delivered the opinion of the court:
The plaintiffs, Ralph Jenkins and Clifton Graham, Jr., brought the instant action seeking to obtain court orders requiring Deborah M. Mcllvain, city clerk for the City of Country Club Hills, to certify their names as candidates to be placed on the ballot for the city’s April 1, 2003, consolidated election and enjoining David Orr, Cook County clerk, from printing election ballots that did not contаin their names. The circuit court entered judgment in favor of the defendants on three counts of the plaintiffs’ five-count complaint, and the plaintiffs now appeal.
The plaintiffs, Jenkins and Graham, timely filed nomination papers seeking to have their names placed on the ballot for the City of Country Club Hills’ April 1, 2003, consolidated election as сandidates for the offices of alderman of the city’s Fifth Ward and mayor, respectively. The plaintiffs included with their nomination papers receipts from the Cook County clerk verifying that each had filed a statement of economic interests on December 27, 2002. No objections were filed to the plaintiffs’ nomination papers. On January 23, 2003, Mcllvain wrote to each of the plaintiffs and informed them that they would not be certified as a candidates for the April 1, 2003, election because: 1) their statements of economic interests were not filed in the same calendar year as their nominating petitions and 2) their nominating petitions were not bound when filed as required by section 10 — 4 оf the Election Code (10 ILCS 5/10 — 4 (West 2000)). On January 30, 2003, Mcllvain certified to the Cook County clerk the names to be listed on the ballot for the city’s April 1, 2003, election. She did not include the plaintiffs’ names.
On February 14, 2003, the plaintiffs filed a five-count complaint against Mcllvain, both personally and in her capacity as city clerk, and Orr, in his capacity as Cook County clerk. In count I of the complaint, the plaintiffs sought a temporary restraining order and preliminary and permanent injunctions compelling Mcllvain to file an amended certification of ballot certifying their names as candidates for the April 1, 2003, election and enjoining Orr from printing and distributing election ballots without their names. In count II, the plaintiffs sought a writ of mandamus compelling Mcllvain to certify their names as candidates in the April 1, 2003, election. In count III, the plaintiffs sought a declaratory judgment that Mcllvain had no discretion to refuse to certify their names to Orr. In counts IV and V of their complaint, the plaintiffs alleged causes of action under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 (2000) against Mcllvain.
On February 24, 2003, the plaintiffs filed a memоrandum of law in support of their complaint, to which they attached their own affidavits. Each plaintiff averred that his nomination papers were bound at the time of filing.
On February 26, 2003, Mcllvain answered the plaintiffs’ complaint, denying allegations that her failure to certify the plaintiffs as candidates in the April 1, 2003, election was improper. That samе day, Mcllvain filed a memorandum of law in opposition to the plaintiffs’ complaint, to which she attached two affidavits from Alison Brothen, the finance director for the City of Country Club Hills. Brothen averred that she accepted the plaintiffs’ nominating petitions for filing and that the petitions were not bound in any manner.
On February 27, 2003, following a hearing, the circuit court entered an order stating its finding that Mcllvain “acted within her duties as mandated within the Election Code in refusing to certify the plaintiffs’ names” because they did not file their statements of economic interests in the same calendar year as their nomination papers and, in doing so, entered judgment in favor of the defendants on counts I through III of thе plaintiffs’ complaint. The court did not address the issues relating to the binding of the plaintiffs’ nomination papers. The circuit court’s written order included the requisite language to permit the plaintiffs to appeal its ruling pursuant to Supreme Court Rule 304(a) (155 Ill. 2d R. 304(a)).
On March 6, 2003, the plaintiffs filed their notice of appeal from the circuit court’s February 27, 2003, ordеr. Due to the imminence of the April 1, 2003, election, we set an expedited briefing schedule and took the matter under advisement without oral argument. For the reasons that follow, we affirm the circuit court’s judgment.
The plaintiffs’ entitlement to relief under counts I through III of their complaint depends upon the resolution of two issues: (1) whether Mcllvain has the аuthority to refuse to certify for placement on the ballot the name of a candidate whose nomination papers are not in apparent conformity with the Election Code; and (2) whether section 10 — 5 of the Election Code (10 ILCS 5/10 — 5 (West 2000)) requires that a candidate file a statement of economic interests during the same calеndar year that he files his nomination papers. As the answer to each of these questions is a matter of statutory interpretation, our review is de novo. Sylvester v. Industrial Comm’n,
The plaintiffs first argue that, pursuant to the Election Code, a local election authority does not have the authority to refuse to certify a person as a candidate to be fisted on the election ballot, regardless of any deficiencies with his nomination papers, unless that person’s nominating petitions have been invalidated by the electoral board. In support of this argument, the plaintiffs rely on section 10 — 15 of the Election Code (10 ILCS 5/10 — 15 (West 2000)). In relevant part, section 10 — 15 of the Election Code rеquires that, not less than 61 days before the date of a consolidated election, each local election official with whom nomination papers have been filed must certify to the appropriate election authority:
“the names of all candidates entitled to be printed on the ballot for offices of that political subdivision to be voted upon at such election and direct the election authority to place upon the official ballot for such election the names of such candidates in the same manner and in the same order as shown upon the certification.” 10 ILCS 5/10 — 15 (West 2000).
