State ex rel. Leslie v. Duffy

164 Ohio St. (N.S.) 178
CourtOhio Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 5, 1955
DocketNo. 34588
StatusPublished

This text of 164 Ohio St. (N.S.) 178 (State ex rel. Leslie v. Duffy) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio 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. Leslie v. Duffy, 164 Ohio St. (N.S.) 178 (Ohio 1955).

Opinions

Stewart, J.

The sole question presented to us is the interpretation of Section 3513.261, Bevised Code, which governs the filing of nominating petitions as to independent candidates for office.

[180]*180The pertinent part of such section, upon the interpretation of which the parties disagree, is:

“Each nominating petition shall contain a statement of candidacy which shall be subscribed and sworn to by the candidate named therein. Such statement of candidacy shall contain a declaration that the candidate desires to be a candidate for the office named therein, and that he is an elector qualified to vote for the office he seeks.
“The form of the nominating petition and statement of candidacy shall be substantially as follows:
“Statement oe Candidacy
“I,.............. (Name of candidate), the undersigned, hereby state that my voting residence is in..........Precinct of the................ (Township) or (Ward and City or Village) in the County of ........, Ohio; that my postoffice address is........ (Street and Number, if any, or Rural Route and Number) of the .......... (City, Village, or Postoffice) of .........., Ohio; that I am a qualified elector in the precinct in which my voting residence is located. I hereby declare that I desire to be a candidate for election to the office of...... in the......(State, District, County, City, Village, Township, or School District) for the..........(Full term or unexpired term ending........) at the General Election to be held on the........day of........,19.......
“I further declare that I am an elector qualified to vote for the office I seek. Dated this........day of..........,19----
(Signature of candidate)
“The State of Ohio ) ) ) * ‘ County of ..........)
“................... (Name of candidate), being duly sworn, deposes and says that he is the candidate named in the [181]*181above statement of candidacy and that the statements and declarations therein contained are true as. he verily believes.
(Signature of candidate)
“Subscribed and sworn to before me this ...... day of ........19.....
(Signature of officer administering oath)
(Title of officer)
“I, ..:..................., hereby constitute the persons named below a committee to represent me:
“Name
Residence
“Nominating Petition
“We, the undersigned, qualified electors of the state of Ohio, hereby nominate .................. as a candidate for election to the office of............in the............ (State, District, County, City, Village, Township, or School District) for the ....................... (Full term or unexpired term ending................) to be voted for at the general election next hereafter to be héld. We individually pledge that we will support and vote for the above proposed candidate at said election, and that we have not signed the nominating petitions of [182]*182more candidates for said office than the number to be elected to said office.
‘ ‘ Signature Street City,
Address Village or Date of
Township Ward Precinct County Signing
“The State of Ohio ) ) ) ‘ ‘ County of ..........)
“................... being duly sworn, deposes and says that he is the circulator of the foregoing petition paper containing ........signatures; that said signatures were written in his presence and are the signatures of the persons whose signatures they purport to be; and that he resides at the address appearing below his signature hereto.
“Signature of circulator .................................
“Address ................................................
“Subscribed and sworn to before me this .... day of----, 19..... ■
(Signature of officer administering oath)
(Title of officer) ”

Respondents maintain that the candidate must sign and swear to the statement of candidacy prior to obtaining the signatures of the electors, whereas the relator maintains that so [183]*183long as the statement of candidacy and the nominating petition are accurately filled in in every blank space, except the signature of the candidate and the jurat, it is necessary to have only such signature and jurat upon such statement of candidacy at the time it is filed.

Respondents base their contention upon the fact that Sections 3513.07 and 3513.09, Revised Code, which govern the declaration of candidacy and signature and affidavit of the candidate as to a person desiring to be a candidate for a party nomination to be voted on at a primary election, require that such declaration of candidacy and the affidavit thereto must be signed and sworn to before the signatures of electors are placed thereon. They contend that there is no reason to suppose that the General Assembly had any notion of providing a different rule as to independent candidates for office, and that, since Section 3513.261 provides a form of nominating petition and statement of candidacy which appears prior to the signatures of the electors, the General Assembly must have intended that such statement of candidacy be signed and sworn to prior to the circulation of the petition.

The short and simple answer to such a contention is that the General Assembly did not provide for- such signature and oath prior to the circulation of a nominating petition for an independent candidate, as it did in Sections 3513.07 and 3513.09, Revised Code, as to a party candidate in a primary election.

Undoubtedly within constitutional limitations the General Assembly may provide for the conduct of elections and the qualification of candidates, and in doing so it naturally follows that many highly technical requirements in election laws exist.

It is essential, of course, to protect the purity of elections, the cornerstone of free institutions. However, since this condition is inevitable, courts should be careful not to read requirements into election laws which are not specifically there.

Where there is mandatory language in an election statute requiring a proposed candidate to do certain things before his name can be placed upon a ballot, those things must be done in accordance with the statute before such proposed candidate is eligible to have his name placed on the ballot. On the other hand, where a proposed candidate strictly follows all the re[184]*184quirements stated in the statute governing his candidacy, he is not required to do things required by another statute concerned with a different class of candidates.

Nowhere in Section 3513.261, Revised Code, is there a provision that the statement of candidacy be signed. and sworn to by the candidate prior to its circulation among the electors.

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Related

State Ex Rel. Marshall v. Sweeney
90 N.E.2d 869 (Ohio Supreme Court, 1950)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
164 Ohio St. (N.S.) 178, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-leslie-v-duffy-ohio-1955.