136 N.W. 76 | N.D. | 1912
This is an application in the name of the attorney general and an elector as relators for an original writ against the county audit- or of Burleigh county. The application charges, and it is admitted by the pleadings, that the respondent is about to ignore the provisions of an act passed by the last legislature, wherein it is the respondent’s ■duty to furnish the assessors of Burleigh county with enrolment blanks with directions to use the same in enrolling in some political party each elector assessed, according to his- political belief, and obtain from such elector an affidavit stating the party with which he affiliates, the affidavit to be used as a party enrolment list at the coming primary election. Such enrolment is designed to be a classification of the electors as to their political belief, to be binding upon them at said primaries according to the enrolment so previously made. The individual enrolled, by virtue of his own declaration as a Republican, if such, can vote none but a Republican ballot in the forthcoming primaries; the same with a Democrat so enrolled. There is no provision in the law for the enrolment of one as an independent voter, or one having no political belief; and independents are accordingly barred from voting at the primaries. To those familiar with recent occurrences and proceedings of political parties had under our primary election law it is wholly unnecessary to state the reasons for such- enrolment. For the sake of the record we will state that this act is to prevent the apparent habit, often indulged on the part of some voters attending primaries, of calling for and voting the primary ballot of a party other than that to which in fact they belong, resulting in a minority party participating to a great extent in selecting the nominees of the majority party, with the result that, in the general election following, a seemingly insignificant minority party elects its nominees to the defeat of those of the
The last legislature has, by chap. 213, required the assessors, as above stated, to malte a party enumeration and enrolment, and prescribed an affidavit in the following form to be taken before the assessor:
State of North Dakota | County of- ^ SS‘
I, the undersigned, elector, do solemnly swear (or affirm) that my name and signature as signed below is my true name and signature. If I have not personally signed it, it is because - and it was signed at my request by the attesting officer. My age is-years and occupation -; nativity - naturalized or declared by intention in-court, in-county,-state, on-19 — , as appears by the naturalization papers exhibited herewith. Present residence is in section-, township-, range-, - county, North Dakota; of (if city or town) at No. - street, in the city of-, post office address-. I belong to the - party; that I have resided in this state for one year immediately preceding this election. In testimony whereof I sign my name two times.
(1) - (1) -:-
(2)--
Elector.
The constitutional provisions involved are those contained in the second amendment to our state Constitution, defining electors, and §§ 122, 124, and 129 of our state Constitution. In brief the portions to be herein considered are § 121, as amended by art. 2 of amendments, reading: “Every male person of the age of twenty-one years or upwards belonging to either of the following classes, who shall have resided in the state one year, and in the county six months, and in the precinct ninety days, next preceding any election, shall be a qualified elector at such election.” Of § 122, the following: “The legislative assembly shall be empowered to make further extensions of suffrage hereafter at its discretion to all citizens of mature age and sound mind not convicted of crime, without regard to sex; but no law extending or restricting the right of suffrage shall be in force until adopted
The attorney general has appeared on behalf of the respondent in this case, though for formal purposes, lending his name as a relator. Respondent takes the position that a primary election is an election within the meaning of that term as used in the Constitution, and the qualifications of electors at such primary are the same as at a general election; and that chap. 213 of the Laws of 1911, by exacting an oath of party allegiance as a condition precedent to the right to vote at the primaries, is in effect requiring an additional qualification of an elector, as a condition precedent to his right to vote, besides those mentioned in § 121, defining his qualification and guarantying every male person with those qualifications who shall have resided in the precinct for a certain time “next preceding any election shall be a qualified elector at such election.” Logically the first question to determine is whether the primary election is an election within the meaning of § 121, as amended. To determine this we must consider ;■ (1) The statutory intent under which the particular right to suffrage is created and the intended rights of the individual and political party thereunder; (2) what is contemplated under the constitutional elective franchise scheme under art. 5, with reference to elector’s rights; (3) its application or not to this class of suffrage rights.
