31 Mont. 227 | Mont. | 1904
delivered tbe opinion of tbe court.
This is in the matter of the application for a writ of mandate to compel tbe secretary of state to receive and file a certain certificate of nomination of tbe petitioner for tbe office of attorney general of tbe state of Montana, said certificate having been made by tbe state central committee of tbe Republican party, and to certify to .the several county clerks in tbe state the name and description of tbe petitioner as the candidate of said party for the office mentioned, to tbe end that said nomination should be printed upon tbe official ballots of tbe several counties for tbe general election to be held on November 8, 1904. Tbe attorney general, Hon. J ames Donovan, appeared for tbe respondent.
Tbe facts in tbe case are not in dispute. Tbe petitioner was duly nominated at the Republican state convention for the office of attorney general. Through inadvertence, accident or mistake tbe name of Albert J. Galen, the petitioner herein, was omitted from, and no mention was made of tbe office of attorney general in, tbe certificate of nominations which was made, signed and filed in tbe office of tbe secretary of state by the chairman and
An alternative writ having been issued by this court upon proper petition, the attorney general, for the respondent, moved to quash and set aside the petition upon the grounds (1) that it showed that there was no vacancy existing in the nomination for attorney general on the said ticket; (2) that the certificate tendered was not the regular certificate of nomination by the convention, but was made by the state central committee to fill an alleged vacancy, instead of being certified by the proper officers of the convention. The position of the respondent was that the statute (Section 1316, Political Oode) requiring certificates of nomination to be filed with the secretary of state not more than sixty days and not less than thirty days before the day fixed by law for the election is directory, and not mandatory, and that, therefore, the time not having arrived for the secretary
This court, in State ex rel. Scharnikow v. Hogan, 24 Mont. at page 402, 62 Pac. 683, expressly declared that certificates of original nominations made by party conventions must be filed within the period prescribed by Section 1316, but that there is no such requirement in respect of nominations made by virtue of the delegated power in a committee to fill vacancies.
It was stated on the part of the respondent on the hearing that the law did not contemplate merely one certificate embracing all the nominations, but that it was the duty of the officers of a convention to certify each nomination, and that this might be done by separate certificate for each nominee, and that the certificate on file therefore was not insufficient or inoperative under Section 1320, Political Code, and had not become such as to Mr. Galen, for the reason that there had not been any certificate of nomination made on his behalf. The statute ( Section 1311, Political Code) contemplates one certificate of nomination, and one only, as coming from the state convention, for it says: “The certificate of nomination, which must be in writing, must contain the name of each person nominated, his residence, * * * and it must be signed by the presiding officer and secretary of such convention. * * *”
As we have said, it is mandatory that this certificate must be made and filed before the thirty days before the election commence to run. The certificate filed certainly was, when received by the secretary of state, insufficient for the purpose of declaring the will of the Republican party in convention assembled
Under Section 1320 of the Political Code, “if any person so nominated dies before the printing of the tickets, or decline the nomination as in this chapter provided, or if any certificate of nomination is or becomes insufficient or inoperative from any cause, the vacancy or vacancies thus occasioned may be filled in the manner required for the original nomination. If the original nomination was made by a party convention which had delegated to a committee the power to fill vacancies, such committee may, upon the occurring of such vacancies, proceed to fill the same. The chairman and secretary of such committee must thereupon make and file with the proper officer a certificate setting forth the cause of the vacancy, the name of the person nominated, the office for which we was nominated, the name of the person for whom the new nominee is to be substituted, the fact that the committee was authorized to fill vacancies, and such further information as is required to be given in an original certificate of nomination. The certificate so made must be executed in the manner prescribed for the original certificate of nomination, and has the same force and effect as an original certificate of nomination. * * *” Such a certificate to fill a vacancy was made by the state central committee, to which the necessary authority had been duly given by the convention, and was offered to the secretary of state.
“The statute is silent touching the time within which must be filed the certificate of nomination made by a committee to fill a vacancy occasioned by the insufficiency of the certificate of the original nomination. ” When a convention has made a nomination, and has authorized its committee to fill any vacancy that may occur, the filling of the vacancy by the committee upon the death or resignation of the candidate, or because the original certificate of nomination was or became insufficient or inoperative, may be made at any time before the day of election.”
To adopt the language used by the Nebraska court in the case above, we may say that, while by a labored effort in that direction, or by some refined reasoning for the purpose, doubtless the vacancy which existed in the roll of Republican nominees when Albert J. Galen was nominated by the state central committee might be argued to be one which was not within the terms or meaning of the portion of the section of the election law which we have quoted, when the words are given their ordinary significance it appears still that it is just such a vacancy as was in contemplation of the lawmakers in the enactment of said section. The convention undoubtedly made the nomination, and its officers, who, both by the convention and the law, were required to certify the same, negligently or inattentively failed to make the certificate sufficient to show the complete results in the nominations made, and it thus was rendered inoperative as to the one in question, and there was thus created a vacancy in the nominations, clearly within the common-sense meaning of the words employed in the section of the election law to which we have referred.
It was ordered heretofore, to-wit, on the 17th day of October, 1904, that a peremptory writ of mandate issue, directing the secretary of state to receive the certificate of nomination made by said committee, and file the same, and to enter the name of Hr. Galen under the designation of the Republican party for the office of- attorney general as nominated by said convention.
Writ issued.