State Ex Rel. Conran v. Duncan

63 S.W.2d 135, 333 Mo. 673, 1933 Mo. LEXIS 595
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedAugust 23, 1933
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 63 S.W.2d 135 (State Ex Rel. Conran v. Duncan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Ex Rel. Conran v. Duncan, 63 S.W.2d 135, 333 Mo. 673, 1933 Mo. LEXIS 595 (Mo. 1933).

Opinion

*677 ELLISON, J.

Prohibition. Messrs. O. A. Cook and the relator, J. Y. Conran, were candidates for the nomination for Prosecuting *678 Attorney of New Madrid County on the Democratic ticket at the August primary election, 1932. According to the returns of the election and the certificate of the canvassing board, Conran was nominated. Cook thereupon instituted a proceeding in the New Madrid County Circuit Court to contest the nomination under Laws 1931, page 205. He gave written notice of his intention so to do and filed his verified petition in the office of the circuit clerk on August 11. On August 16 the respondent, Honorable John E. Duncan, judge of the circuit, caused an entry to be made of record that the contestant then and there appeared in open court in person and by counsel, and. presented his petition; that the eontestee (relator) failed to appear; that the court “having examined said petition and having determined the same on the merits thereof finds that said petition states a good cause of action;” and the court accordingly ordered a recount of the ballots as prayed in the petition, and that the cause be set and heard on August 26 and summons be issued returnable that day.

On August 20, four days before the date set for the circuit court hearing, the relator, Conran, made application to this court for. a writ of prohibition, and on. August 22 our preliminary rule was issued. Respondent made return to our writ on September 2, and relator filed a reply thereto on September 5. The cause was argued orally by relator on October 28.

These pleadings present two .issues. First, under the statute, Section 2041, Revised Statutes 1929, the May Term, 1932, of the New Madrid County Circuit Court began on the third Monday .in May, the next regular term being in September. Relator says the last regular court day of the May Term was July 2 and that on that day the respondent judge caused an entry to be made of record as follows: “Now at 12 o’clock noon this day, court adjourns to -.” Relator contends the order was a nullity; that the term lapsed after the expiration of three days, under Section 1850, Revised Statutes 1929; and that without calling a special term as provided by Sections 1850, 1851 or 1852, Revised Statutes 1929, the respondent judge appeared in court on August 16, directed the clerk to insert that date in the blank space left in the entry of July 2, and proceeded to enter the order in relator’s election contest case referred to in the first paragraph hereof. These allegations of fact are supported by affidavits of the relator and the circuit clerk and sheriff of New Madrid County, incorporated in relator’s petition by reference and attached thereto as exhibits. The ultimate legal contention made by relator is that in consequence of the foregoing the order made in the relator’s election contest case on August 16 was void and that the respondent judge was without jurisdiction to hear the cause on August 26 as he was about to do when our preliminary rule in prohibition was issued-

*679 The respondent judge alleges in his return that the New Madrid Circuit Court was in session when he made the foregoing order in the election contest case on August 16; denies the court adjourned on July 2 to an unknown date; and avers the fact to be that on July 2 an adjournment was taken to August 16, as appears from a certified' copy of the minute • record of the court attached to the return,-as follows: “Now at 12:00 o’clock noon this day Court adjourns to August 16th next at 9:00 o’clock a. m.”‘ Respondent’s legal contention is that the record entry just quoted cannot be disputed by.oral testimony or the affidavits presented by relator; that the record so made could only be attacked by other portions of the court record, which is not done in this case. ■

The second contention made by relator is that Laws 1931, page 205, is invalid because it authorizes the jiulge of a court to hear election contest cases on their merits whereas under Section 1, Article VI of the State Constitution the judicial power of the State is vested in the courts therein mentioned, and cannot be exercised by a judge except when duly sitting as a court. Relator further maintains the act offends against Section 30, Article TI of the State Constitution in that it deprives relator of his property without due process of law by providing a means whereby his office may be taken from him arbitrarily and capriciously through action of the circuit judge without notice, right to a hearing, right of counter-contest or right of appeal. The respondent contends, of course, that the act is valid. The reasons advanced pro and con will be stated more fully in the course of the opinion.

I. The first question to be considered is whether the case has become moot. After the cause was at issue it was set on the docket of this court for -argument on October 28, which was "the fifth day of the term, with a number of cases preceding it in the regular order-. Counsel for relator appeared and made an oral argument. No one appeared for respondent and there was no request for an immediate, decision. The general election at which the contestant Cook aspired to be the candidate of his party was held ten days thereafter on November 8, and the eontestee, Conran, whose nomination had been certified by .the Canvassing board, was elected as the public records in the office of the Secretary of State show. In these circumstances and notwithstanding the. peculiar history of the ease, we are convinced the rights of the contestant, Cook, are foreclosed.

. A candidate for nomination to public office has no inherent right to contest his opponent’s nomination at a primary election. Where the statutes afford such right they are controlling and exclusive. [20 C. J., sec. 122, p. 119.] The Act of 1931, Laws 1931, page 205, distinctly evidences an intent that contest proceedings shall move along with -expedition and- be concluded in time to permit the -name *680 of the successful candidate to be placed on the election ballot. And it has heretofore been judicially conceded in this State that legal proceedings to determine whether the name of a candidate should be printed on an election ballot must be finally adjudicated in time to allow for the placing of the name on the ballot, State ex rel. Neu v. Waechter, 332 Mo. 574, 58 S. W. (2d) 971. With special reference to primary election contests it was said in State ex rel. Dorsey v. Sprague, 326 Mo. 654, 660, 33 S. W. (2d) 102, 104, “a primary contest, in order to be effective, must be summary and speedy.” Speaking of Laws 1929, page 194, the immediate predecessor of the Act of 1931 here involved, this court declared in State ex rel. McDonald v. Lollis, 326 Mo. 644, 652, 33 S. W. (2d) 98, 101, “these provisions indicate a clear intent on the part of the Legislature to provide for a speedy contest in order that the successful party’s name might appear on the ballot as a candidate at the November election.” All this implies that if the contest is not concluded in time to permit of the placing of the name on the ballot, the contest proceeding must yield to the election, rather than the election to the contest proceeding — in other words, the fact that some contest proceeding is pending and undetermined will not invalidate the election. And so it has been held in other jurisdictions.

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Bluebook (online)
63 S.W.2d 135, 333 Mo. 673, 1933 Mo. LEXIS 595, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-conran-v-duncan-mo-1933.