Let us first examine the scheme of the primary system. Previous to primary election reform the right of the legislature to provide all things necessary to the nomination of officials to be thereafter elected was not doubted. The legislature possessed plenary power in the matter; and legislation defining the manner and procedure under the caucus and convention system has always been held to bo the exercise of legislative discretion on a purely political question, without constitutional limitation, and concerning which courts are without authority to do other than declare merely the interpretation of the statutes without regard to its reasonableness or unreasonableness in application
As further evidencing the legislative intent, notice also that under our present existing primary election laws two classes of primary elections are now simultaneously held; namely, the nonpartisan judiciary primary, a complete separate election at which no test of party fealty can be exacted and is in express terms prohibited; the object of which act is to nominate in a nonpartisan manner, regardless of political affiliation, candidates to be elected in the fall at a similar nonpartisan election then held simultaneously with the general election; in addition, simultaneously there is held the partisan primary, at which the personnel of two or more separate party tickets is chosen to contend for office by election at the ensuing general election upon party platforms. That such elections, though' held together, are in law separate elections, see State ex rel. McCue v. Blaisdell, 18 N. D. 31; 119 N. W. 360, where it was held that a change of county boundaries
From the standpoint of political parties, and the legislative intent to recognize and perpetuate them as governmental agencies, relator’s contention then cannot be upheld. But how about the constitutionality of the statute from the view point of the rights of the constitutional elector ? Does the full enjoyment of his constitutional rights bar legislation granting partisan electors the privilege of use of the ballot as election machinery, thereby rendering primary elections within political parties unconstitutional ?
Our constitutional elective franchise scheme, as contained in art. 5, is that all persons possessing certain qualifications as to citizenship, age, and residence shall be electors, and as such possess a constitutional right of franchise whenever general suffrage rights are permitted in
This constitutional scheme further comprehends that the exercise of suffrage shall be had at elections, and recognizes two classes of elections, general and those not general. Section 124 fixes the time for the holding of general elections, and with this the legislature has nothing to do other than provide the means and regulations necessary to its conduct, and prescribe what officers shall then be elected. Other elections are by inference contemplated as permissible, for instance, evidenced by § 129 in prescribing that “all elections by the people shall be by secret ballot, subject to such regulations as shall be provided by law.” Aside from constitutional general elections, the purpose of other elections is left to the legislature as the power to judge of their necessity. Certain it is, then, that if a primary election falls within the term “any elections” so as to be a contemplated constitutional election, the purpose for which it may be held was left a matter to be fixed by the legislature, and that body was not intended to be by the Constitution limited so far as such purpose was concerned. While the purpose of an act may be wholly immaterial if the act be unconstitutional as violating some express or implied constitutional requirement or prohibition, yet the purpose here being left to legislative discretion, it is by the Constitution in a sense recognized, and these provisions are to be considered therewith, and are not to be unnecessarily held to limit the purpose by construction or unreasonable application, or by application not plainly or by necessary inference within its terms. The primary election statutes have as a principal purpose the regulation of the franchise of electors within party limits. The elections so provided concern primarily the rights of parties, and only incidentally those of the individual elector. The primary is not held to afford an elector as such merely a chance to exercise his right of suffrage, but, instead, an opportunity to participate in the proceedings and acts of a political party. This he does by exercising his right to vote, but within that party. Legislative discretion has recognized the party right as to method of nominating officers as well as promulgating its political doc
We have discussed the rights of the individual and the political party from the standpoint of each, and considered the constitutional questions as the legislature construed them, evident from the general plan of party primaries for nominating purposes, and also the same questions from the elective franchise scheme contemplated by art. 5 of the Constitution. We will now thereunder define the rights of the elector and the political party in the light of court interpretation.
