State Ex Rel. Hinyub v. Parish Democratic Executive Committee

138 So. 862, 173 La. 857, 1931 La. LEXIS 1959
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedDecember 7, 1931
DocketNo. 31574.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 138 So. 862 (State Ex Rel. Hinyub v. Parish Democratic Executive Committee) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Ex Rel. Hinyub v. Parish Democratic Executive Committee, 138 So. 862, 173 La. 857, 1931 La. LEXIS 1959 (La. 1931).

Opinion

ODOM, J.

Relators, by separate suits, brought mandamus proceedings against the Democratic Executive Committee of the Parish of Jefferson praying that said committee be ordered and directed to receive and file their written notifications of intention to become candidates for the offices of sheriff, assessor, and clerk of court for the parish of Jefferson at the primary election to be held on January 19, 1932; the four suits being 'consolidated.

They allege that said committee met on October 7, 1931, and ordered, by resolution, that a Democratic white primary election be held throughout said parish on January 19, 1932, for the purpose of nominating candidates for all parish and ward offices and ordered that candidates for nomination file their notices with the chairman of the committee on or before the 17th day of October, 1931, at 12 o’clock midnight; that on October 17th, within the time fixed by the committee for giving notice, they prepared and signed documents addressed to said committee in the form prescribed by law and containing the necessary declaration of their qualification, giving notice of their intention to become candidates for the respective offices of sheriff, assessor, and clerk of court for the said parish; that they made all efforts possible to file their notices with the proper officer of the committee in person, but were unable to do so for the reason that neither the chairman nor the secretary thereof could be found by them; and that as a last resort, they placed said notices together with the filing fee prescribed in a stamped envelope addressed to the chairman at his post office and deposited the same in the United States mail before 12 o’clock midnight.

They further allege that their notices were received by the chairman through the mail on the following Monday morning prior to the meeting of the committee on that date, which meeting was held for the purpose of certifying to the secretary of state the names of all those who had given notice of their intention to become candidates; that the chairman and the committee refused to accept and file their notices on the ground that they were received too late and that the committee refused to certify their names to the secretary of state as candidates. They pray that said committee be now ordered to accept and file their notices and certify their names as candidates.

The respondent committee excepted to the jurisdiction of the court, filed exceptions of no cause and no right of action, and pleas of prescription and estoppel.

Reserving its rights under all said pleas and exceptions, the committee answered admitting that it had met and fixed the time for filing notices by candidates, but denied: First, that relators are qualified electors of *861 the parish of Jefferson; second, that they were members of the Democratic Party, the party calling the election; third, that they possess the qualifications required by law; and, fourth, denied that relators had made proper efforts to file their notices within the time prescribed by law and by resolution of the committee.

Relators’ demands were rejected and they appealed.

The case was heard in this court on Thursday, December 3, the day on which the case of State ex rel. Pilex Elston et al. v. Parish Democratic Executive Committee for the Parish of Plaquemines, 173 Da. 844, 138 So. 857, was decided.

In view of our holding in that case, counsel for the committee abandoned their exceptions to the jurisdiction of the court, and of no cause or right of action, as well as the pleas of prescription and estoppel, and presented the case on its merits.

1. The committee in its answer especially denied that relators are qualified electors of the parish of Jefferson or that they are members of the Democratic Party, the party calling the election; in sum, it is denied that they possess the necessary qualifications to become candidates at the primary election which had been called, and this is set up as one of the defenses.

The district judge found, to use his language, that “there is no evidence in the record to show that relators or any one of them, except Leonard A. Aucoin, is a resident of the Parish of Jefferson * * * to show that any of the relators resided within the Parish of Jefferson for a sufficient length of time to be qualified under the law to become a candidate * * * to show that any one of relators paid his poll tax or was registered * * * or to show that any one of the relators is a member of the Democratic Party,” and he held:

“ * * * Since relators are seeking to enforce a political right of which they claim to be deprived, it is incumbent upon them to establish the fact that they have that right. * * * As they have not shown that they are members of the party which they are seeking to coerce through its Committee and have not shown that they are duly qualified electors, entitled to consideration at the hands of this Committee, the Court is of the opinion that they are without right to bring this action.”

The court erred in this holding. When a person who desires to become a candidate for an office at a primary election called by a political party presents to the proper officer of the executive committee of that party his verified written notice of intention to become a candidate, in the form prescribed by section 13, Act No. 97 of 1922, the Primary Election Law of the state, the question whether such person does in fact possess all the qualifications necessary to become a candidate is not one which the officer of the committee or the committee itself may question or inquire into at the time the notice is presented for filing. The law 'in specific terms provides (section 13):

“That any person desiring to become a candidate in any primary election held under the provisions of this act shall * * * file with the respective officers herein designated, his written notification of his intention to become a candidate at such primary, accompanied by a declaration that he is a duly qualified elector under the Constitution and laws of this State, and that he is a member of the party calling said primary election, and that he possesses such qualifications as are required by the state central committee of such party.”

*863 The question, and the only one which concerns the officer of the committee when a notice of intention to become a candidate is presented for filing, is whether such notice is accompanied by a declaration of the applicant that he is a member of the party calling the primary and that he is a duly qualified elector, etc. If the prospective candidate fails to accompany his notice of intention by such positive declaration, the officer to whom presented may and should refuse to receive and file it. But when such notice, properly signed, verified, and accompanied by the declaration prescribed by the statute, is presented, it is the plain ministerial duty of the officer of the committee to receive and file it. Neither such officer nor the committee itself has jurisdiction “to question or inquire into the truth of the declarations made. State ex rel. Trosclair v. Parish Democratic Committee, 120 La. 620, 45 So. 526.

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Bluebook (online)
138 So. 862, 173 La. 857, 1931 La. LEXIS 1959, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-hinyub-v-parish-democratic-executive-committee-la-1931.