State, Ex Rel. Mihlbaugh v. Bogart

53 N.E.2d 75, 73 Ohio App. 47, 39 Ohio Law. Abs. 421, 28 Ohio Op. 88, 1943 Ohio App. LEXIS 651
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedJuly 17, 1943
Docket851
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 53 N.E.2d 75 (State, Ex Rel. Mihlbaugh v. Bogart) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State, Ex Rel. Mihlbaugh v. Bogart, 53 N.E.2d 75, 73 Ohio App. 47, 39 Ohio Law. Abs. 421, 28 Ohio Op. 88, 1943 Ohio App. LEXIS 651 (Ohio Ct. App. 1943).

Opinion

*422 OPINION

By GUERNSEY, P.J.-

This is an action in prohibition brought - by the State of Ohio -on relation of Edward P. Mihlbaugh, plaintiff, against Mel Bogart, Clarence E. Mumaugh, Francis W. Durbin and James Jacobs, as .members of the Board of Elections of Allen county, Ohio, defendants, to prohibit the defendants from printing on the ballot for the primary election to be held in the city of Lima, Ohio, on August 10, 1943, the names of any persons whose nominating petitions were .filed with said defendants after July 1, 1943, and from holding said primary election in said city for any offices other than those of •councilman of the Third Ward and councilman of the Fifth Ward.

This cause was submitted to this court upon the petition of the plaintiff, the answer and amendment to answer thereto of the defendants, and a statement of facts agreed to by all the parties.

In the answer of the defendants, the following facts pleaded in plaintiff’s petition are admitted to be true:

The defendants are the duly appointed, qualified and acting members of and constitute the Board of Elections of Allen county, .Ohio.

The city of Lima is a municipal corporation of the state of Ohio, liaving a charter which was adopted as alleged in plaintiff’s petition, ¡and-' that Sections 3, 4, 5, 6, 8, 9 and 10 of said charter of the city .of Lima, Ohio, are in the words and figures set forth in plaintiff’s jpetition.

Section 4785-67. GC, provides that primaries in the years, except presidential years, shall be held on the second Tuesday in August next preceding a general election. The year 1943 is not a presidential year and the second Tuesday in August, 1943, falls on August 10, 1943.

Section 3 of said charter provides as follows:

“A general election for the choice of elective officers provided for in this Charter shall be held on the first Tuesday after the first Monday in November in odd numbered years. Elections so held shall be known as regular municipal elections. Such other elections may be held as may be required by law, or provided for in this Charter.”

Section 4 of said charter provides as follows:

“Candidates for all offices to be voted for at any municipal election under the provisions of this Charter shall be nominated at a non-partisan primary election to be held at the time provided by the general election laws of the State. Any matters which by the terms •of the Charter may be submitted to the electors of the City at any *423 special election may be submitted at a primary election or at a regular election.”

Section 5 of said charter provides as follows:

“The name of any elector of the city shall be printed upon the ballot, when a petition in the form hereinafter prescribed shall have been filed in his behalf with the election authorities. Such petition shall be signed by at least two hundred (200) electors of the city, if for the nomination of a candidate for an office- filled by election from the city at large, and by at least fifty (50) electors of the ward if for the nomination of a candidate for an office to be filled by election from a ward.”

Section 6 of said charter provides as follows:

“The signatures to a nominating petition need not all be appended to one paper, but to each separate paper there shall be attached an affidavit of the circulator thereof stating that each signature appended thereto was made in his presence and he believes it is the genuine signature of the person whose name it purports to be. Each signer of a petition shall sign his name in ink or indelible pencil, and shall place on the petition after his name his place of residence by.street and number, or other description sufficient to identify the place, and give the date when his signature was made.”

Section 8 of said charter provides as follows:

“All separate papers comprising a nominating petition shall be assembled and filed with the election authorities as one instrument at least forty days prior to the day of the primary election. Within ten days after the filing of a nominating petition the election authorities shall notify the person named therein as a candidate whether the petition is found to be signed, by the required number of qualified electors. ’If insufficient, the person named therein' may amend said petition by filing, within .five (5) days after notification of insufficiency by the election authorities, additional petition papers. Within five (5) days after the filing of the additional petition papers, the election authorities shall notify the person named therein as candidate whether the amended petition is found to be signed by the required-number of qualified eelctors.”

Section 9 of said charter provides as follows:

“Any eligible person placed in nomination as hereinbefore provided shall have his name printed on the ballots, if, within five days after the notification provided for. in the preceding section, he shall have filed with the election authorities' a written acceptance of the nomination.”

*424 Section 10 oí the charter provides as follows:

“The number of candidates for any office at any regular municipal election, in the city at large or in each ward, as the case may be, shall be the two candidates on the primary election ballot receiving the highest number of votes at the primary election. In case there shall not be for any office more than two persons who shall have filed petitions as provided for in this Charter, then said persons. shall be the candidates at the regular municipal election and the primary for the particular office shall not be held.”
“The name of each person who is nominated in compliance herewith shall be printed on the official ballot at the general election, and the names of no other candidates shall be printed thereon."

The material facts, shown by the agreed statement of facts, are as follows:

That, prior to July I, 1943, on June 21, 1943, relator filed with the Board of Elections of Allen county, Ohio, a nominating petition for the office of mdyor of the city of Lima, Ohio.

' On June 30, 1943, the Board of Elections of Allen county, Ohio, notified relator that his nominating petition had been found to be sufficient and valid. On July 1, 1943, relator filed with the Board of Elections of Allen county, Ohio, his written acceptance of the/ nomination.

No other candidate for the office of mayor of the city of Lima, Ohio, filed with the Board of Elections of Allen county, Ohio, a nominating petition on or before July 1, 1943. On July 2, 1943, five candidates for the office of mayor of the city of Lima, Ohio, filed their nominating petitions with the Board of Elections of Allen county, Ohio.

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Bluebook (online)
53 N.E.2d 75, 73 Ohio App. 47, 39 Ohio Law. Abs. 421, 28 Ohio Op. 88, 1943 Ohio App. LEXIS 651, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-mihlbaugh-v-bogart-ohioctapp-1943.