195 S.W.2d 634 | Ark. | 1946
The question presented on this appeal is that of the constitutionality of Act 107 of the Acts of 1945, p. 253, entitled: "AN ACT Providing for Separate Primaries for the Selection, of Candidates for Federal Offices, and for Other Purposes."
The Act in its entirety reads as follows:
"Section 1. Separate primaries, preferential and run-off; for the selection of candidates for federal offices, including those of United States Senators and Representatives, shall be held respectively on the third Tuesday in July and the first Tuesday in August preceding the general election, and they shall be governed by the primary election laws of the state as far as applicable. No. citizen *300 shall be denied the right to vote in any primary election for the selection of federal offices on any ground prohibited by the Fifteenth Amendment to the Federal Constitution.
"Section 2. The costs of primary elections for the selection of candidates for federal offices shall be borne by the several counties in which the election is held.
"Section 3. This act is cumulative to Act 238 of 1943 and to all other existing laws governing primary elections not inconsistent with it, and it shall take effect and be in force from and after passage."
We are, of course, not concerned with the wisdom or policy of the legislation as this is a question solely for the General Assembly. We may consider only the power of the General Assembly to enact the legislation. In the case of Eagle v. Beard,
The legislation is not an innovation in this state. Section 8 of art. III of the Constitution reads: "The general elections shall be held biennially on the first Monday of September, but the General assembly may, by law, fix a different date." The elections, state and federal, were not consolidated until the adoption of Initiated Act No. 2, at the 1926 general election; thus for more than half a century these elections were separate.
In a recent issue of the Law School Bulletin of the University of Arkansas, there appears an article by the Dean of the Law School criticizing the act, but he does not express the opinion that the legislation is unconstitutional. The last sentence of 1 of the act makes certain the fact that the act is not violative of the 15th Amendment to the federal constitution.
The decree from which is this appeal recites the reasons inducing the court below to hold the act *301 unconstitutional, one of these being that the act is so indefinite that its enforcement is not possible. Read by itself alone, this would be true, but not so when read in conjunction with legislation in force when it was passed, as the act expressly recites that it is cumulative to all other existing laws governing primary elections.
The first attempt to legalize primary elections in this state was made by the passage of Act CLIV, of the Acts of 1895, p. 240. By this act it was provided that primary elections might be made legal elections, if and when the county committees of the respective parties so ordered. By subsequent legislation, which we find it unnecessary to review, all primary elections are made legal elections. The present state of the law is that political parties are not required to hold primary elections to nominate candidates for office. They may do so or not, as the governing authorities of the parties may direct; but if a primary election is held, that election is a legal election, and must be held in conformity with the applicable laws of the state.
The petitions out of which this litigation arose were filed by two persons who are candidates for the Democratic nomination for Congress in the Fourth and Fifth Districts of the state respectively, and they allege invalidity of Act 107 and seek by mandamus to require the proper parties of the Democratic party to certify their names as candidates to be placed on the ballot, ignoring Act 107. They allege they have complied with all the laws of the state and the rules of the Democratic party which authorized them to become candidates for such nominations. They allege various reasons why Act 107 should be declared unconstitutional. In the decree of the court below awarding the relief prayed, there is an enumeration of the reasons inducing the court to declare Act 107 invalid and we consider them in their order.
First. That the act is void because of its indefiniteness. That objection has already been considered and disposed of.
Second. It violates 1 of Amendment 14 to the Federal Constitution, in that it denies petitioners the equal *302 protection of the law. This objection may be answered by saying that Act 107 does not accord to any other person any right which is denied them.
Third. It violates 18 of art. II, and 2 of art. III, and 28 of art. VII, and 5 of art. XII of the Constitution of the State.
Section 18 of art. II provides that the General Assembly shall not grant to any citizen or class of citizens, privileges or immunities which, upon the same terms, shall not equally belong to all citizens. It is not alleged by petitioners, or either of them, that any other person has been granted a right to become a candidate, at what we will call the Congressional primary, which has been denied them.
Section 2 of art. III provides that elections shall be free and equal, and that no power, civil or military, shall ever interfere to prevent the free exercise of the right of suffrage. It is not alleged in what respect this has been done, and we find nothing in the act which does so. On the contrary, this act, when read in connection with other acts on the subject, under which the Congressional Primary election will be held, manifests the purpose to make the election free and equal and to prevent fraud or other abuses in holding it.
Section 5 of art. XII prohibits any county, city, town or other municipality from appropriating any money for, or lending its credit to any corporation, association, institution or individual. Act 107 does not authorize such action. What it does do is to impose upon counties the expense of holding a legal election, and of this more will be said in another connection.
Section 28 of art. VII defines the jurisdiction of the county courts, and gives them jurisdiction of matters of "local concern" of their respective counties. There is nothing about this act involving the jurisdiction of the county court, except indeed to order the payment of the expenses of the election for which the act provides. In the case of Little Rock v. N. Little Rock,
Nor do we think the county court has been given jurisdiction to permit, or prohibit, the holding of an election which the General Assembly has said should be held.
