58 Minn. 525 | Minn. | 1894
Lead Opinion
The petition of Mansion and others states that they are residents and voters of Itasca county; that on September 1, 1894, a mass convention of the Republican voters of that county was held for the purpose of nominating candidates for county officers; that the convention met, and nominated such candidates; that Mansion, being chairman of the Republican county committee, and believing that such mass meeting was illegal under our statute, called a delegate convention, which was held on the 8th of October, and it also nominated candidates for county offices; that he and some of the other petitioners were nominated for county offices at this last con
Laws 1893, ch. 4, §§ 31, 33 and 34, read as follows:
“Sec. 31. Any assembly or convention of delegates, held for the ■purpose of making nominations to public office, or electors to the number hereinafter specified, may nominate candidates for public -office, to be filled by election within the state. Said nomination shall be made by delivering to and leaving with the officer charged by this act with directing the printing of the ballots upon which -the name is to be placed, within the time prescribed by this act, a ■certificate of nomination for each candidate.”
“Sec. 33. The certificate of nomination of a candidate for office ■selected by any convention of delegates, as herein defined, shall be signed and certified by the presiding officer and secretary of said •convention, who shall also take and prescribe an oath before some proper officer that the facts stated in the certificate are true, and the ■.secretary shall immediately deliver such certificate of nomination to the officer charged with directing the printing of the ballots, upon which the name is to be placed, and in case he shall neglect to ■do so he shall be guilty of a misdemeanor.
“Sec. 34. An assembly or convention of delegates within the meaning of this act, is an organized assemblage of delegates representing a political party, which at the last general election before the holding of such convention or assembly polled at least one per cent, •of the entire vote cast in the state, or county or other division or •district for which the nomination is made.”
It is contended by the petitioners that under these sections the law does not recognize any convention but a delegate convention,—
Taking into consideration the history of legislation in this state, we are of the opinion that the Legislature did not intend, by this election law, to interfere with the manner of organizing political conventions, so long as they were regularly organized according to the usage of the-party. As one instance in such history it may be stated that by Laws 1887, ch. 4, §§ 100-104, the Legislature prescribed certain regulations to prevent fraud and caucus packing at primary elections, but by Laws 1891, ch. 4, § 128, these sections were expressly repealed. Under all the circumstances, it seems to us that the Legislature used the word “delegate” in the present law in a more popular but less accurate sense, as meaning a regularly selected member of a regular party convention. It has long been the practice, in several of the thinly settled counties of this state, to hold mass conventions, and the Legislature had no object in suppressing this practice, and did not intend to do so.
It is not a new doctrine which interprets a statute according to its spirit and intent, though that be contrary to its strict technical letter. “The intention of the Legislature should always be followed whenever it can-be discovered, although the construction seems con
The petition should be denied. So ordered.
(Oct. 31, 1894.)
Dissenting Opinion
(dissenting). This is a contest between Republican candidates for county offices in Itasca county, one set being the nominees of a mass convention, and some of the others claiming to be candidates of a delegate convention. The petitioners allege that the mass convention was composed of a howling, lawless mob, irrespective of party, and that the Republican party, at said mass convention, was overcome by persons other than Republicans, all of which is denied in the return to the order to show cause.
The petitioners are residents and voters of Itasca county; and September 1, 1894, a mass convention of Republican voters in that county held a convention for the purpose of nominating various candidates for county offices, one of the petitioners, Manston, being chairman of the Republican county committee, and one Arnold secretary, selected as such at a mass convention of Republican voters held about two years before. The mass convention held September 1, 1894, nominated candidates for the various county offices, and the county auditor received the certificates of the presiding officers, and intended putting them upon the official ballots as the legal nominees. Afterwards, Manston, as chairman of the Republican county committee, and Arnold, as secretary, deeming the mass convention illegal, called a delegate convention of Republican voters of said county. It is alleged in the petition that Manston and Arnold supposed that a mass convention was a legal compliance with the law, but that, immediately upon discovering their mistake, they called a delegate convention, as above referred to. The petition alleges “that immediately upon the discovery of said mistake being made in the call and holding of said mass, nondelegate convention, as aforesaid, said chairman, Manston, and secretary, Arnold, in good faith, and pursuant to the orders and direction of said county committee, made due call and advertisement of a regular convention of an organized assemblage of delegates of the Republican party of said county to be held in said county October 8, 1894; and at said delegate con
The opinion rendered by a majority of this court holds that the nominees of the mass convention were the legal nominees, notwithstanding that candidates were subsequently nominated at a delegate convention. The reasoning by which this conclusion is reached is that, taking the various statutes of 1887, 1891, and 1898 into consideration, the words “mass convention” should be construed as equivalent to the words “delegate convention,” especially in view of the fact that it was the established usage of the political parties of the county of Itasca to nominate county officers in mass convention. The following language is found in the majority opinion, viz.: “Taking into consideration the history of legislation in this state, we are of the opinion that the Legislature did not intend by this election law to interfere with the manner of organizing political conventions so long as they were regularly organized according to the usage of the party. * * * It has long been the practice in several of the thinly-settled counties of this state to hold mass conventions, and the Legislature had no object in suppressing this practice, and did pot intend to do so.”