Many courts lay down the broad rule that such constitutional provisions are applicable only to general elections, and therefore do not apply to primary elections. As illustrative we quote from Riter v. Douglass, 32 Nev. 400, 109 Pac. 444: “That a primary election of candidates is not an election of officers within the meaning of the constitutional test has been sustained by an overwhelming weight of authority in states with similar constitutional provisions to those contained in the Constitution of Nevada.” Citing Line v. Election Canvassers (Line v. Waite) 154 Mich. 329, 18 L.R.A.(N.S.) 412, 117 N. W. 730, 16 Ann. Cas. 248; Montgomery v. Chelf, 118 Ky. 766, 82 S. W. 388; State ex rel. Gulden v. Johnson, 87 Minn. 221, 91 N. W. 604, 840; State ex rel. Webber v. Felton, 77 Ohio St. 554-578, 84 N. E. 85, 12 Ann. Cas. 65; Dooley v. Jackson, 104 Mo. App. 21, 78 S. W. 333. “Any reasonable test of party affiliation may be required by the legislature of those who desire to participate in the primary elections of the various parties.” Citing State ex rel. Zent v. Nichols, 50 Wash. 508, 97 Pac. 728; State ex rel. Labauve v. Michel, 121 La. 374, 46 So. 430; State ex rel. Adair v. Drexel, 74 Neb. 776, 105 N. W. 174; Hopper v. Stack, 69 N. J. L. 562, 56 Atl. 1; Morrow v. Wipf, 22 S. D. 146, 115 N. W. 1121; Rouse v. Thompson, 228 Ill. 522, 81 N. E. 1109. The following is from the opinion in Morrow v. Wipf, 22 S. D. 146, 115 N. W. 1121: “The contention-[the same
We quote from 15 Cyc. 332, 333: “Unless it is expressly made so, a general election law is not applicable to primary elections, which are merely creations of political parties and associations, and may be held at such times and places and on such terms and conditions as may seem fit. But the legislature may recognize the existence of political parties, and within reasonable limits regulate the means by which partisan efforts shall be protected in exercising individual preferences for party candidates. And' this is the general purpose of primary election laws, which are designed to secure to individual voters a free expression of their will. Among other things the primary election laws usually make provision for the enrolment of the voters of the different political parties in order to prevent all persons whatever from voting in the party primaries except such as are entitled to do so.”
The court of this state has twice had occasion to pass upon the reasonableness of fees exacted of candidates at primary elections for filing of petitions, and held that such a fee to be calculated upon a percentage of one year’s salary of the office aspired to was an arbitrary, unreasonable condition upon the right of an aspirant for office, and accordingly void. Although the questions here involved were not necessary to a decision of those questions, the court in the former held a primary election to be an election within the meaning of § 121 of the state Constitution. Johnson v. Grand Forks County, 16 N. D. 363,
We do not hold that the constitutional provisions contained in art. 5 have no application to the primary election law; but we believe that inasmuch as the scheme of elective franchise therein contemplated has classified elections into two classes, general, which is defined, and other elections included within the “any election” provision of § 129, with such elections other than general unclassified and undefined, and with the right to install and put them in operation left to legislative discretion, as is the purpose for which election other than general may be authorized, the legislature is unlimited by said constitutional provisions to the extent that an election for any purpose not unconstitutional may be authorized. And the application of these constitutional provisions to such an election, the purpose of which is within the province of the legislature to determine, must be made with reference to such purpose so as not to unreasonably limit or defeat the purpose of such election when it is plain said constitutional provisions were never- intended to be so used or applied if at all. In other words, the purpose must be considered with the constitutional provisions to determine their application, and such election is to be considered unlimited so far as a reasonable construction of said constitutional provisions will permit. But the term “elector,” as used in the statute, carries into the statute the constitutional definition of an elector, and with it the constitutional guaranty of the right to vote if otherwise qualified under the statute authorizing the election, and which statute cannot restrict or extend suffrage so but what every elector may under equal conditions have a right to participate and enjoy equal rights with every other elector, including the right of written and secret ballot, so far only as is consistent with the purpose for which the election is held. Applied to the facts the legislature had the right to determine the necessity
As to respondent’s contention that the right of suffrage within the meaning of § 121, forbidding the extending or restricting of the right of suffrage until after submission of the proposition to a vote of the people, here applies, we answer that it does not. Chapter 213 in no wise seeks to restrict the right of suffrage, as it is based upon the premise that every elector has the right to vote; and no class of persons other than constitutional electors are by chap. 213 attempted to be granted the right of suffrage. State ex rel. Tompton v. Denoyer, 6 N. D. 586-600, 72 N. W. 1014.