Another objection to the act, and the one which has given us the most concern, is that provision imposing the expenses of the elections upon the counties in which they are to be held. It is alleged by one of the petitioners that only one county in his congressional district has made an appropriation to pay the expenses of the election, and it is alleged by the other petitioner that no county in his district has made such appropriation. It is argued that the congressional primary election cannot and will not be held because no provision is found in the act for the payment of the expenses of the election, except by the counties themselves, and that this is an expense which may not be imposed upon the counties.
The act does provide for the payment of the expenses of the election, its provision being that the counties shall pay the expense. Was it beyond the power of the General Assembly to so enact?
This question would be fraught with more difficulty than it is, but for the recent decision of the Supreme Court of the United States in the case of Smith v. Allwright,
The General Assembly of the State of Texas had passed what was called a presidential primary act which impose the cost of the primary election there provided for upon the counties of the state. It was held by the Supreme Court of Texas in the case of Waples v. Marrast
Laboring under the same impression, this court in the case of Robinson v. Holman,
As pointed out by Prof. Leflar in his article above referred to, there can be no doubt that the case of Smith v. Allwright, supra, has overruled this case.
In this Smith v. Allwright case, the Supreme Court reviewed the laws of Texas relating to primary elections saying "despite Texas' decision that the exclusion (of the negro) is produced by private or party action" that the federal courts must appraise the facts leading to that *305
The court's summary of the effect of the Texas primary election laws was as follows: "We think that this statutory system for the selection of party nominees for inclusion on the general election ballot makes the party which is required to follow these legislative directions an agency of the state in so far as it determines the participants in a primary election. The party takes its character as a state agency from the duties imposed upon it by state statutes; the duties do not become matters of private law because they are performed by a political party."
To reach this conclusion it was necessary, of course, to disregard the decision of the Supreme Court of Texas interpreting the primary election laws of that state, and also to overrule its own decision in the case of Grovey v. Townsend,
At 156, chapter entitled "Elections," 18 Am.Jur., 285 it is said: "It is a rule in some jurisdictions that a primary election to select candidates of the various political parties for public office is not a public purpose for which taxes may be levied or public revenues expended." The only case cited to sustain that text is that of Waples v. Marrast, which was in effect overruled by the Smith v. Allwright case, supra. And, inasmuch as that Texas case was predicated upon the proposition that the primary election was a private or party and not a public purpose, it cannot now be regarded as applicable here. But the text from which we have just quoted proceeds to say: "In other states, however, the view is taken that primaries are not the private affairs of the political parties, but constitute a part of the election machinery of the state, so that the payment of the expenses thereof by the state, or a political subdivision, does not constitute an expenditure of public money for other than a public purpose." Cases are cited in the note to sustain that view. See, also, 20 C.J.S. 1056.
We consider finally the objection that the congressional primary will not be held because the quorum courts have made no provision for the payment of the expenses *306 of the election. Several answers may be made to this objection, the first being that this failure, if true, does not affect the constitutionality of the act. But inasmuch as the power and duty of the courts to pay these expenses is involved, and is one of the reasons assigned for holding the act invalid, we proceed to decide that question.
In the first place, no specific appropriation by the quorum court is required to authorize the county to pay these expenses. The act has imposed this expense upon the counties and it will be their duty to discharge it.
In holding in the case of Pearson v. State,
Opposing the view that such an expense may be imposed upon the county, we are cited the case of State v. Craighead County,
But the holding of an election in a county is a matter of vital concern to the citizens of the county, who otherwise *307 would be deprived of their right to participate in the election of their public officials. A county election is a public and a county purpose and a very important one, and if so the General Assembly has the power to impose its cost upon the county holding the election. Had the state seen proper to do so, it might have assumed the entire cost of the election. Indeed the primary election law of the State of Louisiana, 2682.39, chapter, Election, La. General Statutes, apportions the cost of such elections between the state, parish and the towns of the state, and the candidates. If the right exists to assess any of the cost against the parish, or county, all costs might have been so assessed.
The cases of Crawford County v. City of Van Buren,
But for the fact that it would protract and extend an opinion already too long, many acts of the General *308 Assembly might be cited which have imposed various duties upon the counties of the state, the expenses of which were to be paid by the counties.
Moreover, if an appropriation were required before the counties were liable for the expenses of the election, we must assume that a sufficient appropriation was made, for so it would have been if the quorum court in its sessions had followed the provision of 2527 of Pope's Digest, which provides for the proceedings and order of business of these courts.
The sixth paragraph of this section taken from Act 301 of the Acts of 1909 (to which act reference was made in an opinion presently to be referred to), as amended by Act 112 of the Acts of 1937, provides the order in which, and the purpose for which appropriations may be made, and makes no specific reference to the expenses of holding elections of any kind. But the seventh paragraph of this section reads "to defray such other expenses of county government as are allowed by the laws of this state." This is in the nature of a "lest we forget" provision and covers any and all other expenses of the county government fixed by the laws of the state, and though no specific reference is made to elections, these expenses have always been paid and the obligation and power to pay them has never been questioned. Primary elections are legal elections and obligation to pay the expenses thereof has been imposed upon the counties by Act 107.
The case of State, Use Prairie County, v. Leathem Co.,
It follows from what we have said that the act is constitutional and that the counties are liable for the expenses of the election. The decree of the court below will therefore be reversed and the cause dismissed.