OPINION BY
This mаtter is a Petition to Set Aside Substitute Nomination Certificate filed by six qualified electors in the 158th Legislative District, Susan Rzucidlo, Richard Hicks, Diane Clayton, Mary Lynne Massi, Judy Porta and David Unger (Objectors). The Petition to Set Aside seeks to bar the substitution of Chris Ross (Ross) as the Republican candidate for the position of Representative in the Pennsylvania General Assembly, 158th Legislative District, in the November 4, 2014 General Election to fill the vacancy on the Republican ticket
On September 22, 2014, Walker filed a petition for leave to withdraw his candidacy, which was captioned and docketed in this Court as In Re: Election for Representative in the General Assembly from the 158th District in the General Election of November 4, 2014; Appeal of: Cuyler Walker,
Objectors filed the instant Petition to Set Aside Substitute Nomination Certificate the following day, September 30, 2014.
Mr. Forsythe testified at the October 3, 2014 hearing that the ballots for the voting machines had not yet been printed, that after the filing of the substitute nomination certificate, his office had completed coding the ballot with Ross’s name added, and that the ballot with Ross’s name on it would be ready to send to the printer that afternoon or the next day. Mr. Forsythe further testified that the substitution of Ross as a candidate would not interfere with having the voting machines ready for the November 4, 2014 election. Mr. For-sythe testified that his office had finished preparing supplemental absentee ballots limited to the 158th Legislative District race for the small number of voters (approximately 121 out of a total registration of approximately 60,000 in the district) who had already received absentee ballots before the withdrawal аnd substitution. The Court finds Mr. Forsythe’s testimony credible.
In addition, Mr. Forsythe explained at the September 26, 2014 Walker Withdrawal Petition hearing how the initial absentee ballots and supplemental absentee ballots would be counted for those voters who had already been sent absentee ballots, in or
Based on the evidence from the two hearings, the Court issued an Order dismissing Objectors’ Petition to Set Aside. This Opinion sets forth the reasons for the Court’s Order.
Sections 981 and 1006 оf the Pennsylvania Election Code (Election Code)
Substituted nomination certificates to fill vacancies caused by the withdrawal of candidates nominatеd at' primaries or by nomination papers shall be filed with the Secretary of the Commonwealth or proper county board of elections, as the case may be, at least seventy-five (75) days before the day of the general or municipal election: Provided, however, That no substituted nomination certificate by a political body may be filed until after the primary election.
25 P.S. § 2941(a). Section 1006 provides:
As soon as any substituted candidate shall have been duly nominated, at any time prior to the day on which the printing of ballots is started, his name shall be substituted in place of that of the candidate who has died or withdrawn.
25 P.S. § 2966.
Objectors argue that the substitution of Ross as a candidate is barred by Section 981(a) because it was sought later than 75 days before the November 4, 2014 election. Our Supreme Court, however, has rejected this argument and held that the Election Code’s deadlines for candidate withdrawal and substitution are directory and not mandаtory. Perles v. Hoffman,
In Mayor of the City of Altoona, the Supreme Court upheld the substitution of a candidate for a November 5 general election, despite the fact that it was filed on September 18, too late to comply with the deadline for substitution set by Section 981(a). The Court held' that the deadline in Section 981(a) did not bar substitution where the printing of the ballot had not started and the election would not be disrupted by the late filing, holding that the Election Code must be construed to secure
[i]t imposes neither hardship nor disadvantage upon nor gives preference or advantage to either party or candidate and and [sic] does maintain a fair and equal balance in the election procedures and machinery, thereby affording the electorate the opportunity for choice, an opportunity basic to a democratic and fair election. To have denied the substitution, in reality, would have resolved the election in advance of Novembеr 5 and not at the polls. The selection of elected public officials is historically and legally a function exclusively reserved for eligible voters. No tradition of American life is more cherished than the right of the voter, at all levels of government to express his choice between candidates at the polls.
Id. at 375 (emphasis in original).
In County Commissioner of Allegheny County, the Supreme Court held that the time limit set in Section 981(b) for substitutions in the event of death of a candidate, which provided that the substitute nomination certificate “shall be filed ... prior to the day on which the printing of ballots is started,” 25 P.S. § 2941(b), was directory and not mandatory.
In Perles, the Supreme Court reaffirmed its rulings in Mayor of the City of Altoona and County Commissioner of Allegheny County, and held that the deadline Section 978, 25 P.S. § 2938, the provision of the Election Code governing withdrawals, was not mandatory.
Objectors argue that this Court should disregard these precedents as wrongly decided because they are allegedly inconsistent with the language of Section 981(a) that substituted nomination certificates to fill vacancies caused by withdrawal “shall be filed ... at least seventy-five (75) days before the day of the general or municipal election.” This argument fails for several reasons.
First, even if this Court agreed with Objectors that Mayor of the City of Altoona and Perles were wrongly decided and that the dissenting opinions in those cases are the better reasoned opinions, this Court, as an intermediate appellate court is bound to follow the majority opinions of our Supreme Court, not the dissents, unless and until the Supreme Court overrules those majority opinions or it is clear that they are no longer good law. Griffin v. Southeastern Pennsylvania Transportation Authority,
Objectors contend that the Supreme Court’s recent opinion in In re Nomination Petition of Guzzardi, — Pa. -,
Moreover, the “fatal defect” language at issue in Guzzardi was enacted by the General Assembly to override the Supreme Court’s prior, more flexible construction of the Ethics Act. Guzzardi,
Furthermore, the Court does not agree with Objectors that Perles, Mayor of the City of Altoona and County Commissioner of Allegheny County were wrongly
Objectors also contend that substitution beyond the 75-day time limit must be barred in order to protect against gamesmanship and placeholder or dummy candidаtes. This argument is unsupported by the record before this Court. No abusive practices have been shown here. There is no evidence in this case suggesting that Ross is not a genuine candidate who will serve if elected or that Walker was not genuinely seeking the office of state representative for the 158th Legislative District when he was nominated in the Republican primary in May 2014.
For the foregoing reasons, the Court concluded that Objectors have not shown any valid ground to bar the substitution of Ross as the Republican candidate for Representative in the Pennsylvania General Assembly, 158th Legislative District. Accordingly, the Cоurt dismissed the Petition to Set Aside Substitute Nomination Certificate.
Notes
. Objectors also moved for a preliminary injunction to bar the Department from certifying Ross as the Republican nominee and to bar Chester County Voter Services from placing Ross’s name on the ballot until resolution of this Petition to Set Aside Substitute Nomination Certificate. This Court denied Objectors’ application for a preliminary injunction, and that order was appealed by Objectors to our Supreme Court. Following this Court’s final order in this case, Objectors on October 3, 2014 discontinued their appeal from the denial of the preliminary injunction.
. Act of June 3, 1937, P.L. 1333, §§ 981, 1006, as amended, 25 P.S. §§ 2941, 2966.
. This last amendment, effective January 1, 1964, after the election in Mayor of the City of Altoona and before the election in Perles, changed the deadline for substitution due to withdrawal in Section 981(a) from 55 days before the election to 75 days before the election, but made no change to the language interpreted in Mayor of the City of Altoona providing that "[s]ubstituted nomination certificates to fill vacancies caused by the withdrawal of candidates nominated at primaries ... shall be filed ... at least” a certain number of days before the election. Compare Mayor of the City of Altoona,
. Added by the Act of July 11, 1980, P.L. 591.