Another objection urged to § 1 of chap. 213 in question is that it is unconstitutional as discriminatory. Respondent alleges that the act discriminates between claims of naturalized citizens in that it permits the foreign born elector naturalized by court process to vote if other- \ ise qualified, but excludes from voting that large number of foreign born citizens who were residents of this territory, and who became naturalized by the act of Congress admitting the state into the Union; or naturalized similarly on the admission of other states of the Union while then residents thereof. No provision is made whereby persons so naturalized under act of Congress may make proof of citizenship and right to be enrolled or participate in the primaries if otherwise qualified. This invalidates that portion of the required affidavit read
The same contention is made as to § 3 of the act read in connection with § 2 thereof, respondent urging want of uniformity in application in that the statute by express terms permits the voter becoming twenty-one years of age after the period of enrolment and on or prior to the day of primary election to vote thereat, while .the person naturalized within the state by court decree during the same period is not provided for and hence is denied the right to vote. This contention is not sound for two reasons: (1) This law construed in the light of its intent, as apparent from its terms and the object sought to be accomplished, does not exclude such naturalized elector, but does permit him the same privilege as is accorded the native bom elector arriving at majority during said period; and (2) under existing Federal statutes no one can be admitted to citizenship during said thirty days’ period after registration and before election. As to the first proposition we call attention to the statute: “Any person who was a qualified voter in any election precinct in this state on the day of enrolment and registration provided for in this act, and who failed to have his name enrolled on that day by reason of sickness or unavoidable absence from the election precinct, and who is a qualified voter in said district at the time of the primary hereafter held therein, or who may have become twenty-one years of age after the day of enrolment, may have his name enrolled by the election board on any primary day, upon making oath as provided in the general election law in relation to registration of electors
Conceding, though we do not so construe it, that the statute must be construed as relator contends for, that is, that it does not include an elector who has become such by naturalization during the thirty-day period after the enrolment books have left the hands of the assessors and prior to primary election, we would answer that this legislation was passed presumably with reference to act of Congress of June 29, 1906, § 6, under which naturalization is granted and by the terms
We hold, then, the statute as a whole is not vulnerable to objection on the grounds of its unconstitutionality under any of the specifications strenuously urged against it. To uphold the main contention of relator, urging its unconstitutionality because of its exacting other qualifications of the elector not permitted by the Constitution, or as a restriction of the elector’s right of suffrage, or as denying the elector his constitutional right of secrecy of ballot, would be equivalent to holding invalid every primary election statute on our statute books, as all are vulnerable to such attack if the one in question is. To so hold would be equivalent to saying that there can be no party primary election provided unless it be possibly one wherein either all primary ballots of each party participating in the primary be given to the elector from which he shall choose the one he desires to use, or one ballot used upon which are placed under party headings the names of all nominees with the elector having the right to mark the ballot for any political party with the necessity of voting a straight party ticket or be disfranchised by a rejection of the ballot, which latter might be urged as objectionable as a restriction upon the right of suffrage. In any event, either procedure would permit minority party to participate largely in the nominations of the majority party for the purpose of its destruction, as is said by the supreme court of Louisiana, by nominating undesirable candidates, or capturing the party machinery, or foisting upon it objectionable principles. We do not mean to exaggerate the standing to be accorded to political organizations, nor do we mean to minimize the right of suffrage of the individual at primary elections. But the matter of nominations for office has never been regarded as of the great importance to the individual or the state as has the exercise of suffrage in the general elec