OPINION ON MOTION FOR REHEARING
Our оriginal opinion is withdrawn and the following substituted.
In this original proceeding relator seeks writ of mandamus directing the court of appeals to withdraw the writ of mandamus it issued in an original proceeding. Because the resolution of the issues presеnted to the court of appeals required factual determinations that could not properly be made by an appellate court in an original proceeding, we hold the court of appeals abused its discretion and conditionally grant the writ.
Relator Elaine A. Brady is the sole candidate in the Democratic primary for Place One on the First Court of Appeals. Appropriate Democratic Party officials certified her after she had submitted her application with the $2,000 filing fee and accompanying documentation to satisfy the applicable sections of the Texas Election Code. 1 The documentation included several pages of petitions to have her placed on the ballot. The petitions bore a combined total of 302 signatures.
The incumbent justice and sole candidate in the Republican primary for Place One on the First Court of Appeals is the Honorable D. Camille Dunn. On January 24, 1990, Dunn filed аn original mandamus action in the Fourteenth Court of Appeals to compel Robert Slagle in his capacity as Chairman of the Texas Democratic Executive Committee and local Democratic Party officials to remove Brady’s name from the Democratic primary ballot. Dunn alleged Brady's petitions did not comply with the Election Code’s sections 141.062 2 , 141.063 3 , and 141.065. 4 Dunn claimed that (1) the *714 petitions did not have at least 250 signatures by registered voters because fifty-eight signers were not on the 1990 list of registered voters; (2) other signatures were invalid for failure to include complete addresses, correct voter registration numbers, the date, a printed name, and similar defects; and (3) the person who notarized Brady’s application and 35 рages of petitions did not affix her stamp or seal. Dunn’s record included an affidavit from the Harris County Tax Assessor certifying that 58 signers were not on the 1990 list of registered voters.
Brady, the real party in interest, responded with an affidavit also from the Harris County Tax Assessor showing 10 of the 58 challenged signers were in fact registered. Brady also included certified copies of voter registration records from the assessor’s office to show that an additional 21 of the 58 were registered. Both Slagle and Brady contended that there were factual disputes that precluded mandamus relief in an original appellate court proceeding. Slagle urged that a literal and over-strict construction of the Election Code provisions that even failed to allow for correction of clerical mistakes would, as applied to Brady’s situation, violate the First and Fourteenth Amendments to the United States Constitution. For the constitutional claim, Slagle cited
Pilcher v. Rains,
The court of аppeals issued the writ of mandamus to remove Brady’s name from the primary ballot because the court concluded Brady only had 247 valid signatures, three short of the required 250.
Dunn v. Slagle,
It is well established Texas law that an appellate court may not deal with disputed areas of fact in an original mandamus proceeding.
West v. Solito,
*715
We have a further problem with the statutory construction questions in this case that requires a fully-developed factual record. Statutes are given a construction consistent with constitutional requirements, when possible, because the legislature is presumed to have intendеd compliance with state and federal constitutions.
Greyhound Lines, Inc. v. Board of Equalization,
The Supreme Court has stated that the federal constitutional rights involved in a political party’s process of selecting its nominee for an elective office include the fundamental rights of freedom of association and the right to cast an effective vote.
Tashjian v. Republican Party of Connecticut,
When a political party questions the constitutionality of state statutes regulating the party’s method of selecting a candidate, as applied to a particular office or candidate, the courts must employ a balancing test. The balancing test weighs the burden on the candidate or party against the compelling state interest the state must advance to justify the regulation.
Eu v. San Francisco County Democratic Central Committee,
In applying the balancing test, the Supreme Court has said a “court must resolve [a constitutional challenge to a state election law] by an analytic process that parallels its work in
ordinary litigation.” Anderson v. Celebrezze,
Because the court of appeals issued the writ of mandamus in an original proceeding in which it сould not properly make the factual determinations raised in the case, we hold the court of appeals abused its discretion. We conditionally issue the writ of mandamus directing the court of appeals to withdraw its writ and any relаted orders. The actual writ will issue only if the court of appeals fails to comply with this opinion. We overrule the motion for rehearing,. and no further motion for rehearing will be entertained.
Notes
. Subsection 172.021(e) of the Election Code provides in part: "A candidate for an office specified by Section 172.024(a)(8) ... who chooses to pay the filing fee must also accompany the application with a petition that complies with the requirements prescribed for the petition authorized by Subsection (b), except that the minimum number of signatures that must appear on the petition required by this subsection is 250.” Tex.Elec.Code Ann. § 171.021(e) (Vernon Supp.1990). Subsection (b) requires an application to be accompaniеd by either the appropriate filing fee or a petition that satisfies the requirements prescribed by section 141.062. See Tex.Elec.Code Ann. § 171.021(b) (Vernon 1986). Subsection 172.024(a)(8) sets a filing fee of $2,000.00 for “chief justice or justice of a court of appeals that serves a court of appeals district in which a county with a population of more than 850,000 is wholly or partly situated.” Tex.Elec.Code Ann. § 172.024(a)(8) (Vernon Supp.1990). For the text of sections 141.062 and 141.063 of the Election Code, see notes 2 and 3 infra.
. Tex.Elec.Code Ann. § 141.062 (Vernon 1986):
(a) To be valid, a petition must:
(1) be timely filed with the appropriate authority;
(2) contain valid signatures in the number required by this code; and
(3) comply with any other applicable requirements for validity prescribed by this code.
(b) A petition may consist of multiple parts.
. Tex.Elec.Code Ann. § 141.063 (Vernon 1986):
A signature on a petition is valid if:
(1) except as otherwise provided by this code, the signer, at the time of signing, is a registered voter of the territory from which the office sought is elected or has been issued a registration certificate for a registration that will become effective in that territory on or before the date of the applicable election;
(2) the рetition includes the following information with respect to each signer:
(A) the signer’s residence address;
(B) the signer’s voter registration number and, if the territory from which signatures must be obtained is situated in more than one county, the county of registration;
(C) the date of signing; and
(D) the signer’s printed name;
(3) the part of the petition in which thе signature appears contains the affidavit required by Section 141.065;
(4) each statement that is required by this code to appear on each page of the petition appears, at the time of signing, on the page on which thе signature is entered; and
(5) any other applicable requirements prescribed by this code for a signature’s validity are complied with.
. Tex.Elec.Code Ann. § 141.065 (Vernon 1986):
(a) Each part of a petition must include an affidavit of the person who circulated it stating that the рerson:
*714 (1) pointed out and read to each signer, before the petition was signed, each statement pertaining to the signer that appears on the petition;
(2) witnessed each signature;
(3) verified each signer’s registration status; and
(4) believes each signature to be genuine and the corresponding information to be correct.
(b) If a petition contains an affidavit that complies with Subsection (a), for the purpose of determining whether the petition contains a sufficient number of valid signatures, the authority with whom the candidate’s application is filed may treat as valid each signature to which the affidavit applies, without further verification, unless proven otherwise.