Just where the legislative authority exists for passing a general election law which authorizes the holding of a mass convention of the voters in a thinly-settled county, and a delegate convention in a thickly-settled county, I am not advised, either by counsel, the records of the case, or by the majority opinion; and such authority may be doubted, unless I concede, as some modern statesmen claim, that the legislative power is omnipotent, and its knowledge boundless. As I do not find in the law books or elsewhere any definition of just what constitutes a thinly-settled county, so that mass conventions can there be held, and be legally designated “delegate conventions,” I suppose that it is intended by the majority opinion to take
“Sec. 35. The certificate of nomination of a candidate selected ■otherwise than by a convention of delegates shall be signed by the electors resident within the district or political division from which the candidate is presented, to a number equal to one per cent of the ■entire vote cast at the last preceding election in the state, county or other political division or district from which the nomination is made.”
This is the recognized and acknowledged law, and has been such ever since June 1, 1891. Do these sections need any party usage to enable a court to construe or interpret them? Have these sec
“Where the language is transparent, there is no room for the office of construction. There should be no construction where there is nothing to construe.” Anderson, Law Diet. p. 240. It certainly is not the rule to construe a law that is well understood. Construction or interpretation is only demanded where the law is uncertain, ambiguous, and difficult in its application. This is not.
It seems to me that it is a dangerous doctrine to hold that a local usage in the county of Itasca can be construed to control a general election law applicable to a whole state. There might be a different usage in different counties in reference to the method of administering this election law, and, after a few years, the law itself would be so torn, battered, and left in shreds that it would be difficult to find its spirit, intent, or letter. A general law should not be construed by usage as applicable to one county, and not to another. The usage of wrongfully cutting pine timber in some thinly-settled counties, which has existed for more than thirty years, may yet be claimed to have the force of law, unless we pause in this method of statutory construction.
It is said in the majority opinion that “it is not a new doctrine which interprets a statute according to its spirit and intent, though that be contrary to its technical letter; that the intention of the Legislature should always be followed whenever it can be discovered, although the construction seems contrary to the letter of the statute.” This rule of construction has no application to this case, and the construction is an arbitrary enlargement of the meaning of the law itself. What is the spirit and letter of this law before us? Is it to provide a mass convention when it expressly provides for a delegate convention? Why hunt for the intent and spirit of the law when it has no hidden meaning? What are the words and phrases which justify this majority opinion in invoking this rule of construction? It is bending and twisting words from their well-understood meaning. It is not construction, but
Conceding that the nomination of the mass convention was orderly, yet its proceedings in nominating candidates was a palpable disregard of the requirements of the law. This is not a case where great public interests are to be protected, or human rights secured, by the construction given the law by this court, and which I fear may be hereafter claimed as a sort of precedent for negligence, and one which in the coming years may return to annoy and perplex us very materially. If a “mass convention” can be construed to mean a “delegate convention,” then lexicographers will have to add a new definition to their dictionaries.
I greatly regret that my view of the law compels me to dissent, and, if there were any doubt in my mind upon the proner construction to be given to the law, I would concur in the majority opinion, at least by my silence. My opinion may be of but little consequence in this case, but I am not insensible to the weakening force which sometimes arises by reason of judgments being rendered by a divided court, as well as by the conflicting opinion of different courts; but as
I think that the prayer of the petition should have been granted.
(Opinion published 60 N. W. 672.)