194 Iowa 785 | Iowa | 1922
It is made to appear that both the relator and the defendant were candidates at the late primary election for such office, and that the judges of the election certified the result in favor of the defendant, as having been nominated by a majority of one vote. It was averred in the petition that two election votes were cast for. the defendant which should have been rejected. The illegality charged against one voter was that he had not resided 10 days in the township nor 60 days in the county, prior to the date of the primary. The illegality
A primary election is not an election, within the meaning of the Constitution; nor is it such within any meaning known to the common law. It is purely a legislative creation, that involves neither life, liberty, property, nor franchise. It is enacted solely for the benefit of orderly procedure in the administration of political parties respectively, whereby each may select candidates for office, to be submitted to the consideration of all the electors at the general election. In its creation, the legislature was subjected to no constitutional inhibition; nor are its imperfections, if any, subject to attack on constitutional grounds. Prior to its legislative creation, the primary election never was or could be the subject of judicial cognizance; nor in its creation has the legislature conferred or taken away any right which has been heretofore, or can be hereafter, the subject of judicial cognizance, except so far as such right may be later conferred by legislation. The power of the legislature extends both to the rights created by it and to the remedy for their protection. This is the general purport of our previous holdings. State v. Secretary of State, 141 Iowa 196; State v. Parker, 147 Iowa 69; Jones v. Fisher, 156 Iowa 582.
Authorities from other jurisdictions are so nearly uniform on this question that it would be mere redundancy to cite them all. See the following: Walls v. Brundidge, 109 Ark. 250 (Am. Ann. Cas. 1915 C, 980, 985); Ferguson v. Montgomery, 148 Ark. 83 (229 S. W. 30, 34); Lansdon v. State Board of Canvassers, 18 Ida. 596 (111 Pac. 133, 136); Brumleve v. Cronan, 176 Ky. 818 (197 S. W. 498); Foxwell v. Beck, 117 Md. 1 (82 Atl. 657, 658); Bradley v. Board of State Canvassers, 154 Mich. 274 (117 N. W. 649, 652, 653); Barney v. Woodward, 90 Miss. 777 (44 So. 769); State v. Woodruff, 68 N. J. Law 89 (52 Atl. 294), cited with approval in In re Jamestown Caucus Law, (R. I.) 112 Atl. 900, 901; Brown v. Costen, 176 N. C. 63 (96 S. E. 659,
Two or three quotations from the foregoing citations will be a sufficient indication of the trend.
Quoting from Lansdon v. State Board of Canvassers, 18 Ida. 596:
“Conventions have been recognized by statute, and indeed 'provided for in many states for years; and yet no one -ever thought, of providing for contesting the result of a convention, or having a recount of votes east, or anything of that kind; and still it was recognized all along that many wrongs were committed and often fraud practiced in the holding of conventions. A primary election law is merely a substitute for a convention, and the only thing accomplished by it is that of selecting candidates for the several parties, whose names shall go on the official ballot for the general election. ’ ’
From Bradley v. Board of State Canvassers, 154 Mich. 274:
“The right to be declared the nominee of a party to a certain office is not the right to an office or a franchise nor is it a constitutional right. * * * The general election laws of the state are applicable to a primary election where such laws or their construction already given will not contravene the plain provisions and intent of such law, but to no greater extent. The general election laws know nothing about parties, except as printed upon a common ballot. The primary law is based "entirely upon party recognition. Under the general election laws, an individual is given his remedy by quo warranto to try the title to an office to which he claims to be entitled. Under the primary election laAv, the party and the individual can only know whether a lawful nomination has been made by having recourse to a recount, and the legality of the votes cast for the candidates of a party can only be determined by the party enrollment, which has been made the basis of the proceeding from the beginning.”
From State v. Woodruff, 68 N. J. Law 89:
The provisions of our statute are to be found in Sections 1087-al8 and 1087-al9. It will be noted from the statute that the remedy provided against abuse of the primary election is vested, first, in the judges of election, and second, in the board of supervisors. The remedy is limited in its scope, and practical and expeditious in its operation. Both parties are permitted to name party challengers to attend the election; the challengers are permitted to challenge the votes on the ground of illegality; the judges have power to support the challenges; the judges do the counting of the ballots under the sanction of legal oath; their certification is subject to challenge. before the board of supervisors on the ground of fraud and mistake in the counting; the board of supervisors, upon such challenge, are required to make a recount and to certify accordingly. As to the legality of votes, the decision of the judges of election is final. As to the correctness of the count, the decision of the board of supervisors is final.
The argument for the appellant is that the right to have his name upon the official ballot for the general election as the result of a primary election is a franchise, within the meaning of Section 4313 of the Code; that, therefore, quo warranto will lie, because the statutory remedy already noted does not purport to be exclusive. The argument may be conceded that, if the right of a candidate to have his name as party candidate upon the official ballot is a franchise, then quo warranto will lie. But we think that the premise cannot be sustained and is not sustained by the weight of authority. The loser at a primary elec-tion loses nothing in a legal sense, except it be a mere convenience. He is not thereby excluded from continuing his candidacy at the general election. All electors who wish to do so have a right to vote for him and to have their votes counted. His right in this respect is coextensive with the right of the winning can
When it is considered that tens of thousands of candidates are voted for at the primary within the state, and that irregularities are the inevitable incidents of a primary election whose lines of demarcation as to political affiliations must always be indefinite and uncertain, the impossibility of extending judicial cognizance to the contests which would probably be presented is quite apparent. The trial of the contests would be largely the trial of moot questions, in that many, if not most, of the contestants who might win their contests before the court would still lose at the general election. The question to be decided in such a contest would be almost necessarily political: Had Democrats wrongfully called for and voted the Republican primary ticket? Had Republicans wrongfully called for and voted the Democratic ticket? Was the voter a Democrat? Was he a Republican? Was he an Independent? What was he last year? Did he in good faith change his political affiliations? etc., etc. All these questions would be proper for the consideration of the judges of the election. For the judges of the district and Supreme courts to take cognizance of them would be to contend with a flood.
Without further elaboration, it is sufficient to say that we are united in the view that the trial court properly dismissed the petition, and the judgment is affirmed. — Affirmed.