| W. Va. | Oct 18, 1922

Ritz, Judge:

By this proceeding the relators seek to compel the respondents, the members of the county court of Wayne county, to appoint certain persons as election officers for the election to be held in said county in November of the present year, as representing the Republican party, it being conceded that that party, under the provisions of the law, is one of the parties entitled to nominate' to the county court election officers to be appointed.

The facts as developed upon the hearing are, that the Republican county committee of Wayne county is composed of *68twelve members; that one W. H. Newhonse is the chairman of that committee, and that on the 25th of September said Newhouse wrote a letter to each of the twelve members of the committee asking them to make np lists of election officers for their several districts to represent the Republican party in the election, and send these lists to him; and further advised them that he would be at the county seat of the county on Monday, the 2nd of October, that being- the day before that upon which the election officers were to be appointed by the county court, and if enough of the committee members attended they would have a meeting of the committee at that time. Pursuant to this notice there appeared at Wayne, the county .seat of the county, on the 2nd day of October seven regularly elected members of the committee. One A. 6. Holt also presented himself and claimed the right to sit as a member of the committee because of a proxy which he held regularly executed by one of the regularly elected members who was absent on this occasion. Five of the regularly elected members, together with said Holt, holding the proxy aforesaid, desired to hold a meeting as contemplated by the chairman’s' notice, and they called upon the chairman and the other two members of the committee who were present to meet with them in accordance with that notice. For some reason, not' disclosed by the record, • the chairman and the other two members did not desire to have a meeting of the committee and refused to attend any meeting with the other members. It appears that one member of the committee who had been regularly elected theretofore as such had moved from the county sometime before the date of this meeting, but his office as committeeman had never been declared vacant by any formal action taken by the committee at .one of its meetings. Five regularly elected members of the committee together with Holt, holding the proxy aforesaid, met, and acting on the assumption that the committee was only composed of eldven-members because of the removal of the member above referred to from the county, they held that a quorum was present for the transaction of business. They thereupon elected a resident of the district to which the removed mem*69ber belonged as a member of the committee to fill the vacancy, and the party thus elected appeared and sat with them in the committee. It will thus be seen that five members of the committee were present who had been regularly elected, and whose title to the office is not challenged, one holding the proxy of another regularly elected member, and another claiming the right to sit as a committeeman because of his election to fill a vacancy caused by the removal from .the county of a regularly elected committeeman. As thus constituted they again called upon the chairman and the other two members who were present in the town to meet with them for the purpose of making up a list of election officers to represent the Republican party at the election aforesaid, and upon the refusal of the chairman and the other two members to meet with them they proceeded themselves to make up said list, and having made it up certified it to the county court over the signatures of all seven of the members, one of them acting as chairman pro iem, and another as secretary. On the same day that this list was presented to t£te county court the chairman of the committee also certified a list of election officers to the said court to represent the Republican party at said election, claiming that, he had the authority to do so because of the fact that the committee had had no regular meeting, and had not acted in that behalf. The county court appointed the list certified by the chairman and rejected the list certified by the committee composed of the seven members made up as aforesaid, and this writ is asked to compel the county court to appoint the list presented by the committee as made up of these seven members or parties purporting to act as members.

A contention is made that the writ should not go for the reason that there never was a quorum of the committee present at any time at which the list of election officers was prepared and certified. It is insisted that a regularly elected committeeman could not be represented by proxy, and that whether a member of the committee had moved from the county or not, this matter could only be determined by a *70quorum of the full committee and his successor elected after his office had been lawfully declared vacant.

May a member of the executive committee of a political ■party be represented at a meeting by a proxy? Evidence is. taken upon this hearing to show that it has been the uniform practice of the Republican party for many, many years to-recognize these proxies at meetings of the state committee, and county and other committees. This was the practice at the time the statute first recognized political committees and provided for their election. The legislature, no doubt,' knew of this practice at the time it passed the law, and made no provision to the contrary. Since the statute was passed recognizing political committees, it is shown by the evidence that the practice still obtains, at least so far as the Republican party is concerned, and no act has been passed by the legislature prohibiting it. We are not disposed to hold that a member may not be represented by his proxy when the practice is of such long standing, and of such universal recognition.

The next question is, whether or not the committeeman elected to fill the vacancy on this occasion could sit with the six members present and transact the business of the committee. It may be that his title to the office could not be sustained in a direct proceeding against him to remove him therefrom. As to this we make no inquiry. If he was a de facto officer, his acts, so far as the public and third parties are concerned, are just as valid as though he were an officer by right. Franklin v. County Court, 86 W. Va. 479" court="W. Va." date_filed="1920-05-11" href="https://app.midpage.ai/document/franklin-v-county-court-of-mcdowell-county-8178982?utm_source=webapp" opinion_id="8178982">86 W. Va. 479. As to whether or not the six members present were correct in their determination that there was a vacancy because of the removal of one member from the county, we need not inquire. They acted upon that belief, and they elected a man to fill that vacancy. The party thus elected sat with them and acted as a member of the committee. Clearly under the decision above cited he was a de facto officer, and his acts valid and binding. This leads us to the conclusion that the list which the relators ask that the county court be compelled to appoint was properly certified, and that the chairman as such *71had no right on his own responsibility to disregard the will , of the committee and certify a list, nor had the county court any power or authority to disregard the list certified by the seven members aforesaid and appoint that presented by the county chairman, which did not even purport to be the action of the committee, but his own individual action.

, It follows, therefore, that the writ of mandamus prayed for will be awarded.

Writ awarded

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