State Ex Rel. Nunez v. St. Bernard Parish Democratic Executive Committee

115 So. 901, 165 La. 685
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedMarch 12, 1928
DocketNo. 29154.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 115 So. 901 (State Ex Rel. Nunez v. St. Bernard 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. Nunez v. St. Bernard Parish Democratic Executive Committee, 115 So. 901, 165 La. 685 (La. 1928).

Opinion

THOMPSON, J.

At the primary election held in the parish of St. Bernard on January 17, 1928, there were four candidates for the nomination for assessor, to wit: August R. Messa, Adam Nunez, Bruce Nunez, and Sidney I. Serpas. The returns were duly promulgated, and the result of said election certified to the secretary of state by the Democratic executive committee of said parish. The returns,'as promulgated and certified, showed that Messa had received. 794 votes,. Adam Nunez, 721, Bruce Nunez, 102, and Serpas, 64. No one of the candidates having received a *687 majority of the votes cast, it necessarily followed that, under the mandatory provision of the law, a' second primary would have to he held between Messa and Nunez, unless one of them withdrew, or unless the result of said primary was set aside, and one of them declared the nominee in some proceedings authorized by law.

On January 26th Messa applied to the district court of St. Bernard parish for a writ of mandamus to compel the executive committee “to properly promulgate the returns of said election according to the facts and 'figures set forth in the petition.”

It was alleged that Messa had received a majority of 247 votes over the combined vote of the other three candidates, and that he was entitled to have said committee to declare him the nominee, and to certify that fact to the secretary of state.

The relator’s claim to the nomination was based on the.fact that a number of spoiled ballots were counted for Nunez, and that a given number of qualified electors who would have voted for Messa were illegally restrained and prevented from casting their votes for him.

The committee answered the proceeding, denying that relator had received a majority of the votes cast in the first primary, and alleged that a second primary was necessary between the relator and Adam Nunez.

On trial, judgment was rendered commanding the committee to certify the election of the relator Messa as the Democratic nominee for the office of assessor of said parish.

In this judgment it was declared that 32 spoiled ballots were counted for Nunez, which should be deducted from the total given him, as shown by the promulgated returns, and that 124 voters were prevented from casting their votes for Messa by unlawful methods, and that said number of votes should be added to the total vote received by Messa, as shown in the promulgated returns, thus giving Messa a majority of 72 votes over all of his opponents.

The mandamus proceeding was, as before stated, against the executive committee as the sole defendant.

After the judgment was rendered declaring Messa to be the nominee, Nunez applied to the district- court for a mandamus to compel the executive committee to cancel and annul the certificate issued to the secretary of state pursuant to the judgment of the court, and to call and provide for a second primary election on the date fixed by law, with the said Messa and Nunez as candidates for the office for which they were candidates in the first primary.

In this application it was alleged that the proceeding and the judgment rendered therein declaring Messa to be the nominee were absolutely null and void, and without any effect, for the reason: (1) That no such proceeding against the said committee was authorized by any law of this state; (2) that the right of relator to be a candidate in a second primary election could not be divested in a proceeding to which he was not a party;. (3) that the primary election law specifically requires that relator should have been the sole contestee in such a proceeding; and (4) that the committee was without interest in. such a proceeding.

To that proceeding Messa and the committee filed an exception to the jurisdiction of the court over the subject-matter. Further, that there was a misjoinder of parties, and that relator had no interest in the subject-matter complained of.

These exceptions were all sustained, and the relator’s application for a mandamus was dismissed.

Thereupon the relator filed in this court the present application, in which he prays that Hoñ. J. Claude Mereaux, judge of the Twenty-Fifth district court, be ordered to set aside, annul, and avoid the judgment ren *689 dered by him in the matter entitled August R. Messa v. St. Bernard Parish Democratic Executive Committee, and that the said judge make peremptory the alternative writ of mandamus, directed to the St. Bernard parish Democratic executive committee, commanding it to withdraw, cancel, and annul the certificate filed by said committee with the secretary of state, and .to call and provide for the holding of a second primary for the nomination of a candidate for the office of assessor of said parish.

For return to the rule nisi, the respondent judge and August R. Messa admit that no one received a majority of the votes cast for the office of assessor, as shown by the election returns as promulgated by the committee and certified by said committee to the secretary of state.

They alleged, however, that in a contest by Messa, had contradictorily with the executive committee, the court found that 32 spoiled ballots had been improperly counted for Nunez, and therefore deducted the same from the total of his vote, as declared by the committee.

That the court further found that 124 voters had been prevented from casting their votes, and who declared they would have voted for Messa.

The court therefore added 124 votes to Messa’s total vote, as shown by the committee’s promulgation, which gave Messa a clear majority of 72 over all of his opponents. And therefore the committee was ordered to certify Messa as the nominee to the secretary of state.

It is further alleged that the said proceedings were regular and legal; that the committee was the proper party defendant; and that Nunez was without interest in the suit.

It is further alleged that, in his application for mandamus, Nunez did not claim the nomination that the court was without jurisdiction to entertain the proceeding, and therefore properly dismissed the same under section 27, Act 97 of 1922, and Andrews v. Blackman, 131 La. 355, 59 So. 769; Reid v. Brunot, 153 La. 490, 96 So. 43, and State ex rel. Lyons v. State Central Committee, 115 So. 740, 1 recently decided.

It is provided in section 25 of Act 97 of 1922 that the commissioners of election shall, after the closing of the polls, proceed to eanvdss and tabulate the vote and to make returns thereof to the chairman of the parish, committee, which committee shall immediately tabulate and compile the returns, and certify the results thereof to the .secretary.

It is further provided in section 27 that ail contests shall be made before the courts of the state which are fully vested with the necessary power, authority, and jurisdiction to hear, try, and determine the same.

It is provided further that any. candidate for a nomination for any office who shall claim to have been nominated, and who shall desire to contest the election, shall present a petition to the court in which the contestee resides,

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Bluebook (online)
115 So. 901, 165 La. 685, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-nunez-v-st-bernard-parish-democratic-executive-committee-la-1928.