656 N.E.2d 1031 | Ohio Ct. App. | 1995
On December 5, 1994, the relator, Jay Klein, commenced this prohibition and mandamus action against the respondents, the Cuyahoga County Board of Elections, Jimmy Dimora, Ann White, Roger Synenberg and Marguerite Hughes, to compel them to oust Michael Corrigan as a judge of the Cuyahoga County Common Pleas Court. Subsequently, Klein admitted that the prohibition action was moot; thus, it is dismissed and the application for an alternative writ of prohibition filed therewith is denied. The parties have submitted the mandamus action on cross-motions for summary judgment. For the following reasons, the court denies the application for a writ of mandamus.
The parties agree that in 1992 and 1993 Michael Corrigan was a member of the Democratic Party and voted the Democratic primary election ballot. In January 1994, he filed his declaration of candidacy for common pleas judge in the May 3, 1994 Democratic primary. On March 9, 1994, the board of elections approved the validity and sufficiency of Judge Corrigan's petition and certified his name on the ballot. No one filed a protest to his candidacy, and no one suggests that as of that date judge Corrigan was not properly certified as a Democratic candidate. Moreover, Judge Corrigan was unopposed for that particular judgeship.
On April 5, 1994, the absentee balloting began. On primary election day, May 3, Corrigan voted the Republican Party primary ballot, as established by the *126 public records relating to the election. No one challenged Corrigan's vote. On June 7 the board of elections certified the results of the primary election and declared Corrigan the victor in the Democratic primary for that particular judgeship. In the November 8, 1994, nonpartisan general election, Corrigan was unopposed. Again no one, including Klein, protested his candidacy in any way. On or about November 16, 1994, Klein read a newspaper article in which Corrigan discussed his change from Democrat to Republican; the article stated his reasons were philosophical.
Approximately three weeks later Klein filed this writ action. He asserts that he is a member of the Cuyahoga County Democratic Party Central and Executive Committees and a ward leader for Lyndhurst, that he supported and worked for Judge Corrigan's candidacy, and that he voted for him at the May 3, 1994 primary. Klein further alleges that had he known that Corrigan would change parties, he would not have supported or voted for him. On December 6, 1994, the board of elections certified the election results, including Corrigan's victory.
The gravamen of Klein's argument is that Corrigan violated R.C.
As a mechanism to decertify Corrigan's election, Klein relies upon R.C.
Klein's application for a writ of mandamus fails on the merits. The requirements for mandamus are well established: (1) the relator must have a clear legal right to the relief requested, (2) the respondent must have a clear legal duty to perform the requested relief, and (3) there must be no adequate remedy at law. State ex rel. Ney v. Niehaus (1987),
First, Klein has not cited, nor has this court found, any controlling or persuasive authority for the specific proposition that a board of elections must decertify or rule as ineligible a candidate who properly qualified as a candidate for one party and then voted as a member of another party at the relevant election.
The focus of R.C.
An analysis of R.C. Chapter 3513, especially the timing allotted for protests, verifies the above principle. The vehicle for challenging a candidate's qualifications is the statutorily provided protest under R.C.
Under R.C. Chapter 3513 the time specified for making a protest to a person's candidacy is up to sixty-four days before the primary. R.C.
The "within the current year" language of R.C.
Considering only the previous voting record for purposes of determining eligibility to be a candidate at a party primary is consistent with the amendments to R.C.
State ex rel. Taylor v. Lucas Cty. Bd. of Elections, supra, is instructive on the issue of whether a board of elections has a duty to consider events subsequent to certifying a candidate for a primary for purposes of evaluating eligibility. In Taylor, between the time of the primary and general elections the candidate moved to another precinct within her city, but she omitted to inform the board of the move until it was too late for her to be eligible to vote in the general election. The relator argued that the candidate was no longer a qualified elector, and thus she was ineligible to continue as a candidate, and any votes for her should not be counted and certified. The court of appeals in ruling that the candidate had actually not lost her status as either a candidate or a qualified elector further indicated that the board of elections was not under a continuing duty to monitor candidates' credentials once they were certified.
In the present case there is no doubt that Judge Corrigan properly qualified as a candidate before the primary. The respondents had properly completed their duty at that time. The statutory scheme of R.C. Chapter 3513 and the common law concerning protests establish that the board had no duty to conduct further *129
examinations after the time for protests had lapsed. The board had no duty to consider events subsequent to the time of certification for the primary and no duty to summarily decertify a candidate for eligibility after the general election. To rule otherwise would improperly and imprudently expand the scope of R.C.
The court further notes that Klein did not timely pursue this mandamus action. In election cases extreme diligence and the promptest of action are required. Brink v. Franklin Cty. Bd. ofElections (1985),
In the present case, Klein never filed a protest. Rather, he waited until the day before the results of the general election were to be certified to file this action. This demonstrates an extreme lack of diligence. As the court in Brink noted, granting relief would disfranchise all those who voted for Judge Corrigan in both the primary and general elections. Klein endeavors to excuse his dilatory actions by claiming that Judge Corrigan concealed his actions, i.e., voting Republican at the primary and not announcing it to the news media immediately. However, making one's actions a matter of public record cannot be characterized as concealment. Judge Corrigan's voting Republican became a matter of public record when he requested the Republican ballot. Any failure to act on this record reflects a lack of due diligence on the part of the relator rather than concealment on the part of Judge Corrigan. Laches precludes granting relief under these facts.
Moreover, the Supreme Court of Ohio has repeatedly ruled that protests and other matters relating to candidacies become moot after the election has been held. State ex rel. Patrick v.Cuyahoga Cty. Bd. of Elections (1962),
Accordingly, because relief is barred by laches, because the matter is moot, because the respondents have no duty to perform the requested relief, and because no impropriety was committed, Klein's application for mandamus is denied. Relator to pay costs.
Writ denied.
HARPER and PORTER, JJ., concur.