*954 Opinion
I. Introduction
California statutory law enumerates seven specific grounds by which the results of an election can be contested (see Elec. Code, § 16100 1 ) so that, under certain circumstances, the election can be set aside and a new election held. 2 California case law holds that these seven grounds are the exclusive statutory grounds for postelection challenges. 3 Although election results can be challenged under section 16100 on the ground that the winner is ineligible, the statute does not contemplate challenges based on the fact that one of the runners-up is ineligible.
In the case before us now, a postelection challenge has been brought on the theory that one of the losers in the election—a write-in candidate at that— was ineligible for office and her presence affected the outcome. This challenge, as we explain in more detail below, should have been brought before the election.
*955 II. Background
On November 2, 2004, San Diego held a runoff election for mayor. The candidates on the ballot were the two top vote getters from the primary, Mayor Dick Murphy and County Supervisor Ron Roberts. However, about five weeks before the election the city clerk had qualified a third person as a write-in candidate, City Councilmember Donna Frye. Accordingly, the ballot also provided for write-ins.
It turned out to be a very close election indeed. Mayor Murphy and the write-in candidate, Councilmember Frye, received about 34 percent of the votes each (with Murphy apparently receiving a few more), with Supervisor Roberts receiving the rest.
We express no opinion on the issue as to whether the failure on the part of some voters who wrote in Frye’s name to also blacken an oval next to it means that those votes should, or should not, be counted. As will be made clear, the particular case before us—which is brought by a voter who wants another election without Frye on the ballot—is resolvable independent of the undarkened oval question.
The voter in question is Thomas McKinney. In the wake of the election, McKinney filed a complaint on November 8, which as amended November 12, sought declaratory and injunctive relief and an election contest. In that complaint McKinney seeks a writ of mandate which would annul the San Diego mayoral election and have the court order a new election on the theory that the qualification of Frye’s write-in candidacy by the city clerk was in contravention of San Diego’s City Charter.
The theory behind McKinney’s challenge goes like this: In 1985, the California Supreme Court in
Canaan v. Abdelnour
(1985)
We also do not express any opinion as to whether the qualification of Frye by the city clerk was indeed in contravention of the charter. Again, this case can be decided independent of that question as well.
An ex parte hearing was held on November 15 on McKinney’s request to obtain temporary restraining orders to halt counting the votes and prevent subsequent certification of the election results. At that hearing the trial court denied the request for the restraining order in sweeping terms, indicating that McKinney was not entitled to any relief under his complaint at all. The reporter’s transcript of the hearing shows that the trial judge rejected McKinney’s position on two bases: (1) the write-in candidacy was indeed authorized by virtue of the “custom and practice” of the city in allowing write-ins in runoff elections, but even if it wasn’t (2) McKinney had waited too long to challenge the election and his complaint was barred by laches.
A few days later, the trial judge signed a minute order dismissing McKinney’s complaint nunc pro tunc as of the date of the denial of McKinney’s request for temporary restraining orders. 5
On Tuesday November 30, 2004, McKinney filed this writ proceeding in Division One of this District (based in San Diego), seeking not only to vacate the ex parte denial of his request for temporary restraining orders but also to reverse the dismissal of his case as provided in the signed minute order. The proceeding was transferred to this court (based in Santa Ana) that very day, 6 which was the day that certification of the results was scheduled. We immediately stayed the certification in order to maintain the status quo at *957 least long enough to study the merits of the petition and receive written opposition. We scheduled oral argument for Friday, December 3, and now write in the wake of that hearing.
III. Postelection Challenges Must Either Be Brought on Enumerated Statutory Grounds or Be Based on the Violation of Constitutional Rights
A. McKinney Should Have Brought This Challenge Before the Election
McKinney had a preelection remedy he could have exercised. Section 13314, subdivision (a)(1) provides that: “Any elector may seek a writ of mandate alleging that an error or omission has occurred, or is about to occur, in the placing of any name on, or in the printing of, a ballot, sample ballot, voter pamphlet, or other official matter, or that any neglect of duty has occurred, or is about to occur.” 7
Kilbourne v. City of Carpinteria
(1976)
*958
The bases for a
poste
lection challenge, i.e., an “election contest,” are enumerated in section 16100. And, as our Supreme Court pointed out in
Friends of Sierra Madre
v.
City of Sierra Madre, supra,
*959 At oral argument counsel for McKinney specifically disavowed any reliance on section 16100, and we take that as a formal withdrawal of his complaint to the degree that it requests relief in the form of an “election contest.” Accordingly, we express no opinion here whether any of the subdivisions of section 16100 would otherwise apply to this case.
Rather, McKinney’s theory is that the court must enforce the city charter (or at least his interpretation of the charter) in terms of a request for writ of mandate. But having passed up the chance to challenge Frye’s qualification and provision in the ballot for write-ins preelection, McKinney cannot bring that challenge now, after the election. He had a remedy prior to the election if he had been willing to exercise it.
B. Any Arguable Violation of the Charter Does Not Rise to a Constitutional Level
There is only one remaining question.
Friends of Sierra Madre, Horwath
and
Kerr
all recognized that an election still might be set aside if there was malconduct that rose to constitutional levels. As
Horwath
framed it, the issue is whether a “nonenumerated act”—that is to say, an act not mentioned in section 16100—affects the “electoral machinery itself’ and thus renders the result unconstitutional.
