Schafer v. Whipple

25 Colo. 400
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedSeptember 15, 1898
DocketNo. 3965
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 25 Colo. 400 (Schafer v. Whipple) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Schafer v. Whipple, 25 Colo. 400 (Colo. 1898).

Opinion

Chief Justice Campbell

delivered the opinion of the court.

The district court of Arapahoe county, affirming a ruling [401]*401of the secretary of state, held that the list of nominees for state offices of the Socialist Labor party, represented by the petitioner, was not entitled to be designated by a party emblem or device, because the nominations were not made by a political party, or nominating committee, but by a petition of qualified electors. There is no dispute as to the facts in this proceeding, and the only question is one of law, viz: may a set of nominees, made by a petition of electors, be designated by an emblem ?

That the present discussion may he intelligible to one not familiar with our somewhat incongruous Australian ballot act, it is well to premise by saying that section 18, as now in force, after providing that every ballot shall contain the names of all candidates whose nominations have been duly made and accepted, and how the names shall be arranged thereon, thus continues: “ It shall be lawful to designate the political party or nominating committee by which each list of candidates is nominated, by an appropriate emblem or design, such as a flag, eagle, rooster or other device, as may be set forth in the certificate of nomination.” Sess. Laws of 1894, p. 62; 3 Mills’ Ann. Stats, sec. 1625 r.

That a list of nominees made by a convention representing a political party of the kind designated in section 3 may be, and is, entitled to the use of the party name and emblem, is conceded; but the contention here is, as the right to an •emblem is purely statutory, unless the statute clearly gives it, it does not exist at all.

Counsel do not altogether agree upon the purpose of the legislature in permitting a voter to place a cross mark in the square following the party name and emblem. By one side, it is said that the object was to furnish to the illiterate voters of the state a simple and effectual method of casting their ballots for a fist of nominees, the names of whom they would be unable to read or select from a complicated ballot; while, upon the other hand, it is said that the sole object is to enable all voters, whether illiterate or educated, to vote a straight ticket.

[402]*402Whatever the purpose of the legislature may have been, we are satisfied that this method of voting was intended for all electors who desire to vote a straight ticket, whether that ticket is nominated by a convention of a political party, or of its nominating committee, or, as provided by section 6, by a certificate of nomination signed by qualified electors.

Under section 18, as originally adopted in 1891, it is conceded that it may have been permissible for persons making nominations by petition to claim an emblem, but under the section as amended in 1894, it is contended that the right or privilege is taken away. The language of the original section as to the point under consideration is as follows: “ Each set of nominations shall be arranged in a list running lengthwise of the ballot, with the appropriate designation of the political party, committee or persons making such nominations as set forth in the certificate thereof; and it shall be lawful to designate each or any set of nominations in the certificate thereof, and upon the ballots, by an appropriate emblem or design.” Sess. Laws, 1891, p. 151, sec. 18.

It is said that the presence of the words “or persons,” italicized above, conferred upon nominees selected by petition the right to the use of an emblem. The language of the section, as amended in 1894, has already been given.

We appreciate the force of the argument concerning the significance of the omission of the italicized words, and the change of language in other particulars, and were there no other statutory provisions bearing upon the question before us, we would be inclined to adopt the views of respondent. Under section 18, as it now stands, no question is raised as to the right of some sort of a political party to the use of an emblem. But, say counsel for respondent, under section 8 of the act the right is further limited to the class therein designated. Section 8 is as follows:

“ Any convention of delegates of a political party which presented candidates at the last preceding election held for the purpose of making nominations to public office, and also voters to the number hereinafter specified, may nominate can[403]*403didates for public offices to be filled by election within this state. A convention within the meaning of this act is an organized assemblage of voters or delegates representing a political party, which at the last election before the holding of such convention polled at least ten per centum of the entire vote cast in the state, county or other political division or district for which the nomination may be made. A committee appointed by any such convention may also make nominations to public office when authorized to do so by resolution, duly passed by the convention at which such committee was appointed.” Sess. Laws, 1891, p. 143; 3 Mills’ Ann. Stats. sec. 1625 c.

The construction respondent puts upon section 18, as already stated, is that the right to an emblem is limited to some classes of political parties and their nominating committees ; while section 3 further restricts the right, as they say, to political parties or nominating committees of the specified rank.

This construction is not only too narrow, but it is not even technically correct. The statute does not purport to give a definition of a political party. In the Century dictionary a political party is thus defined: “ A company or number of persons ranged on one side, or united in opinion or design, in opposition to others in the community; those who favor or are united to promote certain views or opinions; ” and the definition in Webster’s dictionary is substantially the same. In this state there is no statute that in any way qualifies this definition, and a political party here, as elsewhere generally, is a voluntary association of voters who are desirous of promoting a common political end, or carrying out a certain line of public policy. The association may be formed not merely by a convention, but in other ways; and when electors to the number named in section 6 of the statute come together and agree upon a certain policy, and make a certain list of nominees, and select a party name and emblem, they may file with the proper officer the certificate evidencing their acts; and while the mere filing of the cer[404]*404tificate or petition may not create a political party, it isT nevertheless, the evidence of its previous formation; and the result of the acts of the association of electors culminating in a list of nominees gives to the organization, with respect, to its nominees, the same rights on the official ballot that are acquired by the nominees of a previously existing political party that makes its nominations by convention or a nominating committee.

It is to be observed that section 18 does not attempt to restrict the right of selecting an emblem to any particular kind, or class, of political parties, nor does section 3 declare that a political party of the rank therein designated is the only kind of a political party recognized by the statute.

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Bluebook (online)
25 Colo. 400, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schafer-v-whipple-colo-1898.