STATE OF MONTANA, EX REL. MARC RACICOT, ATTORNEY GENERAL FOR THE STATE OF MONTANA, RELATORS, v. THE DISTRICT COURT OF THE SEVENTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT OF THE STATE OF MONTANA, IN AND FOR THE COUNTY OF DAWSON, AND THE HONORABLE H. R. OBERT, DISTRICT JUDGE, RESPONDENTS.
No. 90-421.
SUPREME COURT OF MONTANA
Decided Sept. 19, 1990.
798 P.2d 1004 | 521
Marc Racicot, Atty. Gen., Elisabeth S. Baker, Asst. Atty. Gen., Garth Jacobson, Sp. Asst. Atty. Gen., Helena, for relators.
Richard A. Simonton & Lorraine A. Schneider, Simonton, Howe & Schneider, Glendive, for respondents.
JUSTICE SHEEHY delivered the Opinion of the Court.
Richard A. Simonton, after years of estimable public service as County Attorney of Dawson County, was defeated in his bid for re-nomination as a candidate of the Democratic party by Gerald Navratil in the primary election held on June 5, 1990.
On July 23, 1990, Simonton and Lorraine A. Schneider filed a complaint for declaratory relief in the District Court, Seventh Judicial District, Dawson County, alleging that
On August 7, 1990, Simonton presented his petition for nomination as an independent candidate for the office of County Attorney of Dawson County together with the requisite signatures and filing fee to the Dawson County Election Administrator. She rejected his petition on the grounds that
The defendant in the declaratory judgment action was Patricia Peterson Boje, the Dawson County Election Administrator, who was represented in this case by the office of the Attorney General of the State. On August 10, 1990, the District Court entered findings of fact and conclusions of law, to the effect that Simonton‘s petition met the requirements of law for placement on the general election ballot in November, 1990, and that
On August 22, 1990, the Attorney General, by and through his special assistant, Garth Jacobson, filed herein a petition and memorandum in support thereof for supervisory control or other appropriate relief from the order of the District Court entered on August 10, 1990.
On receipt of the petition of the Attorney General, on August 23, 1990, this Court ordered the District Court and all counsel of record to prepare, serve and file written responses to the application for writ of supervisory control, together with appropriate legal memoranda and exhibits in support thereof on or before September 4, 1990; and that the Court would determine upon receipt of those responses whether oral argument was necessary.
On the 5th day of September, 1990, this Court entered an order in this cause finding there was no need for oral argument, and further stating that the application of the Attorney General for writ of
Acceptance of Jurisdiction
Since this cause is an original proceeding in this Court, the first question to be met is whether the petition and the responses thereto present a cause sufficient to move the remedial jurisdiction of this Court.
The Supreme Court of this state is given general supervisory control over all of the state courts.
We find that the criteria for exercising original jurisdiction are present in this case and have accepted jurisdiction for the purpose of determining what relief should be granted.
Grounds Used By District Court To Grant Relief
The District Court found that
The District Court further stated that
Basis For The Constitutional Issue
The parts of our statutes which are pertinent follow:
“13-10-501. Petition for nomination by independent candidates. (1) . . . nominations for public office by an independent candidate . . . may be made by a petition for nomination.
“(2) The petition must contain the same information and the oath of the candidate required for a declaration for nomination.
“13-10-503. Filing Deadlines. (1) A petition for nomination, accompanied by the required filing fee, shall be filed with the same officer with whom other nominations for the office sought are filed. Petitions must be submitted, at least 1 week before the deadline for filing, to the election administrator in the county where the signer resides for verification and certification . . . In the event there are insufficient signatures on the petition, additional signatures may be submitted before the deadline for filing.
“(2) . . . each petition shall be filed on or before the filing deadline for the primary election or for the special or general election if no primary election is scheduled.
“13-10-504. Independent or minor party candidates for president or vice- president. (1) An individual who desires to run for president or vice- president as an independent candidate . . . must
file a petition for nomination with the secretary of state 90 days prior to the date of the general election. “(2) The petition must first be submitted, at least 1 week before the deadline for filing, to the election administrator in the county where the signer resides for verification and certification...”
In addition,
Candidates on a partisan ticket for an elective office must file their declarations for nomination under
Insofar as the foregoing statutes affect this case, the primary election was held on June 5, 1990. The final filing date was March 22, 1990. Independent candidates were required to submit their petitions for candidacy by March 15, 1990, to be final by March 22, 1990. Candidates for nomination by a political party for an elective office were required to file their declarations for nomination by March 22, 1990. Since 1990 was not a presidential election year, there were no contests in Montana for the office of President or Vice-President of the United States.
The District Court did not quarrel with the requirement that independent candidates submit their petitions to the election administrator prior to the final filing date. Rather it contended that the statute violates the
Disposition
Simonton‘s
Simonton relies primarily upon two U.S. Supreme Court decisions, Williams v. Rhodes (1968), 393 U.S. 23, 89 S.Ct. 5, 21 L.Ed.2d 24, and Anderson v. Celebrezze (1983), 460 U.S. 780, 103 S.Ct. 1564, 75 L.Ed.2d 547.
Williams involved a challenge to Ohio‘s election laws which required a person other than a nominee of a major political party to secure signatures of 15 percent of the qualified electors on a petition and the filing of that petition earlier than for other candidates. The case involved candidates of a minor party seeking to secure a place on the Ohio ballot for President and Vice-President. In Williams, the U.S. Supreme Court found that Ohio‘s election procedures were burdensome and prevented the minor parties from ever getting on the ballot and that reliance on write-ins was an insufficient remedy when compared to a printed appearance on the ballot.
