that committee.

The jurisdiction of this Court has not been seriously questioned in this case, and all we need say on this subject is to refer to Boggess v. Buxton, clerk, decided at the present term, and not yet officially reported.

It is not controverted that up to the time of the primary election, called by the MeCaskey committee, held on June 14, 1910, that committee was the regular committee, but it is claimed by-the petitioners that upon that day, and at that election, the said Wise committee was duly elected by the Republican electors participating in said election, receiving, out of the 623 votes cast, 484 votes, entitled them, as it is alleged, to be thereafter- treated and recognized as such county executive committee, with right to nominate said election commissioners.

[115]*115It is agreed that the call issued and published by.the Ma-Caskey committee for said primary election did not include a call for the election of a new executive committee, but it is claimed that the term of office of the members of the McCaskey committee expired by limitation upon the date of said primary election, by a rule or resolution, never changed or abrogated, adopted at a regular county convention, held in 1902, providing as follows: “An executive committee shall be chosen by the convention to be held every two years, to consist of two members from each district, which committee shall select its own officers.” And it is alleged that in calling said primary election the McCaskey committee, in order to perpetuate themselves in office had wholly disregarded said party rule, and had ignored the petition of over seven hundred Republican electors of said county, to include in its call for said primary election ■^lie subject of electing a new executive committee, and that in view of this conduct of said committee the voters at said primary election had asserted their rights in the premises and regardless of the call of said McCaskey committee, had by means of stickers or otherwise, provided for the purpose, voted fox and elected petitioners, thereby entitling them to be regarded and recognized as such regular executive committee.

The McCaskey committee, in justification of its omission to include in its call for said primary election, the election of a new executive committee, allege that at a county convention held in said county, August 15, 1908, all the members thereof, except Lahew of Proctor district and Carney and Seeley of'Center district, were elected for four years, the three last named being elected for two years only, and they exhibit what they' claim are the original minutes of that convention, signed and verified by Theodore Van Camp, secretary, but not signed by the chairman in the blank left for his name. Van Camp swears that these minutes are the true and full proceedings of said con-' vention as made by him “to the best of his knowledge and belief.” The correctness of these minutes as to the election of tho executive committee is vigorously denied by the affidavits of some fourteen witnesses present at the convention, as well as by newspaper reports of the proceedings of the county convention, and of the district conventions, held in the several magisterial districts prior to said county convention. In none of these [116]*116published proceedings does it appear tliat the members of said executive committee elected by the district conventions were ■ elected for the term of four years, or that the party rule or resolution adopted in 1902 was abrogated or changed by the county convention. Some two or three affidavits are filed by respondents in support of the correctness of these minutes, and some two or three certificates, not sworn to, are filed in support thereof, but these affidavits and certificates are not very definite or specific in their statements. It is not claimed that by any formal resolution adopted by the county convention in 1908, the rule providing for election of a county executive committee every two years •was changed, but that according to the minutes certified to by Yan Camp, secretary, the reports of the several district delegates of the election of a county executive committee by districts showing the election of all but three members for a term of four years, was adopted by the convention, and that the adoption of these' reports operated to abrogate and annul the party rule adopted in 1902. It does not appéar that these minutes were ever read and approved by the convention, and as we have said,' they are not signed by the chairman of the convention, nor are the reports of the several district delegates referred to produced or accounted for. Moreover, it appears from the minutes of the several-district conventions, held prior to the county convention of that year, and purporting to be certified by the chairman and secretaries of said conventions, and published in the Wetzel Republican, a newspaper published at Hew Martinsville, August 6, 1908, that members of the county executive committee were elected at said district conventions; but in none of these minutes does it appear that they were elected for the period of four years, or for any particular period, except, as may be implied for the term fixed by the party rule adopted in 1902. The fact that in two of the districts, as shown by the Yan Camp minutes, three of the members were elected- for but two years, is significant. There is a sugestión in one or two of the affidavits filed by the respondents, that perhaps the subject of electing committeemen for four years was first suggested by some of the delegates to. the county convention on the day of that convention, in view of the factional difficulties occurring there, in disregard of the party rule, and of the action of the several district conventions. II. O. Showalter, for example, in his affidavit goes so [117]*117far as to say tliat he was the mover of a resolution to change the rule of electing county committeemen from two to four years.

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Bluebook (online)
69 S.E. 522, 68 W. Va. 113, 1910 W. Va. LEXIS 94, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/republican-executive-committee-v-county-court-wva-1910.