71 W. Va. 180 | W. Va. | 1912
This is a petition by P. D. Morris and other voters of Wetzel county for a writ of mandamus to compel the ballot commissioners of that county to place the name of Morris on the ballot sheet to be used at the general election to be held on the 5th day of November, 1912, in the column of that sheet assigned to the Progressive Party.
The Progressive Party is a new party, which did not exist at the date of the last general election, having been organized by a national convention assembled at Chicago in August, 1912. It has an organization in this state and also its counties, having state and other subordinate committees, among them committees in the counties of Wetzel, Tyler and Doddridge, and a committee for the judicial circuit composed of those counties. The Progressive Party adopted as a device or emblem a picture of Theadore Roosevelt, and as a legend “Theadore Roosevelt,” to be printed at the head of the Progressive Party’s column on the ballot sheet for the coming election. Preparatory to the coming election voters of those counties filed with the clerks of the circuit courts of those three counties, they being members of the ballot commissioners, certificates nominating persons as candidates for various offices on the ticket of the Progressive Party; but they did not nominate any one for judge of that circuit. There was no candidate for that office on the Progressive Party ticket. In this state of things voters in the circuit signed certificates nominating P. D. Morris as a candidate for that judgeship on the Progressive ticket, and filed them with the circuit court clerks of those counties. His name was placed on the Progressive ticket in Tyler and Doddridge counties; but the ballot commissioners of Wetzel county, upon a protest by persons claiming to be Progressive, refused to put his name on the Progressive Party ticket in Wetzel county. The return or answer to the mandamus nisi in this Court states that these certificates nominating Morris for judge do not represent truly the Progressive Party; that a majority of those signing them are not members or supporters of the Progressive Party, but are active and zealous Republicans, seeking in this way to secure the votes of Progressives for a Republican candidate; that they are enemies to the Progressive Party and its
The Progressive Party being a new party casting no vote' at the last election, its committees are not known to the law as competent to call conventions or primary elections for nomination of candidates, because the statute confines those two modes of nomination to parties casting at the last election three per cent of the entire vote of the state, or subdivision of the state for which nominations are made. Code of 1906, ch. 3, secs. 18 and 19. Hence, while the Progressive Party has full right to participate in the election by presenting candidates to the people, it cannot do so by primary election or convention. But the Progressive Party or any other new party are voters and not shut out from presenting candidates for popular verdict. Section 24 says: “Candidates for public office may be nominated otherwise than by conventions or primary elections. In such case, a certificate shall be signed by the voters resident within the State, district or political division for 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, circuit, district, county or other division for which the nomination is made. * * * Such certificate shall state the name and residence of each of such candidates; that he is legally qualified to hold such office; that the subscribers desire and are legally qualified to vote for such candidates; and may designate, by not more than five words, a brief name of the party or principle which said candidates represent.” This right to present candidates to the voters is by the statute plainly clear. It would seem to clearly allow those voters who signed the certificates involved in this case the right to do so. What is the objection interposed to their so doing? The answer says that the signers of that certificate, presenting the name of Morris for judge, are not sincere Progressives, but are Republicans seeking in this way to get for Morris Progressive votes; alleging this to be a scheme of fraud to do so. This is the immaterial defense presented by the return of the board. It says, in fact, that no one but a
Mandamus awarded.
Writ Awarded.