State ex rel. Binner v. Buer

182 N.W. 855, 174 Wis. 120, 1921 Wisc. LEXIS 138
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedMay 3, 1921
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 182 N.W. 855 (State ex rel. Binner v. Buer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State ex rel. Binner v. Buer, 182 N.W. 855, 174 Wis. 120, 1921 Wisc. LEXIS 138 (Wis. 1921).

Opinion

The following opinion was filed February 16, 1921:

Per Curiam.

This is an original action brought in this court, pursuant to leave first granted, to restrain the county board of election commissioners of Milwaukee county and the board of election commissioners of the city of Milwaukee from acting under and pursuant to the provisions of sub. (8), sec. 5.26, Stats. The defendants interposed a general demurrer to the complaint.

The plaintiff contends that the section contravenes several provisions of the constitution and that by reason thereof it is null and void. The specific objections of the plaintiff to the validity of this statutory provision will be considered in detail in an opinion to be filed later. It will suffice for the present purposes to say that all objections urged by plaintiff to the validity of the law have received the consideration of the court, and it is now determined and adjudged that the said law is in all respects a constitutional and valid enactment.

The demurrer to the complaint is sustained and the complaint is dismissed on the merits.

The following opinion was filed May 3, 1921:

Owen, J.

As stated in the per curiam memorandum heretofore filed, this is an original action brought in this court to restrain the county board of election commissioners of Milwaukee county and the board of election commissioners'of the city of Milwaukee from acting under and pursuant to the provisions of sub. (8), sec. 5.26, Stats. The [123]*123action is referred to in plaintiff’s brief as one for declaratory relief, under the provisions of sec. 2687m. We do not, however, so regard it. The complaint plainly sets forth a state of facts entitling plaintiff to the issuance of an injunction if his contention concerning the unconstitutionality of the law in question be sustained. It sets forth that it is the duty of the county board of election commissioners of Milwaukee county to prepare and furnish the ballots to be used at and to conduct the election to be held on the first Tuesday of April, 1921, in the county of Milwaukee, of county judges of Milwaukee county, civil court judges of Milwaukee county, and a circuit judge for the Second judicial circuit of the state of Wisconsin, and that they threaten to, and unless restrained will, conduct said election pursuant to said statutory provision. A similar allegation is made with reference to the board of election commissioners of the city .of Milwaukee, and prays that said boards of election commissioners be restrained from enforcing and following the provisions of said aforementioned statutes in the conduct of the election to be held on the first Tuesday of April, 1921, and all future elections, and for such further order or relief as the court may deem just and equitable.

This presents an existing controversy and a situation calling for judicial cognizance independent of sec. 2687m, providing for the maintenance of equitable actions to obtain declaratory relief. No action under sec. 2687m has come before us, and when one does, questions concerning the constitutionality of the law will arise at the very threshold which will call for the most serious consideration of the court. Anway v. Grand Rapids R. Co. (Mich.) 179 N. W. 350. This observation is made for the reason that this action seems to be considered by the plaintiff as one brought under that section, and it seems best that it should be distinctly understood that the constitutionality of the law has neither been overlooked nor affirmed sub silentio.

[124]*124Sec. 6.24 of the Statutes provides:

“No candidate for any judicial, school, member of county board in counties having a population of two hundred fifty thousand or more, or elective city office shall be elected upon any party ticket, nor shall any designation of party or principle represented be printed on the ballot used at the election of any such candidate. The statement ‘a nonpartisan judiciary’ or ‘a nonpartisan superintendency,’ or 'a nonpartisan administration’ shall not be deemed a designation of party or principle within the meaning of this section. The election of members of such county boards, except as provided by subsection (5) of section 17.21 in cases of vacancy, shall be held and conducted in the manner provided for the election of judicial officers, except police justices or justices of the peace in counties having a population of three hundred thousand or more, and containing an entire judicial circuit for which more than one circuit judge is provided by law.”

Sec. 5.26 pf the Statutes provides for independent or non-' partisan nominations, and provides that such nominations shall be made by nomination papers, prescribes the form thereof, specifies where they are to be filed, etc. This is the manner in which the officers designated in sec. 6.24 are to be nominated. Sub. (8) of sec. 5.26 relates primarily to the officers specified in sec. 6.24 and provides, in effect, that where more than two candidates are nominated for the same office, a primary election shall be held two weeks prior to the regular election. The names of all those for whom nomination papers have been filed shall be placed upon the primary election ballot, and in each instance the two receiving the highest number of votes for each respective office shall be deemed 'nominated for such office, and their names and none other shall be placed upon the ballot at the general election as candidates for the offices for which they were nominated at the primary election. As it relates to members of the board of school directors in any city of the first class, it provides that this primal-y election shall be held" when [125]*125there have been eleven or more candidates proposed by nomination papers. The reason for this is that there are five members of the school board to be elected, and the idea of the law is that the primary or preliminary election shall eliminate all candidates except two for each office, there being five school directors to elect. It is provided that ten shall be nominated at the primary and each voter is entitled to vote for five candidates. This but follows the general scheme of presenting to the electors at the general election two candidates for each office. This scheme relates to populous counties and, as a matter of fact, is applicable only to Milwaukee county.

It is claimed by plaintiff that the legislation is unconstitutional because it amounts to special or class legislation, and that the classification has no basis germane to the purposes of the legislation. It is pointed out that in no other county of the state is this primary or elimination election provided for the officers mentioned in sub. (8) of sec. 5.26; that there is no substantial basis justifying a special election scheme such as is embodied in the provision under consideration for Milwaukee county. On the part of the defendants it is argued that the classification is justified by virtue of density of population in that county. This leads us to a consideration of the constitutional rights enjoyed by plaintiff as well as the power of the legislature to enact special legislation.

First, what are the rights of plaintiff' in respect to matters under consideration ? Manifestly, in the matter of elections of public officers he is entitled to the same right of suffrage that is accorded to all other electors of his election district, meaning thereby the territory from or for which a given officer is elected.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
182 N.W. 855, 174 Wis. 120, 1921 Wisc. LEXIS 138, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-binner-v-buer-wis-1921.