Strecker v. Smith

164 P.2d 192, 66 Idaho 593, 1945 Ida. LEXIS 166
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 28, 1945
DocketNo. 7261.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 164 P.2d 192 (Strecker v. Smith) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Strecker v. Smith, 164 P.2d 192, 66 Idaho 593, 1945 Ida. LEXIS 166 (Idaho 1945).

Opinion

GIVENS, J.

Appellant was elected county commissioner of the Second Commissioner District of Bonner County at the general election, November 7, 1944. Respondent contested his election under Section ,33-1701, I.C.A., 1 on the ground that appellant is not eligible under Section 30-602, I.C.A. 2

From 1912 to 1942, except for a period in 1929, appellant lived near Laclede in District No. 2, north of the Pend d’Oreille River. In 1942 his father died and he moved to his parents’ farm, south of the river in District No. 1, where his mother resided, and handled the property for her. October 3, 1944, appellant returned to Laclede in District No. 2.

The admitted circumstances of appellant’s handling, managing and operating his mother’s property; that he voted at a school election in District No. 1, April 21, 1944; that he paid taxes on personal property in District No. 1 in 1944.; and that he made this statement at a public hearing held by the United States Engineers Office of the War Department at Priest River, June 19, 1943, “* * * as stated, I am a farmer living across from Laclede * * evidently caused the learned trial judge to consider appellant an elector of Commissioner District No. 1 at the time of the *595 primary, as the “election” referred to in Section 33-1701, supra.

Section 30-602, supra, first appears in the 1887 Revised Statutes as Section 1746. It is incumbent, therefore, to determine what meaning was attached to the word “elector” at that time and period. (Wright v. Callahan, 61 Ida. 167 at 176, 99 P. (2d) 961.)

An elector was then defined as:

“All male inhabitants over the age of twenty-one years, who are citizens of the United States, and have resided in the Territory four months, and in the county where they offer to vote thirty days, next preceding the day of election, ‘if registered as in this Code provided,’ are entitled to vote at any election for Delegate to Congress, and for Territorial, County, and Precinct officers, except as provided in the next section.” Section 500, 1887 Revised Statutes of Idaho.

Only one election was then authorized, as follows:

“There must be held throughout the Territory, on the ' first Tuesday after the first Monday of November, in the year eighteen hundred and eighty-eight, and in every second year thereafter, an election, to be known as the general election.” Section 465, Revised Statutes of 1887.

At this election there were to be elected “* * * one county commissioner for each of the three districts for each county * * Section 466, Revised Statutes of 1887.

At that time there was no such thing as a primary election such as we have' at the present time, which is a ‘nominating’ not ‘electing’ election. (Section 33-601, I.C.A.; Lansdon v. State Board of Canvassers, 18 Ida. 596 at 606, 111 P. 133.)

The context of Section 33-1701, supra, clearly connotes that ‘election’ in Section 2 refers to the ‘election’ in the first general paragraph, and this means the final determinative selection to the office, not nomination as a candidate. The primary does not result in an “election” to public office, only nomination for a place on the ballot (except for non-partisan judicial positions, Fisher v. Masters, 59 Ida. 366, 83 P. (2d) 212).

*596 The subsequent and present constitutional and statutory qualifications df an elector are not materially different 3 from the first enactments so far as this controversy is concerned, and it would appear conclusive that the qualification required of a county commissioner as being “an elector of the district he represents” was intended by the legislature to apply to the possession of this qualification at the time of the general, not the primary election. (Bradfield v. Avery, 16 Ida. 769 at 776, 102 P. 687.) It will be noted that the qualification for appointment is on a different basis. (Section 57-908,1.C.A. 4

The pertinent findings and conclusions are:

III
“That prior to * * * July, 1942, * * * Smith was an *597 elector of Laclede Precinct; that on or about * * * July, 1942, * * * Smith removed from * * * the second Commissioner District * * * without * * said * District, and established a residence * * * October, 1944, * that such removal * * * was made without * intent * * * to retain his domicile in said Laclede Precinct and * * * to return to, or to retain his rights as an elector of, said Laclede Precinct.”
IV
“That, prior to the * * * primary election * * * in * *, 1944, * * Smith filed his declaration of candidacy for the office of County Commissioner for the Second Commissioner District * *, in which * * he certified * he possessed the legal qualifications to fill said office. That, at the time * * * of the * * primary * * * Smith was not a resident within, nor an elector within, the Second Commissioner District * * *.”
CONCLUSIONS OF LAW
I
“That Homer Smith was not entitled to become a candidate for said office at the primary election held in June, 1944, nor a candidate at the general election next following said primary.”
II
“That the purported election of * * * Smith as Commissioner * * *, on the 7th day of November, 1944, should be held to be null and void by reason of his disqualification to hold such office, due to his not being an elector of the Second Commissioner District at the date of the holding of the primary election.”

These findings do not negative appellant’s being an elector after his return to Laclede Precinct, October 5, 1944 or on November 7, 1944. It might be that at the time of leaving the district in 1942, he had not intended to retain any domicile in Laclede or to return, but these are not definite findings as to his status upon his return in October, if he then intended to establish his legal residence in District No. 2, because his previous intent or lack of intent would not control. He was not a newcomer as he had twice *598 previously been elected county commissioner from District No. 2. His conduct was consistent with sufficient permanency of resumed residential intent to constitute him an elector. (MacLeod v. Stelle, 43 Ida. 64 at 72, 249 P. 254.)

The statute only requires residence for a designated length of time, but conceding intent to remain is essential, and that such intent being but a state of mind, is to be gleaned from all surrounding facts and circumstances as well as what the individual himself says; nevertheless the only positive and direct evidence with regard to appellant’s intent, so far as essential, at the time he resumed his actual physical residence in District No.

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Bluebook (online)
164 P.2d 192, 66 Idaho 593, 1945 Ida. LEXIS 166, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/strecker-v-smith-idaho-1945.