On May 11, 1936, the Prairie county Democratic Central Committee, enacted a resolution providing that all candidates for county office were required to pay the sum of $15 on or before June 13, 1936, as ballot fees, and that all candidates for township offices, including delegates to the county convention and township committeemen, were required to pay the sum of $1 on or before the aforesaid date as ballot fees. It was further resolved that no name of any candidate for any of said offices should appear on said ballot unless the ballot fee had been paid within the time specified. On the 28th of July, 1936, the appellees offered to file with the secretary of the county central committee petitions nominating each of them as candidates for township committeemen for their respective townships. Each petition was accompanied by the sum of $1, the ballot fee required by the resolution passed May 11, preceding. The secretary refused to accept these petitions and money for the reason that the fees were not tendered within the time specified by said resolution. On July 29, appellees filed their petitions setting up their qualifications to serve as township committeemen, the nominating petitions and the tender of the ballot fees, and the refusal of the central committee acting through its chairman and secretary to place their names on the ballot. They prayed that they be awarded a writ of mandamus directing the central committee to place their names on the ballot. The central committee waived service, entered its appearance and filed a general demurrer to the petitions, which was overruled. Thereafter, answer was filed, and, on August 1, 1936, the case coming on for hearing, the trial court granted the prayer of the petitioners, and this appeal followed.
The first contention is that the trial court was without jurisdiction to issue a writ of mandamus directing the central committee to have the names of appellees *Page 116
placed on the ballot. In support of this position reliance is placed on the case of Tuck v. Cotton,
Section 7020, Crawford Moses' Digest, as amended by act No. 130 of the Acts of 1925, clothed the circuit court and the judges thereof in vacation with power to issue writs of mandamus to the courts of probate, county courts, justices of the peace, and all other inferior officers in their respective circuits. Section 3 of act No. 116 of the Acts of 1929 provides: "The members of the various county central committees, and the chairman and secretary of each committee are hereby declared to be officers within the meaning of 7020, Crawford Moses' Digest." Section 3759 of Crawford Moses' Digest provides for the choosing at each primary election of members of the county central committees, and makes it the duty of the central committees to place on the primary ballot the names of all persons nominated for committeemen. It provides how the nominations shall be made and, in the event of the failure to nominate a candidate for any ward or precinct, that the central committees may make such selection. From this, it will be seen that county central committees are clothed with a ministerial duty which is made mandatory in exact and peremptory terms.
Since the passage of 3 of act 116 of the Acts of 1929 declaring that members of county central committees, and the chairman and secretary thereof are officers within the meaning of 7020, supra, it clearly follows that the circuit court was expressly clothed with power to entertain the petitions for the writ of mandamus.
The last contention, upon which the greatest stress is laid, is that the trial court erred in directing the writ *Page 117
to issue because the regulation of the central committee providing for the payment of ballot fees on or before June 13, and that the name of no candidate for township committeeman could be placed upon the ballot where the fee was not paid within the time specified was within the authority of the committee and binding upon the appellees. Appellants cite the rule announced by this court in Ferguson v. Montgomery,
We are of the opinion that the order of the trial judge was proper, and it is, accordingly, affirmed.
