E. C. 3513.05 establishes the statutory remedy for protesting a candidacy for party nomination. It provides, in pertinent part, that “* * * [p]rotests against the candidacy of any person filing a declaration of candidacy for party nomination or for election to an office or position, as provided in this section, may be filed by any qualified elector who is a member of the same political party as the candidate and who is eligible to vote at the primary election for the candidate whose declaration of candidacy he objects to, or by the controlling committee of such party. Such protest must he in writing, and must he filed not later than four p. m. of the sixty-fifth day before the primary election. Such protest shall be filed with the election officials with whom the declaration of candidacy and petition was filed.” (Emphasis added.)
In Maranze v. Bd. of Elections (1958),
The Maranze case is dispositive of the instant cause and dictates that the relator may not maintain this mandamus action.
Relator’s motion for summary judgment is therefore overruled and the writ prayed for denied.
Writ denied.
Notes
Relator maintains that the board failed to notify him of the alleged deficiency in the Aveni petition. R. C. 3513.05 requires only that notice of a protest hearing be given to one making a protest and to the person whose candidacy is being protested.
Since R. C. 3513.05 also provides that “[a]ll petition papers * * * filed with such board shall * * * be open to public inspection until four p. m. of the seventieth day before the day of the next primary election,” and since it is presumed that the board performed its statutorily mandated duty in this respect, the relator had adequate opportunity to discover any defect in the Aveni part-petitions and file a timely protest.