In Anderson, the U.S. Supreme Court again examined Ohio law and found its primary deadlines, when applied to independent candidates and minor candidates, to be unconstitutional. There, Anderson, running for president of the United States, did not tender his petition until May 16, when the filing deadline was March 20, and the election administrator refused the petition. The Supreme Court held that Ohio‘s early filing deadline placed an unconstitutional burden on the voting and associational rights of Anderson supporters and that the requirement that he must gather 5,000 signatures on a number of petitions would discourage independent candidates who otherwise would have to decide well in advance of the March filing deadline whether to run.
Simonton also relies on Bradley v. Mandel (D. Md. 1978), 449 F.Supp. 983, examining a Maryland statute and resulting in the same kind of decision, and other cases.
Simonton‘s and Schneider‘s arguments respecting the
Simonton and Schneider raise constitutional issues of considerable complexity and depth, but in this case they are not the right parties to raise such issues. Simonton does not come before the Court as a truly independent candidate. He is a partisan candidate who ran for re-election for the office of County Attorney on the Democratic ticket and failed to prevail in the primary election. When he filed his declaration for nomination as a Democratic candidate, that declaration became conclusive evidence that he was a candidate for nomination by his party.
The same situation exists with respect to Lorraine A. Schneider. The evidence in the case is that she voted in the primary election, having signed the register of voters at the primary election in Dawson County which certifies that she received primary election ballots. We do not know how she voted but we do know she had an opportunity to vote for the candidate of her choice, Mr. Simonton. Again, no operation of the laws relating to independent candidates prevented her from voting for her candidate as a representative of the party ticket under which he chose to run, and in which she was given the right to choose to vote.
This position of lack of standing of either Simonton or Schneider to raise the constitutional issues in this case is strongly urged upon us by amicus curiae, Montana Association of Counties, which filed with us an amicus brief. Essentially, the Association argues that neither Simonton nor Schneider have been disadvantaged in the
The District Court, recognizing that Simonton had been a partisan candidate for the same office, gave no heed to this factor because, the court said, Montana did not have a “sore loser” statute that would prevent defeated partisan candidates from filing as an independent for the same office. Until the enactment of
Schneider‘s case presents
On the basis therefore that neither Simonton nor Schneider were disadvantaged by the operation of the filing requirements for independent candidates, we decline to decide the constitutional issues otherwise presented.
We hold, therefore, that the Order of the District Court must be reversed and that the name of Richard A. Simonton is not entitled to
Accordingly, IT IS ORDERED:
1. The Order of August 10, 1990, of the District Court, Seventh Judicial District, Dawson County, in its cause No. DV 90-058 be and same is hereby REVERSED.
2. The Order and directions therein of this Court in this cause dated August 23, 1990, be and the same are hereby confirmed. A copy of such Order is attached hereto as Addendum 1.
3. The Petition of the Attorney General in this cause as relator be and the same is hereby GRANTED. This Opinion, together with our Order of August 23, 1990 in this cause, shall be and perform the office of a writ of supervisory control issued out of this Court without further order of this Court.
4. The Clerk of this Court is directed to mail copies of this Opinion to counsel of record for the parties, to the District Court of Dawson County and its presiding judge, to the Election Administrator of Dawson County, Montana, and to the Clerk of Court of Dawson County.
CHIEF JUSTICE TURNAGE and JUSTICES BARZ, HARRISON, and WEBER and HON. JEFFREY SHERLOCK, District Judge, sitting for JUSTICE McDONOUGH, concur.
HON. LEROY McKINNON, Retired District Judge, sitting for Justice Hunt, dissenting:
I respectfully dissent from the foregoing majority opinion. In my opinion Mr. Simonton ceased to be the Democratic party candidate following the primary election. Thereafter he sought to become an independent candidate.
It appears to me that the statute in question discriminates against anyone seeking to run for election as an independent candidate, and no compelling interest of the state to justify such discrimination is apparent.
ORDER
Relator, Marc Racicot, Attorney General, filed in this cause a petition for writ of supervisory control seeking review of the order of the District Court of the Seventh Judicial District, Dawson County, in its Cause DV 90-058, dated August 10, 1990, permitting the name
Upon receipt of the petition, this Court entered an order on August 23, 1990, requesting the respondents and all counsel of record in the said cause to prepare, file and serve written responses to the application for writ of supervisory control together with appropriate memoranda and exhibits. The Court in that order also reserved the question whether oral argument would be necessary.
Responses having been received and briefs of the parties and from amicus curiae, and the Court being advised in the premises,
IT IS HEREBY ORDERED:
1. The Court finds no need for oral argument in this cause.
2. The application for writ of supervisory control is GRANTED.
3. The District Court of the Seventh Judicial District, Dawson County, and the presiding judge, Honorable H. R. Obert, are each hereby ordered to take such steps as may be necessary to reverse its decision of August 10, 1990, to inform the proper election officials, and to remove from the general election ballot of November 1990 the name of Richard A. Simonton as an independent candidate for the office of county attorney.
4. A full opinion respecting this case will issue later.
5. The Clerk of this Court shall give immediate telephonic notice of this order to counsel of record, to the presiding judge of said district court, to the clerk and recorder of Dawson County, Montana, and shall mail copies hereof by ordinary mail forthwith to said persons.
DATED this 5th day of September, 1990.
S/ J.A. TURNAGE, CHIEF JUSTICE
S/ DIANE G. BARZ, JUSTICE
S/ JOHN C. SHEEHY, JUSTICE
S/ JOHN CONWAY HARRISON, JUSTICE
S/ FRED J. WEBER, JUSTICE
S/ JEFFREY SHERLOCK, DISTRICT JUDGE, sitting in place of JUSTICE McDONOUGH.
HON. LEROY L. McKINNON, Retired District Judge, sitting for JUSTICE HUNT, dissents to the foregoing order.
