265 Mass. 19 | Mass. | 1928
These are two petitions for a writ of prohibition directed against the State ballot law commission. They are before this court on the exceptions of the petitioner to the denial of identical requests for rulings of law by a single justice of the Supreme Judicial Court. The first of these petitions was filed August 22,1928. The answer, admitting “all the material allegations of fact contained in thepetition,” was filed August 29, 1928. The second petition was filed September 28, 1928. The answer, admitting “all the material allegations of fact contained in the petition,” was filed on the same day. In the first petition the purpose is to secure a prohibition against the State ballot law commission to enjoin it from hearing objections “to the nomination of and the nomination papers filed by the petitioner ... as a candidate for the office of Representative to the General Court for the 12th Suffolk District under the political designation of a Republican and also under the political designation of a Democrat.” The nomination papers were in due form and in accordance with the requirements of law, and entitled the petitioner’s name to be placed on the Republican and Democratic ballots to be used at the polling places in said district, at the primaries to be held on September 18, 1928, if the State ballot law commission is without jurisdiction to hear and determine certain written objections, filed with the Secretary of the Commonwealth on August 17, 1928, by a resident and qualified voter of said “12th Suffolk Representative District,” in these words: “That said Simon Swig is ineligible and disqualified to be Representative of said District in that he will not have been an inhabitant of the District for which he seeks to be chosen for one year at least next preceding his election, as required by Article XXI of the Amendments to the Constitution of the Commonwealth, and therefore is not eligible to be voted for at said primary for said office.”
By the second petition an injunction is sought to restrain the State ballot law commission from hearing and determining the matters set forth in the objections, filed September 13,
At the hearing on the first petition, on August 29, 1928, and on the second petition, on September 28, 1928, the petitioner filed requests for rulings. The single justice, at each hearing, gave the fifth request for rulings, refused the other requests, ruled “that the respondents have jurisdiction to consider and determine the objections to the nomination [of] and nomination papers filed by the petitioner, which objections are set forth in the written objections annexed to the petition for a writ of prohibition,” and dismissed the petition. The petitioner in both petitions excepted “to the finding and rulings made by the court and to the court’s refusal to grant the petitioner’s requests for rulings.” The exceptions were allowed on October 3, 1928, and were heard on briefs filed in this court on October 18, 1928.
On that day, October 18, 1928, when the briefs of the petitioner and the respondents were presented to this court, both September 18, the last day on which, by G. L. c. 53, § 28, as amended by St. 1926, c. 96, a primary could be held, and September 10, the last day on which, by G. L. c. 53, § 10, as amended by St. 1921, c. 387, nomination papers of candidates for offices to be filled at a State election could be filed, had passed. G. L. c. 54, § 62. There
Petitions dismissed.