(Horwath v. City of East Palo Alto, supra,
Do the facts that Frye was “qualified” by the city clerk as a write-in candidate and there was a space on the ballot for write-in candidates, in arguable violation of the city charter, rise to such a constitutional level? We think not.
*960 First of all, the fact that a ballot contains the names of candidates who are otherwise not qualified to serve was not considered by our Legislature to be a ground for setting aside an election when it enacted section 16100—how much less so did the Legislature consider the mere qualification of a candidate in arguable contravention of a local charter to be such a ground. Only if an ineligible candidate is declared the winner may a postelection challenge be brought.
Any other rule threatens to undermine the stability of most elections: If any candidate on the ballot was ineligible (and therefore supposedly drew votes away from eligible candidates), the election could be annulled despite the fact that the statute does not provide for contests based on the ineligibility of losers. The Legislature drew the line at the winner.
The other reason is more basic, but again centers on the need for stability in elections. (Cf.
Gooch
v.
Hendrix
(1993)
IV. Conclusions
The trial court’s minute order dismissing McKinney’s challenge is affirmed, or, to be precise, we deny the petition seeking a writ ordering the vacation of that order.
*961 We discharge the stay of the certification we issued on Tuesday, November 30. Each party shall bear his or her costs in this proceeding.
Rylaarsdam, J., and O’Leary, J., concurred.
Petitioner’s petition for review by the Supreme Court was denied January 12, 2005.
Notes
All nonspecific statutory references in this opinion are to the Elections Code. Section 16100 provides:
“Any elector of a county, city, or of any political subdivision of either may contest any election held therein, for any of the following causes:
“(a) That the precinct board or any member thereof was guilty of malconduct.
“(b) That the person who has been declared elected to an office was not, at the time of the election, eligible for that office.
“(c) That the defendant has given to any elector or member of a precinct board any bribe or reward, or has offered any bribe or reward for the purpose of procuring his election, or has committed any other offense against the elective franchise defined in Division 18 (commencing with Section 18000).
“(d) That illegal votes were cast.
“(e) That eligible voters who attempted to vote in accordance with the laws of the state were denied their right to vote.
“(f) That the precinct board in conducting the election or in canvassing the returns, made errors sufficient to change the result of the election as to any person who has been declared elected.
“(g) That there was error in the vote-counting programs or summation of ballot counts.”
E.g.,
Bradley
v.
Perrodin
(2003)
See
Friends of Sierra Madre v. City of Sierra Madre
(2001)
A formulation which is even more restrictive than the one in San Francisco’s Charter analyzed in Edelstein; the phrase “only candidates” was not to be found in the charter provision construed there. (See
Edelstein, supra,
Procedurally we have a case with a signed order of dismissal (see Code Civ. Proc., § 581d) in which the “appellant,” i.e., the petitioner here, has short-circuited the appellate process by bringing a writ petition instead of going by way of ordinary appeal. Given that the petitioner seeks the annulment of an election and the holding of a new one, it is hard to say that he has an “adequate” remedy by way of appeal. However, even if petitioner does have an adequate remedy by way of appeal, the uncertainty generated by this litigation is sufficient grounds for this court to explain its reasons for the denial of the petition instead of just denying it summarily.
Because several justices in Division One of this District to whom the case would normally be assigned, recused themselves, a panel to hear this matter in that court was unavailable.
Subdivision (a)(2) of section 13314 provides that “A peremptory writ of mandate shall issue only upon proof of both of the following: (A) that the error, omission, or neglect is in violation of this [Elections] code or the Constitution, and (B) that issuance of the writ will not substantially interfere with the conduct of the election.”
Would this subdivision, restricting mandate as a remedy to violations of the either Constitution or the Elections Code, have precluded a preelection challenge by McKinney on the theory that his challenge was strictly a matter of the city charter? No. San Diego’s Municipal Code has a specific provision allowing the city clerk and city council to look to the state Elections Code “for guidance if there is no controlling provision” in the code. (San Diego Mun. Code, § 27.0106, subd. (d).) Moreover, in any event, even if McKinney could not have sought mandate pursuant to section 13314, there is absolutely nothing in the basic law of mandamus which precluded his bringing a challenge to Frye’s qualification as a write-in candidate, or to the ballot being printed with a space for write-ins, before the election.
As this court noted in
People ex rel. Kerr v. County of Orange
(2003)
There is no doubt that the Elections Code governs disputes even in charter cities. Article 11, section 5, subdivision (a) of our state’s Constitution provides in pertinent part: “It shall be competent in any charter city to provide that the city governed thereunder may make and enforce all ordinances and regulations in respect to municipal affairs, subject only to restrictions and limitations provided in their several charters and in respect to other matters they shall be subject to general laws.” (Italics added.) Moreover, the Elections Code has a number of provisions (e.g., §§ 1003, 9247) which expressly allow a charter city to have a different provision, while most provisions of the Elections Code do not expressly allow charter cities to have a different rule. That itself means something: Under the rule of expressio unius est exclusio alterius (by saying the one thing you necessarily exclude the other), absent some express allowance by the state Elections Code for a different rule in charter cities, the Legislature clearly intended the provisions of the Elections Code to govern election disputes in charter cities.
