State v. Carroll

106 P. 748, 57 Wash. 202, 1910 Wash. LEXIS 727
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 3, 1910
DocketNo. 8612
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 106 P. 748 (State v. Carroll) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Carroll, 106 P. 748, 57 Wash. 202, 1910 Wash. LEXIS 727 (Wash. 1910).

Opinions

Fullerton, J.

On December 10, 1909, the relator, Godfrey Chealander, filed in the office of the city comptroller of the city of Seattle a written declaration of candidacy, in accordance with the direct primary law, in which he declared himself a candidate for nomination to the office of member of the city council of the city of Seattle for the Tenth ward thereof, to be made at the primary election to be held on February 8, 1910, and requested that his name be printed on the official primary ballot as a candidate of the republican party for that office. The application was regular and sufficient on its face and was accompanied with the statutory fee required of candidates for the office named. The city comptroller, whose duty it is to certify the nominations and direct the printing of the official ballots, refused to recognize the relator as a candidate for the office sought by him, and ordered and directed that, in making up and printing the official ballot, the relator’s name be not included thereon, giving as his reason therefor that the relator was not eligible to the office to which he aspired. The relator, on learning of this action of the comptroller, began mandamus proceedings in the superior court of King county to compel the comptroller to recognize him as a candidate • and to place his name on the ballot.

In response to the writ, the comptroller appeared, whereupon the following facts were stipulated as constituting the grounds for the comptroller’s action, viz: That the relator was on the- day of-, 1908, appointed to the [204]*204office of civil service commissioner in and for the city of Seattle, for the term ending December 31, 1910; that he did not then, nor thereafter, give and file the bond required by the city charter before entering upon the duties of such office, but did, within ten days after his appointment, enter upon such duties and did perform the same from such time until on or about December 1, 1909, when he resigned the office and his resignation was accepted; that the relator became a resident of the city of Seattle in the month of August, 1905, and was never a resident thereof before such time. That the city charter of the city of Seattle provides that all elective and appointive officers of the city shall be citizens of the United States and of the city of Seattle and electors therein, and shall have been residents of the city of Seattle for at least four years prior to the time of their election or appointment, and that “no person elected or appointed to” the office of civil service commissioner of the city “and who has accepted the said office and entered upon the duties thereof, shall ... be eligible to any other office in the city during the term for which he was so elected or appointed.” On the hearing the trial judge ruled that the relator was not entitled to the writ sought, and ordered the proceedings dismissed. The relator prosecutes this appeal.

It is the relator’s first contention that the city comptroller is without warrant to inquire into his eligibility for office; that neither the city charter not the general law confers upon the comptroller that power, and that in consequence when he filed with the comptroller a declaration of candidacy in due form, accompanied with the statutory fee, the comptroller had no other duty than to certify his name as one entitled to be printed on the official ballot; and, he argues, that since the comptroller had no authority to inquire into his eligibility, the courts likewise have no authority to make the inquiry, and will compel the comptroller to properly certify his candidacy so that his name may appear on such official ballot.

[205]*205It is true there is no statute or charter provision of the city of Seattle directing and authorizing the city comptroller to inquire into the eligibility of candidates for office who file the statutory declaration with him, and he would perhaps be guilty of no dereliction of duty if he directed the printing of the names of all such persons on the ballot, but we do not think it follows therefrom that he is precluded from making the inquiry in all cases. The primary law by express terms limits the right to file declarations of candidacy to those persons only “who shall be eligible” to the office sought. This, while it may not require inquiry on the comptroller’s part into the eligibility of candidates, plainly suggests such inquiry, and, when it is remembered that the comptroller has duties to perform in relation to the expenditure of public moneys, indicates that the comptroller has sufficient discretion to compel a candidate whose eligibility is doubtful to resort to his proofs. The argument that this puts too much power into the hands of a ministerial officer is not conclusive. True, the power may be abused by that officer, but so may the filing of declarations of candidacy be abused. Let us suppose that the women of the relator’s ward should become convinced that they were eligible to the office of member of the city council of the city of Seattle, and should tender to the comptroller their declarations of candidacy; must the comptroller file the declarations and place the declarants’ names upon the official ballot? He would know that the very charter under which he acts and under which the declarants sought election declared them ineligible. He would know also that his duties as comptroller require him to conserve the expenditures of the public money; yet, if the relator’s theory be correct, he must, without questioning their rights, certify such declarants as candidates and publish their names upon the election ballots. The law does not require the doing of vain and useless things, even when the doing of them incurs no greater hardship than the mere time and labor expended [206]*206in the doing of the things. But where, as here, the thing involves the useless expenditure of public money, the rule has almost the form of a mandate. This view of the law works no hardship upon the candidate. If the comptroller rules incorrectly, the means for correcting him are open and can be made available without loss of right on the part of the candidate.

The authorities cited by the relator seem to us not to support his contention in its entirety. The case principally relied upon is People ex rel. Eaton v. District Court, 18 Colo. 26, 31 Pac. 339. In that case two sets of nominations, both by conventions purporting to have been held by the same political party, each in apparent conformity to law, were certified to the secretary of state for filing. Protests against the regularity of the one convention by the other were made to the secretary and he decided between them. The defeated contestants thereupon brought a proceeding in mandate to compel their recognition as the regular party nominees. The court decided that neither the secretary nor the courts had power to determine which of the contestants had the better right, and compelled the secretary to certify to both sets of nominees. The contest in this case, it will be observed, was over the right to the party name. It involved no question of eligibility on the part of the several nominees, but merely which of two several sets of nominees were entitled to call themselves by the name of the party each purported to represent. This presents no question which directly affects the state, and since the law did not impose the duty of deciding upon the secretary, the courts might well hold that he had no such power. But the case at bar presents a question in which the state is interested.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
106 P. 748, 57 Wash. 202, 1910 Wash. LEXIS 727, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-carroll-wash-1910.