State ex rel. Peterson v. Hall

176 N.W. 117, 43 N.D. 628, 1919 N.D. LEXIS 70
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 10, 1919
StatusPublished

This text of 176 N.W. 117 (State ex rel. Peterson v. Hall) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering North Dakota 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. Peterson v. Hall, 176 N.W. 117, 43 N.D. 628, 1919 N.D. LEXIS 70 (N.D. 1919).

Opinions

Grace, J.

This is an original application to this court for a writ of mandamus commanding the defendant, as secretary of state, to certify the name of the relator to the county auditor of Towner county, which county constitutes the twenty-second legislative and senatorial district, to be placed on the ballot, to be voted at a special election to be held November 25 a. d., 1919, in said legislative district, and for a writ of mandamus commanding the county auditor of said Towner county to place the name of said O. P. Peterson upon the said election ballot, at said special election to be held at the time above stated, in said senatorial and legislative district for the state of North Dakota.

A short statement of facts will suffice to present the matters at issue. The regularly elected and duly qualified senator of the said twenty-second legislative district of North Dakota, Honorable A. S. Gibbons, died, thus leaving a vacancy in that office, in that district, of which facts the county auditor of Towner county gave due notice to Governor Frazier, who, on the 18th day of October, 1919, issued a proclamation and filed the same with the secretary of state, calling an election to fill such vacancy, and directed it to be held, under § 501 of the Code of North Dakota, of the year of 1899, and further directed that petitions of nomination be filed not later than 11 o’clock, November 25, 1919, with the secretary of state. Petitions or certificates of nomination were circulated on behalf of C. P. Peterson, which were signed in duplicate, and one copy was filed with said Forrest Vaughan as auditor of Towner county, Cando, North Dakota, on the 25th day of October, 1919, before 11 o’clock, a. m. of said day; and, at the same time and place, a duplicate, original of the said nominating petition was duly and properly mailed in the United States mail at Cando, North Dakota, by registered letter,to the secretary of state, Thomas Hall, at Bismarck, North Dakota, and, by him thereafter received.

[630]*630The secretary of state admits receiving said petitions of nomination on the 27th day of October, a. d. 1919. He further admits that the petitions were circulated and signed by the legally required number of voters, placing in nomination O. P. Peterson, of Bisbee, Towner country, State of North Dakota, and admits that there is a vacancy in the office of state senator, in and for the twenty-second legislative district, which embraces Towner county only.

It is admitted by the secretary of state, that, since receiving said petitions of nomination of C. P. Peterson, as aforesaid, he has refused and continues to refuse to certify to Forrest Vaughan, county auditor of said Towner County, the said petition of nomination of said Peterson. His only ground for not doing so is based upon the claim that it was not received by him thirty days before the time of said special election. The auditor of Towner county, said Forrest Vaughan, refused and still refuses to place the name of said Peterson upon the ballot for said special election as candidate for state senator for said legislative district, upon the ground that it has not been certified to him by the secretary of state. The election is a special one; the legislative district in question is composed of only Towner county. The questions presented are:

(1) Must the petition for nomination be filed with the secretary of state ? And

(2) Must they be filed with the secretary of state thirty days prior to the date of the special elections ?

(3) May the petition be filed by mailing it to the secretary of state by duly registered letter, and is that a due presentation of it for filing ?

We will discuss these questions together. As they are so closely related there is no need of a separate analysis of each question.

Considerable has been said by the parties to this proceeding with reference to certain provisions of the primary law. It might clarify matters to state from the very beginning that provisions of the primary law have no application to the questions confronting us, excepting in so far as it recognizes, in case of special election such as this, § 501, Rev. Codes 1899 (which was § 5 of the Law of 1891, and other provisions of law referred to in § 501), relative to the method of making nominations of candidates to be voted for at a special election.

Section 973, Comp. Laws 1913 (which was formerly § 8 of the [631]*631Election Law of 1891) has no application to a special election; that has reference, and is applicable only in a general election. The same is true of § 974 (which was § 9 of the 1891 Law).

We will subsequently discuss these two sections at greater length. ■ Section 501 provides a method which may be used for nominating a candidate to a public office at a special or general election. This has been repeatedly held and decided by the courts of this state, and there can be no dispute in this regard.

The petition for nomination, provided for in this section, may be filed, and is required to be filed, with the secretary of state in the manner prescribed in § 500 of the Code of 1899.

Section 501 specifically prescribes that the petitions or certificates of nomination shall he so filed. Section 500, so far as it governs the filing of the petition, is specifically made a part of said § 501 by a specific reference thereto.

We have now disposed of the question as to where the-petition or certificate of nomination shall be filed; and we may interpolate that where, under the law which we are discussing, provision is made for the nomination to an office by a petition signed by duly qualified electors, etc., that such petition is of the same force, effect, and character as a certificate of nomination otherwise provided for.

We come now to the discussion of the' question of the time, if any, of the filing the petition with the secretary of state, and the inapplicability of § 973, Comp. Laws 1913 (formerly § 8 of the Laws of 1891). We must now distinguish between a general and a special election.

In the case of state ex rel. Anderson v. Falley, 9 N. D. 464, 83 N. W. 913, it is held that the certificate of nomination must be filed with the secretary of state, not less than thirty days before the election. That was a general election, and the section under consideration was directly applicable to it.

In the case of State ex rel. Miller v. Burnham, 20 N. D. 405, 127 N. W. 504, the election was a general primary election, and the section was also applicable to that situation. Why was it stated in § 973, that the provisions of that section should not apply to special elections? Eor the very reason that, if they were made applicable, it must often happen that no special election could be had.

A special election is brought about by some exigency usually unfore[632]*632seen; for instance, as in the present case, by the death of Honorable Á. S. Gibbons, who, prior to his death, was the incumbent of the office of state senator of the said twenty-second legislative district; so might a vacancy be created in a similar office by resignation, etc. There might often, and there do, arise occasions where it would be necessary, in the public interest, to hold a special election to fill such vacancy, and where it would be necessary to issue the proclamation of election, setting the time thereof, and have the whole election begun and completed in much less time than thirty days.

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Related

State ex rel. Anderson v. Falley
83 N.W. 913 (North Dakota Supreme Court, 1900)
State ex rel. Miller v. Burnham
127 N.W. 504 (North Dakota Supreme Court, 1910)
State ex rel. Burtness v. Hall
163 N.W. 1055 (North Dakota Supreme Court, 1917)

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Bluebook (online)
176 N.W. 117, 43 N.D. 628, 1919 N.D. LEXIS 70, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-peterson-v-hall-nd-1919.