Westerman v. Mims

227 S.W. 178, 111 Tex. 29, 1921 Tex. LEXIS 57
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 5, 1921
DocketNo. 3386.
StatusPublished
Cited by88 cases

This text of 227 S.W. 178 (Westerman v. Mims) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Westerman v. Mims, 227 S.W. 178, 111 Tex. 29, 1921 Tex. LEXIS 57 (Tex. 1921).

Opinions

The court,

per curiam,

granting relators leave to file their petition for mandamus, Mr. Chief Justice PHILLIPS delivered the following dissenting opinion.

The purpose of this proceeding is the issuance of a mandamus by this Court requiring the Secretary of State to direct the printing of the name of Aubrey Fuller upon the official ballot for the general election in November in Galveston County, as an independent candidate for District Judge of the Fifty-sixth District. Mr. Fuller, it is revealed by the petition, voted in the Democratic primary held in the county in July, in which Hon. Robert G. Street was the successful candidate for the nomination for the same office, and subscribed to the statutory pledge to support the nominees of the primary.

The right to the mandamus is based upon the holding of the majority of this Court in the Woman Suffrage Case (Koy v. Schneider, 110 Texas, 369, 218 S. W., 479), that notwithstanding the statute requiring a voter in a party primary to agree that he will support the nominees of the primary, he is under no legal obligation to do so, and may vote as he chooses in the general election. I entered my emphatic dissent from that decision, and as emphatically dissent from its application here.

The chief design of our laws governing primary elections is to protect the integrity of a party nomination. If the primary binds nobody, if one who participates in it and subjects himself to the statutory pledge and its corresponding statutory obligation, is at liberty to repudiate its whole purpose and result, and not only may vote as he pleases in the general election, but as an independent candidate in *34 such election may legally oppose one of its nominees, the primary is a farce and our statutes governing the subject are but empty pronouncements. Such is not my view of the law.

The relators, in my opinion, show no right to a mandamus and this motion should be refused.

Delivered October 13, 1920.

Mr. Justice GREENWOOD

delivered the opinion of the court.

The relators seek by mandamus to compel the respondent, Secretary of State, to instruct the County Clerk of Galveston County to have the name of respondent, Aubrey Fuller, printed in the independent column, under the title of Judge of the 56th Judicial District, on the official ballot in that county, at the general election on November 2nd, 1920.

It was averred and admitted that the respondent Fuller participated and voted in the democratic primary in Galveston County, on July 24, 1920, at which the respondent Robert G. Street was a candidate and was nominated for Judge of the 56th Judicial District; that the official primary ballot had printed on it the words: “I am a democrat and pledge myself to support the nominees of the primary;” that the American Party of Galveston County nominated respondent Fuller, on July 31st, 1920, as a candidate for Judge of the 56th Judicial District; that on October 2, 1920, he filed with the County Clerk of Galveston County a declination of the nomination; that on August 21st, 1920, the relators presented and delivered to the respondent Secretary of State their written application, requesting that the name of respondent Fuller be printed on the official ballot at the general election in Galveston County, as an independent candidate for Judge of the 56th Judicial District; that relators were all qualified voters, constituting more than three per cent, of the votes cast in the county in the general election of 1918; that none of the relators signing the application participated in a primary which nominated a candidate for said office, and that the application was verified by the statutory affidavits of each relator; that on July 24th, 1920, respondent Fuller filed with the Secretary of State his written consent to become an independent candidate for Judge of the 56th Judicial District; that respondent Fuller was a citizen and a qualified voter of the County of Galveston and State of Texas, was more than twenty-five years of age, was a citizen of the United States; and, that he had been a practicing attorney in the State of Texas and in Galveston County for more than four years, had resided in Galveston County for more than two years next preceding November 2, 1920, and now resides in said county, of which he has been an actual, bona-fide citizen for more than six months.

The contention of the relators is that since the application of relators and the consent of respondent Fuller conformed to the requirements of *35 articles 3164, 3165 and 3166 of the Revised Statutes, it became the duty, enforceable by mandamus, of the Secretary of State, under article 3167, to issue his instructions to the county clerk, directing that the name of respondent Fuller be printed in the independent column of the official ballot.

On the other hand, the respondents, save Fuller, contend: first, that relators show no such interest as authorizes them to maintain this proceeding; second, that respondent Fuller’s nomination, on July 31, 1920, by the American Party for the office of Judge of the 56th Judicial District, rendered him ineligible to become an independent candidate, at the time relators’ application was presented and for more than thirty days after July 24, 1920, the date of the primary election, and that the subsequent declination of the nomination by Fuller was ineffectual to render him eligible to become an independent candidate; and, third, that relators were not entitled to maintain this suit by reason of respondent Fuller’s participation in the democratic primary at which respondent Street was nominated.

It is clear to us that if this suit could be maintained by respondent Fuller it can likewise be maintained by relators. The objection that respondent Fuller is alone affected by the action of the Secretary of State is not tenable. The right asserted by relators is to present an independent candidate, designated by themselves, for the consideration of each voter through the official printed ballot. Such a right is conferred by statute on certain groups of qualified voters, under certain conditions. The precise question to be determined is whether the conditions exist which entitle relators, as such a group, to enforce by mandamus the right stated. The statement of the question is sufficient to disclose the interest of relators and their privilege to have the question adjudicated, notwithstanding respondent Fuller may not also join as relator in seeking the adjudication.

Article 2970 of the Revised Statutes forbids the name of any candidate appearing more than once upon the official ballot, except as a candidate for two or more offices permitted by the Constitution to be held by the same person. Article 3172 authorizes a nominee for other than city offices to “decline and annul” his nomination by delivering to the officer with whom the certificate of his nomination is filed, twenty days before the election, a written declaration of his declination, signed before some officer authorized to take acknowledgments. While article 2970 warranted the Secretary of State to refuse to issue instructions for the printing of respondent Fuller’s name on the official ballot as an independent candidate, during the time he was the nominee of the American Party, yet that nomination was annulled when respondent Fuller declined the nomination in the mode prescribed by article 3172.

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Bluebook (online)
227 S.W. 178, 111 Tex. 29, 1921 Tex. LEXIS 57, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/westerman-v-mims-tex-1921.