Lead Opinion
Relators argue that the Secretary of State and board of elections abused their discretion and disregarded the law, such that writs of prohibition and mandamus should issue to overturn their decisions, which are otherwise final. State ex rel. Higgins v. Brown (1960),
The Secretary of State responds that, in view of White I, this action should be dismissed on the basis of res judicata. He relies on the principle of merger, which prevents a successful claimant from recovering again on the same cause of action against the same party or a party in privity, Whitehead v. Gen. Tel. Co (1969),
We disagree. While the Secretary of State, who was not a party in White I, arguably is a party in privity with the board of elections, the respondent in that case, see Johnson’s Island, Inc. v. Danbury Twp. Bd. of Twp. Trustees (1982),
The Secretary of State also argues, as do the other respondents, that relators’ failure to bring all their causes of action at once caused delay and material prejudice. This argument has merit.
We have routinely dismissed complaints or othеrwise denied extraordinary relief in election-related cases due to laches. See, e.g., State ex rel. Lightle v. Glass (1983),
Impossibility was not immediately apparent when relators filed this complaint on September 8, 1992. However, the record shows that relators anticipated their prohibition action nearly two months before the board of elections certified Testa’s nomination for county auditor, and that they waited another two months after that certification to filе the instant complaint. We find this delay unreasonable because “extreme diligence and the promptest of action” are required in election-related matters. Schwartz, supra,
By accepting laches as a defénse, we reject the argument, advanced by relators, that their cause of action in prohibition arose only after our decision in White I. All of the events underlying relators’ complaint occurred prior to White I except two: the certification of the primary election results and the refusal to issue Testa a certificate of nomination as the Republican candidate for county recorder. Relators’ argument for the writ of prohibition, however, is not based on these two events. On the contrary, they argue that Testa is a candidate fоr incompatible offices, despite the absence of a certificate of nomination for one of them, because his name appeared on the primary ballot as a candidate for nomination for thаt office. Relators’ prohibition action, therefore, actually arose on July 7,1992, when the board certified Testa as the Republican nominee for county auditor in the general election. Nothing prevented them from filing the action and asserting their argument at that time.
In White I, we held that the board of elections was required by statute to count the votes cast for Testa and certify the rеsults of the election because his statement of withdrawal was ineffective to remove his name from the primary election ballot. In doing so, we merely recognized that Testa’s candidacy might have some vitality apart from his personal interest in the nomination. To illustrate, we cited Ashbrook, supra, in which the candidacy of a deceased incumbent retained such vitality long enough for his replacement to be selected pursuant to R.C. 3513.31, so that a free, cоmpetitive general election might take place.
Although the candidate’s death in Ashbrook did not permit removal of his name from the primary ballot, it plainly terminated his personal candidacy. Similarly, Testa’s statement of withdrawal also terminated his personal candidacy. Even under the policy of protecting the elective franchise, no one can be compelled against his or her will to accept an elective office, and giving effect to Testa’s candidаcy beyond the fact that his name appeared on the primary ballot would ignore this basic reality. Thus, Testa’s statement of withdrawal was sufficient to renounce his personal candidacy for county recorder, even though it did not relieve the board of elections from its statutory duties to count the ballots and certify the results.
We conclude, therefore, that Testa was never a candidate for incompatible offices at the same time and, thus, we do not decide whether the rule prohibiting such candidacies exists in Ohio. But, see, 1948 Ohio Atty.Gen. Ops. No. 2922. However, our holdings in Ashbrook and White I imply, relative to relators’ mandamus action, that a board of elections has a duty to issue a certificаte of nomination even for a withdrawing primary candidate whose name appears on a primary ballot, so that his party may choose a substitute to appear on the general election ballot. A writ of mandаmus might issue for this purpose in another case, but here, the period for selecting a replacement nominee under R.C. 3513.31 (withdrawal prior to eighty days before the general election) has already passed. As mandamus does not lie to
Accordingly, the writs of prohibition and mandamus are denied.
Writs denied.
Notes
. R.C. 3.11 and 319.07 establish that the offices of county auditor and recorder may not be held at the same time. R.C. 3.11 states:
“No person shall hold at the same time by appоintment or election more than one of the following offices: sheriff, county auditor, county treasurer, clerk of the court of common pleas, county recorder, prosecuting attorney, and probate judge.”
R.C. 319.07 provides:
“No judge or clerk of a court, county commissioner, county recorder, county engineer, county treasurer, or sheriff shall be eligible to the office of county auditor.”
. Specific evidence of the prejudice causеd by relators’ delay is presented in the affidavit of D. Robert Keeler, who is the president of the company under contract to print the absentee ballots for use in Franklin County at the general election. Keeler attests (1) thаt proofs of the Franklin County absentee ballots list Testa as the Republican candidate for county auditor only, (2) that his company could not accommodate changes to the ballots after September 22, 1992 and still havе them ready by the September 29 deadline, and (3) that the printing process had, therefore, already begun.
Concurrence Opinion
concurring in judgment only. I concur with the judgment of the majority but for a reason different from that set forth in the majority opinion. This causе should be dismissed — or at the very least the writs denied — on the basis that the decision of the Secretary of State, in breaking a tie vote of a local elections board, is final. R.C. 3501.11. In this regard, I continue to adhere to my position set forth in State ex rel. White v. Franklin Cty. Bd. of Elections (1992),
