DocketNumber: 1104
Citation Numbers: 149 N.E.2d 576, 104 Ohio App. 418, 5 Ohio Op. 2d 91, 1957 Ohio App. LEXIS 936
Judges: Griffith, Nichols, Phillips
Filed Date: 8/20/1957
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/12/2024
There is no dispute as to the facts upon which this proceeding is predicated. Relator has a voting record which shows the following:
Primary Election, May 5, 1953, voted Democrat.
Primary Election, May 4, 1954, did not vote.
Primary Election, May 3, 1955, voted Republican.
Primary Election, May 7, 1956, voted Republican.
Primary Election, May 7, 1957, voted Republican.
All the statutory requirements of the office of city solicitor have been met by him.
In the primary election of May 7, 1957, without any solicitation on his part, his name was written in on the Republican ballot for the office of solicitor of the city of Toronto and properly marked with a cross to the left thereof.
There were 539 votes cast in this Republican primary in the 9 precincts in Toronto, that being the entire city. Of this number, 290 Republican electors wrote his name in and properly marked the same. He received, by this write-in vote, over 53 per cent of the total Republican votes cast, thereby more than meeting the 15 per cent requirement of Section
No name was printed on the Republican ballot for this office. After the election, the relator, within the prescribed statutory time, filed with the board of elections an expense account and tendered the fee thereby meeting those statutory requirements.
On May 31, 1957, the board of elections denied relator a certificate of nomination for the reason that he did not qualify under Section
On June 13, 1957, relator filed in the Common Pleas Court of Jefferson County his petition for a writ of mandamus commanding the board of elections to print his name on the November *Page 420 ballot. On July 11, 1957, the court denied the relator his prayer for a writ, and it is from that final order that this appeal is before us on questions of law.
The bill of exceptions consists of an agreed statement of facts and nothing more. There is nothing in the record that the relator sought the nomination.
Section
"No person shall be a candidate for nomination or election at a party primary if he voted as a member of a different political party at any primary election within the next preceding four calendar years."
Section
"No person who seeks party nomination for an office or position at a primary election shall be permitted to become a candidate at the following general election for any office by nominating petition or by write-in."
The relator contends (1) that he was not a candidate for nomination by filing his declaration of candidacy, but (2) that he became a nominee of the Republican Party by reason of the write-in votes which the 290 Republicans cast for him without his solicitation.
True, he filed no declaration of candidacy and did nothing to promote or encourage the 290 voters to write in his name. Did he become the nominee of the Republican Party? The statutes outline how one may become the nominee of the party through the primary system. Section
These words are plain and understandable and mandatory. Relator admits that he did not have his name printed on the official primary ballot by filing a declaration of candidacy, but he says that since 290 Republicans wrote his name in, that fact made him an official nominee of the Republican Party for the office of city solicitor.
Now the only manner in which relator may become a candidate of the Republican Party for this office in the November election is: (1) by filing a declaration of candidacy under Sections *Page 421
Admittedly, he did not pursue the first method. He did obtain over 15 per cent of the write-in vote. In his petition for a writ of mandamus, he asks:
"That a writ of mandamus issue commanding the board of elections to certify him as the duly nominated candidate for the office of city solicitor on the Republican ticket and to have his name printed upon the ballot as a Republican candidate for the general election to be held on the 5th day of November, 1957."
Relator has been affiliated with the Republican Party since the primary election held on May 3, 1955. State, ex rel. Bouse,Jr., v. Cickelli,
May the voters at a party primary disregard the inhibition of Section
"No person shall be a candidate for nomination or election at a party primary if he voted as a member of a different political party at any primary election within the next preceding four calendar years."
This statute does not say, "No person shall be a nominee at a party primary," but "No person shall be a candidate for nomination."
Was George Mazaris a candidate for nomination at the recent primary? Section
We hold that "candidate," as used in Section
The word, "candidate," as used in this section embraces not alone one who seeks office, but it includes one who is chosen by others as a contestant for office. A definition of "candidate," is found in the case of In the Matter of Burns v. Wiltse,
"Primarily it [the term ``candidate'] means one who seeks an office or honor; the secondary meaning is one who is selected by others as a contestant for office."
Under the circumstances, the relator is ineligible to be nominated either by declaration of candidacy or by write-in for the office of city solicitor of Toronto on either party ticket.
We hold, therefore, that since the relator, George Mazaris, was affiliated with the Democrat Party until the primary election of May 3, 1955, he was disqualified to be nominated as a party candidate of the Republican Party for the office of city solicitor of Toronto at the general election to be held on November 5, 1957.
We find no error in this case prejudicial to the rights of the relator. The judgment is, therefore, affirmed.
Judgment affirmed.
NICHOLS, P. J., and PHILLIPS, J., concur.