Stephenson v. Boards of Election Commissioners

42 L.R.A. 214, 118 Mich. 396
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 25, 1898
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 42 L.R.A. 214 (Stephenson v. Boards of Election Commissioners) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stephenson v. Boards of Election Commissioners, 42 L.R.A. 214, 118 Mich. 396 (Mich. 1898).

Opinion

Hooker, J.

The relator asks a mandamus to compel the several boards of election commissioners of the Twelfth congressional district to place the name of the relator upon the Republican tickets throughout the district as candidate for Congress, to the exclusion of the name of Carlos D. Shelden, each claiming to be the nominee of the regularly called convention of the Republican party. The record shows that a congressional convention was called, and the delegates assembled. It is admitted to have been a regularly called convention, and therefore its nominee, if ascertainable, is lawfully entitled to have his name printed upon the ticket.

At the appointed time a large number of persons assembled. Previous to its meeting, George A. Newett, the chairman of the congressional committee, assembled his committee, which, by á vote of three for and two against the proposition, decided that the committee should ascertain in advance what persons were lawful delegates from those counties where there were contesting delegations, and that such persons, and such only, should be permitted to participate in the preliminary work of organizing the convention. For the purposes of this opinion it is sufficient to say that two counties — Dickinson and Marquette — had contesting delegations, and it appears to be admitted that, leaving these counties out, there were 35 delegates who favored'the nomination of Mr. Shelden, and 31 who supported the relator. Here, then, was one assembly, in which 87 delegates were entitled to seats, and there were 66 present who are conceded to have been entitled to seats. The chairman of the committee called the convention to order, and, while reading or about to read the call for the convention, a delegate whose right to a seat was unquestioned arose and said, “I nominate Chase Osborn for chairman,” and himself put the question, and declared it carried; whereupon Osborn, also a delegate whose right to a seat is undisputed, appeared upon the platform, and attempted to preside over the convention; and, as appears by the proceedings of the convention set up in the return [398]*398of the respondents and affidavits accompanying the same, the business was proceeded with, credentials examined and passed upon, and Carlos D. Shelden nominated,- when the convention, or that portion which had not declined to take part in these proceedings, adjourned sine die, and its members left the hall. Meantime Mr. Newett, who occupied the same stage, had been elected chairman by a faction of the assembly, a secretary chosen, and committee on credentials appointed, who, after the lapse of a couple of hours, and therefore after the adjournment of the other faction, made a report seating delegations favorable to the relator, and, this being adopted, this faction nominated the relator, and adjourned sine die. The officers of each faction filed certificates of nomination with the several boards of election commissioners, and, while we do not find it explicitly so stated, it is perhaps inferable that in some cases these boards refuse to place relator’s name upon the ballot, and that others are disposed to do so, to the exclusion of Mr. Shelden.

The relator contends that it was the right and duty of the chairman, acting under the direction of a majority of ' the committee, to preside over the assembly until the convention should be organized, and to determine who were entitled to vote in effecting such organization, and that the organization of a meeting through the election of Mr. Osborn as chairman was irregular and void, and that the organization perfected by the other faction was the only valid organization, and therefore the only “regularly called convention” whose nominee the law permits to have a place upon the ballot. Political conventions are deliberative bodies, supposed to be made up of representatives of a political party, who assemble at the appointed time and place for the purpose of holding the convention. The delegates usually come armed with something in the nature of credentials which tend to show that they are there by authority; and it has usually been supposed that the assembly itself passes upon the authenticity and sufficiency of such credentials, and it has been quite common [399]*399for conventions to admit bystanders from an unrepresented district to seats as representatives of tbeir locality, although without other authority. While it has doubtless been the common practice for chairmen of political committees to use the gavel to procure order and silence, to read the call, and then to ask the assembly its further will or pleasure, and put motions until a temporary chairman is chosen, we have not understood it to be the province of the chairman to do more, or so much even, if against the will of the assembly. Certainly, we know of no rule of law authorizing it. The assembly is a law unto itself, and has uniformly been the judge of the qualification of its own members, and its decision final.

The contention of the relator seems to be based upon the assumption that the assembly cannot be trusted to faithfully discharge the duty of sifting out the disqualified, and that for that reason there must be some outside authority which shall have power to determine what individual members of the assembly are prima facie authorized delegates, and what are not, to the end that the convention shall be legally organized; and the claim that party custom has conferred that power upon the committee. It is said that outsiders may capture the convention under any other rule, or that enough contesting delegates may be sent to control the assembly, thus frustrating the will and thwarting the intentions of the constituency. To this the opposition retorts that the relator’s theory is a still better scheme for perpetrating fraud and thwarting the popular will, placing it within the power of a majority of a committee to recognize the partisans of a particular candidate to an extent sufficient to control the organization and the seating of delegates, thereby making his nomination sure and the convention a farce. These difficulties do not now present themselves for the first time. From our earliest recollection party politics has always been a matter of shrewdness and management, not always defensible; yet the people have been left to deal with the difficulties as they arise. It is not to be supposed that com[400]*400mittees on credentials, however fairly selected, have always dealt justly; and, no doubt, expediency or political exigency has governed their action, to the exclusion of abstract justice. The remedy has usually been either a bolt on the part of the dissatisfied, and the selection of an opposition candidate within the party, or a refusal by the electors to support the nominee; and the courts have been careful not to interfere with the application of these remedies, which have usually been found adequate.

Nothing is more certain than that, when this assembly met, it constituted what the law calls “a regularly called convention; ” and, had there been no split, the right of its nominee to a place upon the ticket could not have been successfully questioned upon the ground that it was organized upon the motion of Hambitzer, instead of under the leadership of Newett. But it did split; and we must do one of two things, viz.: Either follow the precedents, and say that we will not decide between the rival factions, or ourselves decide who were the lawfully elected delegates to the convention. To do this, we might be called upon to investigate every ward or township caucus and county convention, held in the two disputed counties, and, had either side asked it, throughout the district.

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Bluebook (online)
42 L.R.A. 214, 118 Mich. 396, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stephenson-v-boards-of-election-commissioners-mich-1898.