77 P. 555 | Kan. | 1904
The opinion of the court was delivered by
This is an original proceeding in mandamus by which it is sought to require'the secretary of state to certify to the various county clerks of the counties comprising the second congressional district the name of Henry J. Allen as the republican nominee for congressman from that district. The affidavit
An alternative writ has been issued and an answer has been filed denying its material allegations. The ■defendant, however, by a motion to dismiss the pro•ceeding, which is equivalent to a motion to quash the alternative writ, challenges the jurisdiction of this court to grant the plaintiff any relief, even assuming the facts to be as stated by him. The determination of this preliminary question is the purpose of the .present inquiry.
The statute, the benefit of which is invoked by de
“The certificate of nomination and nomination papers being so filed, and being in apparent conformity with this act, shall be deemed to be valid, unless objection thereto is duly made in writing within three days from the date said papers are filed with the proper officers. Such objections or other questions arising in relation thereto, in the case of nominations of state officers or officers to be elected by the voters of a division less than a state and greater than a county, shall be considered by the secretary of state, auditor of state, and attorney-general, and a decision of a majority of these officers shall be final.”
The constitutionality of this statute was upheld by this court in Miller v. Clark, 62 Kan. 278, 62 Pac. 664, against the very attack now made upon it, supported by substantially the same arguments now urged upon our attention. In the brief of the plaintiff in that case it was said :
‘ ‘ The power attempted to be conferred on the secretary of state, auditor and attorney-general by section 144 of chapter 36, General Statutes of 1899 (Gen. Stat. 1901, §2703), is clearly a judicial one.- These officers belong to the executive branch of the government and judicial power cannot be conferred upon them.”
This contention was held not to be well founded, and we are satisfied with the conclusion there reached. In the opinion the power conferred upon the officers named was described as gwm’-judicial. In Meffert v. Medical Board, 66 Kan. 710, 72 Pac. 247, this term was applied to the functions of the state board of medical registration and examination, which was said not to be a judicial body, although by its determination a physician might be deprived of his means of livelihood. Executive officers are often charged with duties so far judicial in their nature that they
Speaking of the law imposing upon probate judges the duty of issuing permits for the sale of liquor, Justice Brewer said,in Intoxicating-liquor Cases, 25 Kan. 751, 760, 37 Am. Rep. 284:
“It may be conceded that it would be more logical and less objectionable to say that the legislature may create an office with specified duties, and then make the person holding the position of probate judge the incumbent of 'such office, than to hold that certain duties may be cast directly upon the person holding the office of probate judge. But substance is above form. That which may properly be done in one way ought to be upheld, if possible, though done in another way ; and an act of the legislature should be sustained whenever by • any reasonable construction the act can be brought within the scope of the legislative power. If in this case the legislature had created the office of commissioner of licenses, and provided that the probate judge should ex officio be such commissioner, there could be little doubt of the constitutionality of such an act. Substantially the same thing is accomplished by casting upon him the duties named in this act. And having in view the duty of upholding an act of the legislature wherever possible, the past decisions of this court, the general recognition by all departments of the government—executive, legislative, and judicial—of the correctness of such exposition of constitutional limitations, and the*816 ■substance rather than the form of this proceeding, we think the casting of this duty respecting permits upon the person holding the office of probate judge must be adjudged within the power of the legislature."
Applying this reasoning to the present case, it may be said that the legislature, having in mind the necessity of providing for the settling of disputes as to the nominations of political parties in a summary way, has created a special tribunal for that purpose, having a membership of three ; that, instead of providing for the appointment or election of the members of such board, it has'enacted that it shall be made up of the individuals who at the time hold the offices of secretary of state, auditor of state, and attorney-general. These officers, in exercising the duties devolved upon them by this statute, do not, in any sense important to this discussion, act in their respective capacities of secretary of state, auditor, and attorney-general, and would not in such capacities be chargeable with any dereliction of which they might be guilty as members of such tribunal. (The State, ex rel., v. Brown, Probate Judge, 35 Kan. 167, 10 Pac. 594.) Other officers, instead of those selected, might have been designated for the purpose with equal propriety. They were not chosen for any supposed connection between their respective departments and the matters to come' before the new board. It is true that the secretary of state happens to be the officer who has custody of the certificates of nomination and who is required to transmit, to the county clerk the names of the persons found to have been duly nominated, but this duty is purely ministerial and can be controlled by mandamus. It is in no way involved with the matter of passing upon the ques-.
With respect to the contention that the statute is unconstitutional by reason of impairing the jurisdiction of this court nothing need be added to what was said in Miller v. Clark, supra.
Since the general adoption of the Australian-ballot law the courts have frequently been called upon to settle disputes about the regularity of nominations made by political conventions. The adjudications show little divergence of judicial opinion.' The varying practice in the several states results mainly from statutory differences. Where two conventions are held, each claiming to be the authorized exponent of the same political party, the courts, from an unwillingness to undertake the settlement of purely political controversies, have generally required the nominees of each to be printed on the official ballot, where that was permitted by statute. (Sims v. Daniels, 57 Kan. 552, 46 Pac. 952, 35 L. R. A. 146; Phelps v. Piper, 48 Neb. 724, 67 N. W. 755, 33 L. R. A. 53; Shields v.
