State Ex Rel. Smith v. Pride

54 S.E.2d 31, 132 W. Va. 801, 1949 W. Va. LEXIS 81
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedMay 27, 1949
Docket10169
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 54 S.E.2d 31 (State Ex Rel. Smith v. Pride) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia 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. Smith v. Pride, 54 S.E.2d 31, 132 W. Va. 801, 1949 W. Va. LEXIS 81 (W. Va. 1949).

Opinions

Kenna, Judge :

This mandamus proceeding was instituted in this Court by the State of West Virginia at the relation of C. W. Smith, Paul M. Halstead, W. B. Curry, C. P. Lewis, Rex Pruden, Harry A. White, E. L. Kinkaid, George E. Byrn-side, Orville Jarrett, James P. Barton, C. D. Hopkins, C. J. Flippen, J. E. Carter and R. F. Lipscomb against George W. Pride, Mayor of the City of St. Albans, West Virginia, Gregory L. Funk, Averill Ramsey, W. L. O’Neal, Frank E. Oliver, E. H. McClintock, Estol T. Carte, Councilmen of the City of St. Albans, West Virginia, O. N. Slater, Clerk of the City of St. Albans, West Virginia, and The City of St. Albans, West Virginia, a municipal corporation, by the filing, on May 17, of their petition praying that the named respondents be required to place relators’ names upon the official ballot for the municipal election in the City of St. Albans to be held on the 7th of June, 1949, as the Democratic nominees, respectively, for mayor and membership of the city council of that municipality. The petition sets out Section 21 of the charter of the City of St. Albans regularly adopted at a general election held in that city in January, 1948, after it was prepared and drafted by a charter board of seven members elected for *803 that purpose. A certified copy of the St. Albans charter is filed with the petition as “Petitioners’ and Relators’ Exhibit No. 3”. Section 21 thereof reads as follows:

“Section 21. New Parties”
“A new party may place candidate for any office upon the ballot at the general election by filing a petition therefor, signed by at least ten (10%) percent of the registered voters on the date of the last preceding regular municipal election, and containing the names of the candidates for such offices, with the Clerk at least twenty days prior to the date set for such general election, and paying the proper filing fees therefor. If any candidate of such new party for the office of Mayor receives more than ten percent of the votes cast for all candidates for his office, the new party shall be established as a qualified political party at the next municipal election. If the candidate for Mayor of any party fails to poll more than ten percent of the votes cast for all candidates for that office at any general election, such party shall be dropped from the ballot at the next municipal election, unless placed on the ballot by petition as a new party.”

Relators’ petition alleges that a petition of nomination duly signed by at least ten per cent of all of the registered voters as required by Section 21 of the city charter was filed with C. N. Slater, Clerk of the City of St. Albans, on April 28, 1949, more than twenty days prior to the city election, and that each of the relators is and was properly qualified to occupy the office for which the nominating petition sought to nominate him, but that on May 13,1949, the Common Council of the City of St. Albans adopted a resolution declining to place the names of the relators upon the ballot to be used in the city election to be held June 7,1949, because said petitioners did not comply with the laws of the State of West Virginia and the sections of the charter of the City of St. Albans relating to elections. The position of the relators is that they have fully complied with Section 21 of the charter and therefore that *804 the refusal of the common council to place their names upon the ballot is the refusal to perform a ministerial duty that entitles them to a peremptory writ requiring that duty to be carried out.

The respondents in their answer allege that Section 19 of the charter of the City of St. Albans provides: “elections shall be conducted under the statutes of the State of West Virginia. * * and that that provision of the charter is in compliance with Code, 8A-3-7, which vests in municipalities the right of electing as to whether the laws of the State of West Virginia shall govern the conduct of their municipal elections, or whether they wish to adopt their own specific charter provisions which shall control. The respondents say that the charter of the City of St. Albans provides no machinery under which the city clerk can proceed further after the filing of the petition in his office, and that the only reason for requiring that to be done is in order to carry out the remaining provision of Section 21 to the effect that if candidates nominated by petition receive ten per cent of the votes cast at the ensuing municipal election, the party designation adopted by them shall remain a recognized party in the municipality of St. Albans, so long as it maintains that relative strength. The answer points out that in contrast to the charter of the City of St.. Albans, the applicable statutes of this State (being Code, 3-4-29, 30, and the following article of the same chapter) provide in detail not only the method of nominating by petition, but also the procedure to be followed in placing the names of candidates so nominated upon the ballot.

Certain essential steps are pointed out in the answer, alleged to be supplied by the laws of the State of West Virginia, and completely lacking in the St. Albans charter, in so far as nominations by petition are concerned, including the functions of a board of ballot commissioners. The answer goes further and points out that although not expressly required in Section 21 of the charter, in undertaking to nominate candidates for the city council in the vari *805 ous wards, the nominating petition does not separate its signers as being voters in the wards that the different relators seek to represent, and therefore that it does not appear that ten per cent of the voters in each of the different wards have petitioned to nominate the candidate for council in the respective wards.

The answer also alleges a chain of circumstances to support its contention that it was and is the purpose of the voters of St. Albans to erect a non partisan form of city government. The answer alleges that on April 1, 1947, a charter board for the City of St. Albans was duly and properly elected in accordance with our statutory provisions therefore, and that a draft of the St. Albans charter was submitted to the Attorney General as required by law, and that after a public hearing in November, 1947, the charter was regularly adopted by a vote of the people on January 6, 1948. The answer alleges that in that election there was submitted the alternate proposal to recognize as established parties in its municipal elections either the Democratic and Republican Parties or the Peoples Party and the Citizens Party, and that the people voted not to recognize the Democratic and Republican Parties as their recognized political parties in municipal elections, but instead the Peoples Party and the Citizens Party. The answer argues that it is certainly not the intention of the charter of the City of St. Albans to permit one of the old line parties to run candidates in their municipal election without an opportunity to do likewise to the other old line party.

We do not think there can be much doubt but that the people of the City of St. Albans intended to conduct a municipal election under the laws of the State of West Virginia in so far as applicable. Many of the smaller cities of this State lack the facilities of preparing for and conducting orderly elections.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
54 S.E.2d 31, 132 W. Va. 801, 1949 W. Va. LEXIS 81, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-smith-v-pride-wva-1949.