State ex rel. Riggs v. Jaquis

11 Ohio Cir. Dec. 91, 1900 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 383
CourtOhio Circuit Courts
DecidedJuly 7, 1900
StatusPublished

This text of 11 Ohio Cir. Dec. 91 (State ex rel. Riggs v. Jaquis) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Circuit Courts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State ex rel. Riggs v. Jaquis, 11 Ohio Cir. Dec. 91, 1900 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 383 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1900).

Opinion

Parker, J.

The relator avers in his petition that at the annual election held in Lucas county, Ohio, on April 2, 1900, for the election among other officers, of a member of the board of education for district No. 2, village of Maumee, in Waynesfield township, Lucas county, Ohio, he was duly elected for the term of three years, beginning with the third Monday in April, 1900, and that he was duly qualified and is lawfully entitled to exercise the powers and duties of the office for that term, but that the defendant, Elijah Lee Jaquis, has usurped and unlawfully holds and exercises said office and excludes the relator therefrom. Wherefore he prays that Jaquis may be ousted and he may be adjudged entitled to said office.

It stands unquestioned upon the evidence that Riggs was elected, having received a majority of votes cast for said office at said election. Some question is made as to whether the election was held upon the right day; whether it is not a special village district in which the election was not required to be held on another day; but we have concluded, — as announced [92]*92upon the hearing — that in this controversy between these parties respectively claiming the office, we will not consider that question, it appearing that this has been regarded as a village school district for a great many years, and that all the present membership of the board have been elected under the law providing for the 'election of members of boards of education of village school districts. What we might do, if a proceeding were instituted on behalf of the public by the proper public authorities, to question on that ground the right of any of these member? of the board of education to exercise their office, we need not say, but, as between these individuals, we do not feel that we would be justified in giving that question consideration.

The defendant claims a right to the office because he was elected thereto some three years ago, and is the member of the board that Riggs was elected to succeed; he claims the right to occupy the office and hold over until his successor is duly elected and qualified, and says that Riggs has not been duly elected and qualified and is not entitled to the office1 because he has failed to file certain statements of expenses in procuring his nomination and election to the office. '

What is known as the Garfield law, or the corrupt practices act, requires, among other things, that a person nominated to any office created by the constitution or laws of this state to be filled by popular election (and this we find is an office under the laws of the state to be filled by popular election), shall, within ten days after his nomination, file certain statements, under oath, of all his expenses which he has sustained in procuring the nomination, and such statement shall set forth in detail each and all sums of money and other things of value, contributed, disbursed, expended or promised by him, and (to the best of his knowledge and belief) by any other person or persons with his procurement in his behalf wholly or in part endeavoring to secure or in any way in connection with his nomination to such office or place; in the statute the form which is to be observed in making this statement is given. And there is also a like provision with respect to the expenses incident to the election.

These statements are to be made out in writing and filed with the clerk of the county in which the candidate resides, and a duplicate thereof with the board, officer or officers if any, empowered by law to issue the certificate of election to such office or place. The provisions with respect to the nomination and election are substantially alike. Section 5 of this act (sec. 3022-5, Rev. Stab, provides that any person failing to comply with the provisions of the third section (which is in regard to the nomination expenses), or with the provisions of the fourth section (which is in regard to the election expenses) of this act, shall be liable to a fine not exceeding one thousand dollars, to be recovered with costs, in an action brought in the name of the state by the attorney general or by the prosecuting attorney of the county of the candidate's residence, the amount of said fine to be fixed within siich limits by the jury, and to’be paid into the school fund of said county. /

It appears that Riggs made out such stataments and filed them, but it is said that he did not file them within ten days after the nomination and election respectively, and that therefore he has forfeited his right to the office. The nomination was made upon March 15. The ten days within which he should have filed his expense account with respect to such nomination Expired on March 25. The relator testifies, and about this he is not contradicted, that he made out statements of his nomina[93]*93tion expenses some four or five days before the expiration of this ten days, perhaps along about March 20 ; that he turned the papers over to a notary public, before whom he made the oath required by the statute, and desired and directed such notary to file them where the law required them to be filed. The date appearing upon this account is March 27, two days after the expiration of ten days. The same date appears upon the certificate of the notary public to the affidavit, and Mr. Riggs testifies that these dates were not placed there by himself, and that he has no knowledge of their being placed there, the papers having no dates upon them when he made oath thereto, and that they were not certified to or dated by the notary public in his presence. As to when the papers' were actualij' filed he had no knowledge.

Whether such paper is required to be filed with the clerk of the board ot education we do not find it necessary to inquire. The statement which was filed with the county clerk has upon it a very indistinct mark made by the filing stamp. One witness testified that that mark indicates March 25; .but the court, upon careful inspection, is unable to determine the date when that was filed, but from the circumstances, including the date appearing upon the account itself and the date affixed to the certificate of the notary public, we conclude it was not filed before March 27. It appears that the nomination paper filed with the clerk of the board of education was filed March 27, 1900. The certificate of filing upon its back shows that.

The election was held on April 2, so that the statements of election expenses were due to be filed upon April 12. It is unquestioned that such statement was filed with the county clerk- upon April 12. A copy of such statement was mailed at the city of Toledo in an envelope addressed to Walter Richardson, village clerk, at Maumee, Ohio. From the marks upon the envelope, it appears that it was mailed on April 12, at 7 o’clock p. m. ; that it reached the village of Maumee at 8 o’clock A. m. on the 18th, and Mr. Richardson endorsed upon the back of the envelope: “Received 4 — 13,1900,” which he says means April 13, 1900; and on the afternoon of that day he caused the paper to be handed, or in some way put into the custody of the clerk - of the board of education, who testifies that that was the first time he had it in his possession. It thus appears that a statement of the expenses incident to his nomination was not filed within tén days of the time of the nomination, with either officer, and that a statement with respect to the expenses incident to the election was not filed with the clerk of the village board of education until after the expiration of ten days succeeding the election.

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Bluebook (online)
11 Ohio Cir. Dec. 91, 1900 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 383, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-riggs-v-jaquis-ohiocirct-1900.