Wheeler v. Hall

204 P. 231, 188 Cal. 49, 1922 Cal. LEXIS 398
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 30, 1922
DocketS. F. No. 10130.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 204 P. 231 (Wheeler v. Hall) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wheeler v. Hall, 204 P. 231, 188 Cal. 49, 1922 Cal. LEXIS 398 (Cal. 1922).

Opinion

THE COURT.

Petitioner asked a mandate to compel the county clerk to omit from the official ballot to be used at a special election, to be held in the county of Sacramento, for the purpose of electing freeholders to prepare and propose a charter for the government of said county, the names on a certain list of persons offering themselves as candidates for members of said board and claiming to have been nominated for such office in the manner provided by the primary election law. Hpon the hearing the court denied the application, holding the objections made by the petitioner to the proceedings for placing said names on the ballot to be untenable, as follows:

[1] 1. The first objection is that the appointment of verification deputies by the said candidates is invalid because it consisted of one paper signed by all of them, instead *51 of separate papers signed by each for himself alone. The appointment is in the singular number and declares that “I, the undersigned candidate for election to office of board of freeholders . . . hereby appoint the following registered and qualified electors of said county of Sacramento as verification deputies,” etc. According to its grammatical construction this is a several appointment by each candidate of the persons named in the paper as verification deputies. The fact that it is signed by all of the candidates may make it also a joint appointment of them all, but it comes within the terms of the statute by the fact that, in legal effect, it is also a several appointment. In cases where two or more members of such a board or of any similar body are to be elected, we find nothing in the statute that forbids any number of candidates, not exceeding the whole number to be elected, from obtaining their nomination in this manner. This applies to numerous other objections based on the same fact and which will not be further noticed.

[2] 2. The objection that it fails to state the residence of the candidates is met by the fact that the law does not require it.

[3] 3. Another objection is that B. D. Turner’s signature thereto appears as follows: “E. D. Turner, Isleton, California, by Mae E. Allen, his agent and attorney duly authorized.” It must be assumed from this signature that Mae E. Allen had authority to sign Turner’s name to that particular document. There is no provision in the law that forbids this method of signing such appointment, and, as that method of signature is sufficient for contracts, we see no reason why it should not be a sufficient compliance with the law on this subject.

[4] 4. There is no force in the objection that the nomination paper filed in behalf of said candidates is faulty because separate nomination papers were not circulated and signed for each of the candidates, and that a single nomination paper containing all their names should not have been circulated and signed by the voters. There is no provision in the law that forbids several candidates for such an office, not exceeding the whole number to be elected, from having their names inserted in a single nomination paper and cir *52 culating it in that form. We, therefore, hold that it does not render the nomination paper defective.

[5] 5. It is claimed that the name of the office is not properly given in the nomination paper or in the appointment of verification deputies. The office is there designated as “The office of Board of Freeholders.” This particular office is not given a special name in the constitution or in any statute. It obviously must be sufficient for the candidate or voters who sign the nomination paper to designate it by any form of words that will describe it with reasonable certainty. We think the above-quoted phrase is a sufficient description to answer that purpose.

[6] 6. The next objection is in these words: “It was circulated in the city of Sacramento and fails to state that fact,” referring to the several sections of the nomination paper filed in the clerk’s office. Subdivision 3 of section 5 of the direct primary law (DBering’s Supp. 1917-19, p. 993) provides that each section of a nomination paper “shall bear the name of the city or town, if any, and also the name of the county, or city and county, in which it is circulated, and only qualified electors of such county . . . shall be competent to sign such section.” It does not require that the paper shall “state” that it was circulated in the city, town, or county named, but only that it shall “bear the name” of such city, town, or county. If the name was inserted in the caption or indorsed on the back of the nomination paper, it would substantially comply with this provision. The provision was evidently intended for the convenience of the county clerk when he compares the paper with the affidavit of registration and certifies as to the genuineness of the signatures, as required in subdivision 4 of section 5. He might perhaps at that time refuse to compare or certify to a paper not so complying with the law. But there being no allegation to the contrary, we must presume that the papers complied with the law in this particular in the manner suggested and that the clerk had made the certificate that the signatures counted by him are “sufficient.” The defect, if any there be, is not shown and the objection as made is not good.

[7] 7. The next objection to be noticed is that the affidavits of the verification deputies are sworn to before the *53 aforesaid Mae E. Allen, who was the attorney in fact signing the name of E. D. Turner to the appointment of such deputies. The petitioner insists that the fact that she signed his name and was his attorney in fact in some manner disqualifies her for administering an oath to any of the verification deputies. We are unable to see how that fact can in any way operate to affect her official act as notary public.

[8] 8. It is objected that the affidavits of the several candidates do not comply with the provisions of subdivision 4 of section 5 of said primary law. That requirement is that each candidate “shall file ... his affidavit, stating his residence, the street and number, if any; his election precinct; that he is a qualified elector in the election precinct in which he resides; the name of the office for which he is a candidate; that he will not before said primary election withdraw as a candidate for nomination, and that, if nominated, he will accept such nomination and not withdraw and that he will qualify as such officer if nominated and elected.” The constitution authorizing the framing of charters for county government provides that the board of supervisors may order the holding of a special election for the purpose of electing the board of freeholders, “which said special election shall be held not less than twenty nor more than sixty days after the adoption of the ordinance” directing the holding of such election. (Art. XI, see. 7y2.) The provision of the primary election law (subd. 4, see. 5) aforesaid requires that the affidavit there prescribed shall be filed by the candidate not later than the twenty-fifth day prior to the primary election. Section 1188 of the Political.

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Bluebook (online)
204 P. 231, 188 Cal. 49, 1922 Cal. LEXIS 398, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wheeler-v-hall-cal-1922.