An objection is made by plaintiff to the form of certificate filed with the secretary of state by the opposing claimant. The statute (Gen. Stat. 1901, §2697) requires that the certificate be signed by the chairman and secretary of the convention making the nomina
Plaintiff also contends that if the contest board ever-acquired jurisdiction in the matter it lost it by postponing the hearing to a time more than five days after the filing of objections to the certificate. The statute requires the inquiry to be begun within five days, but does not forbid necessary continuances. Complaint is made of lack of notice of the hearing, but the objection is not substantial.
It remains only to consider the effect of the allegations of the alternative writ, that the majority of the contest board who made the decision against plaintiff' did so in compliance with a corrupt and fraudulent-agreement, to which they were parties, that plaintiff" should be prevented from having his name printed-upon the official ballot as the republican candidate-for congressman, regardless of the merits of his claim. So far as the allegations of conspiracy relate only to-fraud practiced against the plaintiff by his political or factional opponents in regard to choosing delegates, manipulating committees, organizing conventions, filing certificates, and all other matters affecting, his right to be recognized by the contest board as the regular nominee of his party, they are not material in this inquiry, for the reason that they concern questions which, under the statute, must be decided by that board, and not by the courts. But the writ, following the affidavit on which it is based, in addition to various allegations more or less directly implicating.
“Said J. D. Bowersock, as a part of his said fraudulent scheme and design, early in said campaign for the nomination for congress from the second congressional district, fraudulently and corruptly conspired and entered into an arrangement with the defendant, J. R. Burrow, secretary of state, and with C. C. Coleman, attorney-general, such persons constituting a majority of said contest board, whereby it was provided, understood and agreed that if the said J. D.' Bowersock would procure from a bolting and fraudulent assemblage of persons claiming to be the congressional convention of the said congressional district a false, spurious and fraudulent certificate of nomination, and would file the same in the office of the secretary of state, defendant herein, then they, said Burrow and said Coleman, being a majority of the contest board provided by statute for the hearing of contested nominations, would recognize such false, spurious and fraudulent certificate of nomination, notwithstanding any objections thereto and notwithstanding clear and convincing proof of the fraudulent character of the assemblage which had pretended to authorize the execution of the same, and notwithstanding the fact that clear, positive and conclusive proof should be presented before said board of the regular nomination of H. J. Allen for the said office.”
In Miller v. Clark, supra, it was said :
“We do not hold, however, that if the action of the officers specially designated to pass on the merits of such a controversy was induced by bad faith, or was the result of arbitrary acts showing wrongful conduct amounting to fraud, or their findings resulted in personal benefit to themselves, equity would not interpose to prevent a candidate from being thus wronged, or that the remedy by mandamus, sought to be employed in this case, might not be invoked.”
It has often been said of special tribunals established by statute to pass on matters expressly com
The bias, prejudice, partizanship and unfairness imputed to the members of the board cannot alone be made the basis of the relief sought. It is reasonable to suppose that such conditions were foreseen and taken into account in the framing of the statute under consideration. They might have been provided against in various ways.; for instance, by an arrangement al
The question presented by the allegations of their •corruption is not difficult and requires no extended •discussion. If the decision of the contest board was in fact made in virtue of a corrupt agreement between Bowersock and his associates on the one hand and the two members of the. board against whom the accusation is lodged on the other, that the matter should be determined against Allen regardless of what the circumstances might be or what questions might arise, then it was not made in the exercise of any real judgment—not even a judgment warped and perverted by interest or passion. The announcement of a conclusion so reached would not be an adjudication at all; it would have none of the attributes of a judgment; it would be a mere sham and pretense, entitled to no respect, requiring no attention from a court of justice, not even to be set aside. It would be preposterous to suppose that any one could be concluded by such an announcement and that the courts would be powerless to grant relief.
Assuming the facts to be as stated in the alternative writ, the situation presented is that it would obviously
If it be established that the charges of fraud against the members of the contest board are well founded, this court will not hesitate to examine into the facts, with a view of determining the merits of the original controversy between Allen and Bower-sock, and to make an order in this proceeding for the secretary of state to certify to the county clerks the name of the candidate who may be found to be the rightful nominee; but as the jurisdiction of the court to make such inquiry depends wholly upon the ■disqualification of the statutory tribunal, it will not be entered upon unless such disqualification be established. Issues are already joined upon this question as ■upon the others involved. By an order to be hereafter ■made, after receiving suggestions from~counsel as to a suitable time for such hearing, opportunity¡will be afforded for the production of evidence bearing solely upon the question whether the decision of the contest board was made in pursuance of a fraudulent scheme
Before any further step is taken in the case it is ordered that the plaintiff cause the attorney-general to be made a party hereto, adding his name as a defendant and serving notice upon him of the pendency of the action. This course is pursued not in response-to the suggestion that in his absence there is a technical defect of parties, but entirely irrespective of any question of that character. Since the immediate subject of inquiry is the good faith of the board, the-charges made affecting him equally with the secretary of state, the taking of evidence will not be entered upon without enabling him to participate in the proceedings, with whatever advantage may be derived from-being a party to the litigation, and as such entitled to-be heard in his own defense, as a matter of right.
For the reasons stated the motion to dismiss is denied, and the cause is retained for the purposes indicated.