Section 10 — 15 further provides:
“The local election officials shall certify such candidаtes for each office in the order in which such candidates’ certificates of nomination or nominating petitions were filed in his office. However, subject to appeal, the names of candidates whose petitions have been held invalid by the appropriate electoral board provided in Section 10 — 9 of this Act shall nоt be so certified.” 10 ILCS 5/10 — 15 (West 2000).
This court has already rejected the plaintiffs’ proposed interpretation of section 10 — 15 in North v. Hinkle,
We now consider the plaintiffs’ contention that their nomination papers were in apparent conformity with the Election Code. Specifically, we begin with the plaintiffs’ assertion that there is no statutory requirement that a candidate’s statement of economic interests be filed within the same calendar year as his nomination papers.
Pursuant to section 10 — 5 of the Elеction Code, all petitions for nomination must be accompanied by a statement of candidacy which shall include, inter alia, a statement that the candidate “has filed (or will file before the close of the petition filing period) a statement of economic interests as required by the Illinois Governmental Ethics Act.” 10 ILCS 5/10 — 5 (West 2000). Section 10 — 5 furthеr provides that:
“[n]omination papers filed under this Section are not valid if the candidate named therein fails to file a statement of economic interests as required by the Illinois Governmental Ethics Act in relation to his candidacy with the appropriate officer by the end of the period for the filing of nomination papers unless he has filed a statement of economic interests in relation to the same governmental unit with that officer during the same calendar year as the year in which such nomination papers were filed.” 10 ILCS 5/10 — 5 (West 2000).
Contrary to Mcllvain’s assertion, this court did not, in Allord v. Municipal Officers Electoral Board for the Village of South Chicago Heights,
The primary rule of statutory construction is to ascertain and give effect to the intent of the legislature. Kavanagh v. County of Will,
As stated, section 10 — 5 of the Election Code provides that a candidate’s nomination papers are not valid if the candidate fails to file a statement of economic intеrests in relation to his candidacy “by the end of the period for the filing of nomination papers unless he has filed a statement of economic interests in relation to the same governmental unit with that officer during the same calendar year as the year in which such nomination papers were filed.” 10 ILCS 5/10 — 5 (West 2000). The plaintiffs maintain that section 10 — 5 rеquires only that a candidate file a statement of economic interests in relation to his candidacy before the end of the filing period for nomination papers. They assert that the same is also true of section 4A — 105(a) of the Illinois Governmental Ethics Act (Ethics Act), which provides that a candidate must file his statement of economiс interests “not later than the end of the period during which he can take the action necessary under the laws of this State to attempt to qualify for nomination, election, or retention to such office if he has not filed a statement in relation to the same unit of government within a year preceding such action.” 5 ILCS 420/4A — 105(a) (West 2000). The plaintiffs further maintain that the phrase “during the same calendar year as the year in which such nomination papers were filed,” as used in section 10 — 5 of the Election Code, applies only to an incumbent candidate who does not file a statement of economic interests in relation to his candidacy prior to the end of the filing period for nomination papers and who wishes to avail himself of the stated exception to this filing requirement by relying on a previously filed statement of economic interests. Mcllvain, on the other hand, asserts that the requirement that a statement of economic interests be filed “during the same calendar year as the year in which such nominations papers were filed” applies equally to a candidate who files an economic statement in relation to his candidacy prior to the end of the filing period for nomination papers and to an incumbent candidate who does not file an economic statement in relation to his candidacy but relies on a previously filed statement in relation to that same unit of government.
Based upon our review of the plain language of section 10 — 5, without more, we conclude that the statutory provision could be interpreted in more than one manner, specifically in the manner proposed by the plaintiffs and in the manner proposed by Mcllvain. We may, therefore, consider extrinsic aids of interpretation, such as the reason and necessity for the statute and the purpose to be served by it, in determining the proper construction. Whitney,
The purpose behind the statutory requirement that a candidate file a statement of economic interests is to facilitate the public’s right to information regarding financial dealings between the candidate and the unit of government in which he seeks an elected office. Requena v. Cook County Officers Electoral Board,
The period for the filing of nomination papers for the April 1, 2003, election in the City of Country Club Hills commenced on January 13, 2003, and ended on Jаnuary 21, 2003. The plaintiffs filed their statements of economic interests on December 27, 2002. As such, we find that the circuit court properly ruled that Mcllvain was justified in refusing to certify the plaintiffs’ names for placement on the ballot as candidates in the April 1, 2003, election. Due to our resolution of this issue, we find it unnecessary to consider the issues related to the binding of the plaintiffs’ nomination papers.
For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the judgment of the circuit court.
Affirmed.
WOLFSON and HALL, JJ, concur.
