22 Haw. 293 | Haw. | 1914
OPINION OP THE COURT BY
At the primary election held on the 12th day of September, 1914, under the provisions of Act 151, S. L. 1913, John W. Oathcart and George A. Davis were candidates on the republican ticket, and the petitioner was a candidate on the democratic ticket, for the office of city and county attorney for the city and county of Honolulu. At said primary election there were cast for the various candidates for delegate to Congress in the city and county of Honolulu votes aggregating a total of 7,182. For the office of city and county attorney, the votes were: Oathcart, 3,575; Davis, 1,533, and petitioner, 1,769, making an aggregate of 6,877. Petitioner tendered the necessary fee to the respondent in order to have his name placed upon the official ballot for the election to be held November 3, 1914, which respondent declined to accept. The respondent has issued to said Oathcart a certificate of election at the said primary election to the said office of city and county attorney, and declared his intention to leave off of the official ballot the name of the petitioner as a candidate for city and county attorney for the approaching general election. The petitioner filed in the circuit court his petition for a writ of mandamus to compel the respondent city and county clerk, to print upon the official ballot for the said approaching general election, the name of petitioner as the democratic candidate for the office of city and county attorney for the city and county of Honolulu, and other relief. An alternative writ issued directing the said respondent to place the name of petitioner as the democratic candidate for said office upon the said ballot, or show cause why he should not do so. To the alternative writ the respondent
The reserved question requires a construction of the proviso to section 16 of said Act 151, S. L. 1913, with a view of determining, whether, in order to elect to the office, as contradistinguished from a nomination as a candidate for the particular office, it was necessary for the said Cathcart to receive a majority of all of the votes cast at the said primary of the city and county of Honolulu, or only a majority of the votes cast for that particular office. Section 16 of said act reads as follows : “The person receiving the greatest number of votes at a primary as a candidate of a party for an office shall be the candidate of the party at the following election, and any non-partisan candidate receiving at least twenty (20) per cent, of the votes of registered voters cast at such primary shall also he a candidate at the following election. Provided, however, that any candidate receiving the votes of a majority of the registered voters voting of the district in which he is a candidate shall he thereby duly and legally elected to the office for which he is a candidate at such primary.” The act provides a scheme for the selection of candidates for the various political parties, and non-partisan candidates, for the next general election to follow, and all of the provisions of the act relate to the selection of such candidates, and not to the election of candidates to office, with the exception of said proviso, a fact important to be kept in mind in determining what the legislature meant when it provided that, “any candidate receiving the votes of a majority of the registered voters voting of the district in which he is a candidate shall be thereby duly and legally elected to the office for which he is a candidate at such primary.” The query arises: What did the legislature mean by the words “a majority of the
Many authorities have been cited from various States upon the question under consideration. None of the decisions are exactly in-point, in that in none of them is the language of the constitution or statute under which the election was held identical with the language used in our statute. A number are cited to the effect that where the creation of a county, or school, or the
In State v. Bechel, supra, the proposition of permitting a street railway to build its lines upon the streets of the city of Omaha was submitted to the voters at a general election. The proposition received a majority of those who voted upon it, but not the required majority of the voters voting at the election. The court in its decision says relative to this point: “Section five * * * Compiled Statutes provides * * * ‘and if a majority of the votes cast at such election shall be in favor of the constructing and operating of such proposed street railroad’ the council shall cause the clerk to make the certificate, etc. It is impossible for us, by any system of logical reasoning, to say that the election held in the city of Omaha on the 3d day of May, 1887, was other than one election. There were but the usual number of judges and clerks, but one poll list, and in some precincts but one return. If we say there were two elections, to-wit: the general city election, and the election upon the proposition submitted, to which of these can we say that the poll list, or list of voters actually voting belonged? Most certainly to the general election. If that is true, to what record can we apply for a list of those who voted at the other election, i. e., the one in which votes were cast on the proposition ? How could that election be contested upon the ground that illegal votes were cast by those who were not electors? Obviously it could not be successfully done. How can it be said that the fact that another ballot box was prepared, into which ballots were deposited to be counted as cast upon the proposition in question, would produce a different legal result than if the proposition had been written or printed on the tickets for the general elec
In the case at bar there was no proposition submitted similar in nature to the -proposition submitted in the large majority of the cases. Here the question was as to the selection of political candidates for the several parties, and there is less reason for saying that there was more than one election than in the case of State v. Bechet, and as much reason for saying that there was only one election, only one set of election officers, only one poll list, and that the majority required in order to elect Mr. Cathcart was a majority of all of “the registered voters voting of the district in which he is a candidate,” that is, in the city and county of Honolulu, at said primary, upon all questions, was necessary in order to elect him to the office of city and county attorney.
The difficulty of ascertaining the number of registered voters voting at the primary election aforesaid has been suggested. Section 12 of the act provides that the county clerk shall, at least three days prior to the primary election, present to the judges (inspectors) of election lists of the registered voters. Section 23 provides that “the laws relating to elections shall apply to all primaries” so far as consistent with the provisions of the act. Sections 61 and 98 of the Revised Laws provide that the inspectors of election shall check upon the list of registered voters furnished them, all who vote, and make a list of all who vote, and send such list with other named matters in a sealed packet to the secretary of the Territory addressed to him, and which packet may be opened and inspected in the presence of a justice of the siipreme court, after which it shall be resealed in the presence of such justice. It is thus seen that the law provides a way in
A query as to whether the proviso to section 16 of the primary law is germane to the scope of the act as shown by the title and body of the act has been suggested. That question has not been considered, and is not decided. Mr. Oathcart having received a vote less than a majority of the registered voters voting at the primary in the city and county of Honolulu, was not elected under the terms of the proviso. Eor the reasons herein given the question reserved by the second judge of the first circuit is answered in the affirmative.