57 Neb. 41 | Neb. | 1898
This was a petition for a peremptory mandamus to compel the respondent, as county clerk of Buffalo county, to print the official and sample ballots for the general election in November, 1898, without names of J. M. Easterling and Emery Wyman as nominees of the democratic party for representatives of the fifty-eighth representative district. To the application the respondent demurred for the reasons following: (1.) The court has no jurisdiction over his person or the subject-matter. (2.) The petition does not state sufficient facts to constitute a cause of action. Just prior to the said election a
We are all agreed that jurisdiction over the person of the respondent was acquired by his entering a general appearance herein by counsel, without the issuance and service of a summons in the cause. (South Omaha Nat. Bank v. Farmers & Merchants Nat. Bank, 45 Neb. 29.)
The question of jurisdiction of the subject-matter in this kind of a proceeding ought to be no longer an open one in this state. Jurisdiction has been entertained of similar causes in State v. Allen, 43 Neb. 651, and Woods v. State, 44 Neb. 430, and the recent case of State v. Olark, 56 Neb. 584, although the question of jurisdiction was not raised in any of them, but was necessarily involved in all. The last was an original application for mandamus to require the county clerk of Nuckolls county to place on the ballots for use at thé election held in November last the name of Joseph Patterson as candidate for county commissioner. Certificate of his nomination in due form had been filed with the respondent therein, yet he declined to recognize the validity of the certificate and refused to place the name of Patterson upon the ballots as the nominee for said office. A peremptory writ issued. In State v. Piper, 50 Neb. 25, the question of jurisdiction of this court over the subject-matter was squarely raised, and decided adversely to the contention of the respondent herein. Ryan and Irvine, CC., did not sit in the cause, and Ragan, C., filed an opinion dissenting from the conclusion of the court on that proposition. The decision on that point was followed in State v. Piper, 50 Neb. 39, 40, 42. In the opinion reported in 50 Neb. 25 this court, in passing upon the jurisdictional question, after quoting section 136, chapter 26, Compiled Statutes 1895, said: “A mere reading of the foregoing is sufficient to disclose that it was the purpose of the legislature to give to the secretary of state, or other officer
“1. That said democraticcounty convention assembled on the 24th day of September, 1898, in the city of Kearney, but did not make nominations for said offices, but*46 selected a county central committee, as set forth, in said objections, and passed the resolution attached to said certificate of nomination. That said committee was composed of at least twenty-three members, besides its chairman and secretary.
“2. That on the 26th day of September nineteen members of the said committee were notified by a postal card sent by the chairman and addressed to each member at his post office address, stating, in substance, that on October 1, 1898, at his office, in the city of Kearney, at 2 P. M., a meeting of said committee would be held to consider the advisability of filling or putting on the democratic ticket nominees for said offices.
“3. That there was no evidence adduced, except in one instance, — the committeeman from Shelton township,— as to whether or not said notices were received by the absent committeemen, and on this point I make no finding. That only nineteen of the members of said committee were attempted to be notified.
“4. That on October 1, at the office of the chairman in the city of Kearney, five members of said committee met with the chairman and four of said members, with the chairman, made the nomination set forth in said certificate. I further find that W. S. Lampson, member from Elm Creek, was one of the five who met with the chairman but refused to participate in said nomination.
“5. I further find from evidence that it has been the usual custom of the democratic party in Buffalo county that in actions taken by the central committee, to act or take action, by those present, irrespective as to whether a majority of said committee were present or otherwise.
“conclusions of law.
“First. That said county central committee, by reason of their following their usual custom, had a legal right to act with a less number than a majority present, and that said committee therefore had the legal right to make said nominations evidenced by said certificate.
*47 “Second. That said objections should be overruled and the names of the said candidates placed upon the official ballot as the democratic nominees for said offices. And it is so ordered.”
It is unnecessary for the court at this time to decide whether the acts of a central or managing committee of a political organization, or party, are valid when taken at a meeting by a less number than a majority present and participating in accordance with party custom and usage, but assuming for the purpose of the present case that custom may control in the absence of specific directions given by the party, yet the pretended nominations of Easterling and Wyman cannot be sustained. They were not selected as candidates for said offices at a regular or stated meeting of the county central committee, but by a minority of the members thereof, who were specially convened for that purpose without notice to, or any attempt to notify all, the other members of the committee. It is not averred, nor did the respondent find upon the hearing had before him, that it was the custom or usage of the democratic party of Buffalo county in calling special meetings of the central committee not to notify each member thereof of the time and place fixed for convening; hence the usual rule applicable to other bodies or boards may be. invoked. The authorities are quite uniform in holding that where a board or public body transacts business at a called or special ses-' sion all members must have been given notice of the time and place of meeting in time to attend, or all must have been present, or such acts will be invalid. {Lee v. Parry, 4 Den. [N. Y.] 125; Stewart v. Wallis, 80 Barb. [N. Y.] 344; Crocker v. Crane, 21 Wend. [N. Y.] 211; People v. Coghill, 47 Cal. 361; State v. Wilhesville Township, 20 O. St. 288; State v. James, 4 Wis. 408; 19 Am. & Eng. Ency. Law 465.) This court held in People v. Peters, 4 Neb. 254, by Lake, C. J., that a majority of a school district board cannot bind the district where the other members were absent and had not been notified of the meeting and
Writ allowed.
Irvine, C.
The power of the court to review the action of the county clerk or secretary of state in such cases as the present has been sustained by former decisions in which I did participate. On principle I would agree with the dissenting opinion of Ragan, C., in State v. Piper, 50 Neb. 25.
Ragan, C.
I think the action of the democratic central committee absolutely void; but I still adhere to views expressed in State v. Piper, 50 Neb. 25.