State Ex Rel. Cameron v. Jones

1933 OK 514, 25 P.2d 648, 165 Okla. 193, 1933 Okla. LEXIS 291
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedOctober 3, 1933
Docket24712
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 1933 OK 514 (State Ex Rel. Cameron v. Jones) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Ex Rel. Cameron v. Jones, 1933 OK 514, 25 P.2d 648, 165 Okla. 193, 1933 Okla. LEXIS 291 (Okla. 1933).

Opinion

WELCH, J.

This is an original action by relators for a writ of prohibition against Honorable P. L. Gassoway. district judge of Coal county, and the other respondents above named.

*194 The said other five respondents, Tom Jones, Mrs. Charles Hoye, Mrs. Tom Lamp-tin, Mrs. Anna Westerman, and Hayden Whitlock, as plaintiffs, commenced cause No. 5927, being an action in the district court of Coal county against the election board of Coal county for an injunction to restrain the said county election board from issuing certificates of election, to the relators herein, and a temporary restraining order was issued.

The relators herein, Mrs. Sarah Cameron, Bd Edwards, J. T. Dyer, Joplin Rogers, and Frank/ Bowers, were candidates for election as members of the board of education of independent school district No. 21, in the town, of Lehigh in Coal county. At a primary election held March 21, 1933, they won nomination of the political party of their choice and received their nomination certificates. Thereafter, at a general election held April 4, 1933, they were elected to membership on said board of education, and the county election board had canvassed the results of said election and were about to complete their duties by issuing certificates of election, when the respondent, Hon. I5. It. Gassoway, district judge, at the suit of the other respondents in said cause No. 5927, issued a temporary restraining order against said election board.

The relators/ herein urge that there is no authority in law to restrain the holding of an election nor the canvassing and certification of the result thereof, nor the issuance of certificates of election to the successful candidates at a general election. That, although they called to the attention of the district court this lack of authority and jurisdiction, the respondent, district judge, refused to dismiss said cause No. 5927, or to vacate his temporary injunction order.

The question for our determination is whether this is an unauthorized application of judicial force such as to require or warrant prohibition from this court.

The petition in said cause No. 5927, in which the injunction order was issued, contained the following allegations, in substance :

(1) That the five plaintiffs in that action, Tom Jones, Mrs. Charles Hoye, Mrs. •Tom Lampkin, Mrs. Anna Westerman, ana Hayden Whitlock, are now holding office as members of the board of education in question.

(2) That the defendant, county election board, is about to wrongfully, illegally, and unlawfully prepare and deliver certificates of election to Mrs. Sarah Cameron, Ed Edwards, J. T. Dyer, Joplin Rogers, and Frank Bowers, showing that said last-named persons are “nominees, candidates, electees, ox-aspirants for the position or place as members or officers of the board of education, * * * or that all or one of said persons ara entitled to supersede all or some of the plaintiffs herein as members of said board of education. * * *”

(3)That said act or acts of the election board, “* * * if permitted to be done, would be void, illegal, wrongful, and unlawful, as there was nol vacancy in said board of education, for the reason that no prim|ary or general election has been held or had as provided by law, wherein the said •Mrs. Sarah Cameron, Ed Edwards, J, T. Dyer, Joplin Rogers, and Frank Rowers, or either of them, could be elected or named, or entitled to a place or position on the board of education, * * * and if permitted to be done, would work a great and irreparable damage to the plaintiffs, and that the plaintiffs have no adequate remedy at law.”

It is in the third paragraph of the petition above quoted that the plaintiffs in cause No. 5927 seek to allege the facts entitling them to injunctive relief. The facts are not clearly pleaded, and these allegations are not free of the objection that they state legal conclusions instead of facts. But it is clear that by this action the plaintiffs, who are respondents to this action in this court, sought in the district court of Coal comity to restrain the issuance of the ctertifieates of election, and to test in the action for injunction the legality of the election, and sought in such action for injunction to prevent the newly elected members of the board of education from receiving their election certificates and becoming aspirants for or entitled to a place or position on the board of education. And, in fact, in this action for injunction the plaintiffs therein, who were the old members of the election board, sought to try the right and title to the office between themselves and the newly elected members of the board of education.

It is quite clear from the authorities that the right or title to a political office may not be tried by injunction.

The correctness of that rule is not questioned herein, but counsel for respondents insists that the court may enjoin the issn- *195 anee of a certificate of election. TRis identical question seems never to have been passed upon by this court, but it is no.w squarely before) us for determination.

It has been generally held that purely political rights as distinguished from civil or property rights may not be determined in equity, Pagosa Springs v. People ex rel. (Patterson, Mayor, v. People ex rel. Parr [Colo.] 130 P. 618; Davis v. Wilson [Art.] 35 S. W. (2d) 1020; Avery v. Hale [Ga.] 145 S. E. 76; Osgood v. Jones, 60 N. H. 543; Fleming v. Guthrie, Judge [W. Va.] 9 S. E. 23; Alderson v. Commissioners [W. Va.] 9 S. E. 868) ; and in recognition of this principle it was held in Davis v. Wilson, supra, that equity would not restrain officials from recognizing a person appointed to office, and it was held in State ex rel. Coffey v. McFarland (N. D.) 223 N. W. 931, that a person declared elected, and who had received his certificate, could not be restrained from acting officially.

While this court has never passed upon the question directly, it has been considered in other states, and the rule is stated in 32 C. J. 257, as follows:

“Flection officers will not be enjoined from giving a certificate of election to the successful candidate, and the fact that there was fraud in the election sufficient to vitiate it, or that the election was held under a void statute, does not affect the operation of the rule. The right to hold office cannot be tried in a suit to enjoin certification of an election, the remedy being by quo war-ranto. ”

The Supreme Court of Colorado in deciding People ex rel. Bentley et al. v. McClees, Secretary of State, et al., 38 P. 468, wrote this syllabus:

“Where the Supreme Court was asked in the exercise of its original jurisdiction, to issue a writ of injunction to restrain the Secretary of State from delivering certificates of election to certain persons elected as district judges, the injunction being asked on the ground that the terms of the incumbents of such judicial offices were not about to expire, held, that the real question in controversy was the question of title to public offices between the individual claimants ; that the controversy did not involve the rights or franchises of the people, nor the rights of the state in its sovereign capacity, — and so the writ was denied”

—and in the body of the opinion the following ;

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Bluebook (online)
1933 OK 514, 25 P.2d 648, 165 Okla. 193, 1933 Okla. LEXIS 291, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-cameron-v-jones-okla-1933.