607 N.E.2d 848 | Ohio Ct. App. | 1992
Lead Opinion
This is an original action in mandamus. Relators seek to compel respondents, the Wood County Board of Elections ("board") and its members, to certify and place upon the primary election ballot for the Fifth Congressional *476 District of Ohio the name of relator Edmund G. Brown as a candidate for the Office of President of the United States. Respondents have answered relators' complaint and, in so doing, the parties have admitted or stipulated to all the facts necessary for our decision.
The facts establish that relators are Edmund G. Brown, his campaign committee and candidates for the positions of delegates to the Democratic Convention who have pledged to support Brown in Ohio's Fifth Congressional District. Brown declared himself a candidate for the Democratic Nomination for the Office of President of the United States. Thereafter, the delegate relators circulated petition papers in Wood, Seneca, Ottawa, Sandusky, and Williams Counties in an effort to secure the requisite fifty signatures of qualified Democratic Party electors.
Relators filed five petition papers, one from each of the above counties, with the Wood County Board of Elections in Wood County, as required by R.C.
The two disputed petition papers contained a pre-printed certification on the back of the form for the circulator to sign. The form had a blank space for the circulator to indicate the number of signatures on each petition paper. The circulators signed the forms but did not fill in the blank space to indicate the number of signatures thereon. Therefore, respondents declared the petitions to be invalid. As a result of respondents' action, relators, then, were left without the necessary fifty valid signatures.
At relators' request, the board convened a hearing to review its decision that the two petition papers were invalid.1 At the hearing, the two circulators testified that they had personally witnessed each and every signature on the two petitions. Respondent Marsh, a member of the Wood County Board of Elections, then made a motion to accept the petitions. The motion was seconded and the matter was put to a vote. Two members of the board voted "no." One member was absent and one member abstained, ostensibly because he was himself a candidate to be a delegate for another Democratic party presidential candidate. The board rejected the petitions, thus excluding Brown from the ballot. *477
Relators then filed their complaint in this court seeking to compel respondents to accept the petitions. Respondents answered and admitted the pertinent facts but denied that they were obliged to accept the petition papers. Also, respondents have moved for judgment on the pleadings. Civ.R. 12(C) provides for such a motion after the pleadings are closed but within such time as not to delay the trial. The motion is to be granted when, after viewing the allegations and reasonable inferences therefrom in the light most favorable to the non-moving party, the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.Peterson v. Teodosio (1973),
Mandamus will lie where (1) the relator has a clear legal right to the relief sought, (2) the respondent has a clear legal duty to perform the requested act, and (3) relator has no plain and adequate remedy at law. State ex rel. Westchester Estates,Inc. v. Bacon (1980),
Boards of elections consist of four members appointed by the Secretary of State to act as representatives of the Secretary of State and as election officials. R.C.
R.C.
Based on the opinions of the Ohio Supreme Court, we must conclude that substantial compliance with R.C.
Second, relators contend2 that any defect in the petition papers was cured by the circulators' subsequent testimony establishing that they had, in fact, witnessed each signature on the petitions. We disagree. R.C.
Therefore, after reviewing the complaint in mandamus, the answer and the stipulated facts, we must conclude that relators have failed to show that the respondents' refusal to certify the name of relator Brown was contrary to law *479 and that relators have a clear legal right to the relief sought. Accordingly, the writ of mandamus is denied.
Writ denied.
GLASSER and SHERCK, JJ., concur.
RESNICK, J., dissents.
A party may decide to forgo the primary election system and adopt an alternate method of selecting delegates. Ferency v.Austin (W.D.Mich.1980),
Dissenting Opinion
I must respectfully dissent. In State ex rel. Zahneis v. Bd. ofElections (1971),
Moreover, I cannot find that this procedure is violative of R.C.