Oklahoma and Indian Territories were joined in single and inseparable union in the year 1907 and admitted as the forty-sixth state of the United States of America.
The people, by their Constitution adopted, submitted to them by the Convention and ratified by them at an election held for the purpose, manifested a purpose contained in the text of the document to "Let The People Rule," and this is a principle inherent in the right of self-government. Dove v. Oglesby,114 Okla. 144, 244 P. 798.
Broad suffrage is extended to the people by the constitutional provision; permissive authority is granted to the Legislature to require, as a condition of voting, the registration of each qualified elector. By statutory act, such a registration has been required with the exceptions extended to such qualified electors as may be serving in the armed forces of the United States. Indubitably, the public purpose was to preserve the purity of the ballot and to prevent fraud in elections. These statutory regulations, as conditions of voting and the exceptions with extensions under equitable consideration, have been sustained. In re Initiative Petition No. 142, 176 Okla. 155, 55 P.2d 455; Love v. State Election Board, 197 Okla. 157, 170 P.2d 193, decided May 17, 1946. The result is that ordinarily and save and except for the exceptions by statute provided, for the purpose of voting, a qualified elector in Oklahoma is a registered elector.
This special proceeding, considered in the exercise oforiginal jurisdiction, by the Constitution vested in the Supreme Court (sec. 2, art. 7, Const.), involves the issue whether such registration is or may be, by statute, made or imposed as a requirement to be administered by the State Election Board to test the right of a constitutionally qualified elector to file, within the time and as provided by statute, as a candidate for nomination and election to public office in Oklahoma and to become the nominee of a political party with which *Page 173 such elector is affiliated in this or another state.
A mandatory primary system for political party nomination and elections to public offices is contemplated and required by the Constitution of this state, and the Legislature is, by the constitutional provision, directed to "enact laws providing for a mandatory primary system, which shall provide for the nomination of all candidates in all elections for state, district, county, and municipal offices for all political parties, including United States Senator" (sec. 5, art. 3, Const.), and this duty to provide such a mandatory primary system has been performed by the Legislature by the enactment of suitable statutes, and they have been sustained. By provision of statute, 26 Ohio St. 1941 § 162[26-162], within a specified period of time an elector, who is a candidate for party nomination and election to public office "who is affiliated with a legally recognized party at whose hands he seeks the nomination, shall have his name printed on the official ballot of his party for an office to which he is eligible, in any primary election, upon the filing with the proper officer, within the time provided by law, a notification and declaration of candidacy." A form is provided for that purpose. The statute has been held to be informative and directory only, and not to provide a test for such candidacy. Swindall v. State Election Board, 168 Okla. 97, 32 P.2d 691.
However, section 161, Id., is mandatory in its nature. It provides:
"No person shall be allowed to become a candidate in any general election unless he shall have complied fully and completely, with the provisions of this chapter"
which is incorporated in this title. Craig v. Bond,160 Okla. 34, 15 P.2d 1014; Dancy v. Peebly, 132 Okla. 84, 270 P. 311. However, it is not competent within the public policy denoted by the Constitution for the board, in its administration, to so require the registration, for, by the Constitution the authority of the Legislature as to such matters governing such election is to provide regulatory measures only, whereas that which is by the board administered as a requirement limits the elective franchise and restricts the right of suffrage and the right to hold public office to those within a class not sanctioned by the Constitution and public policy. By constitutional provision, qualifications for each and every state office are specifically provided, and therefore the constitutional provisions are exclusive and not amendable by legislative act. The administrative denial and restriction of the purpose of such constitutional provisions are not according to the evidenced public policy and purpose.
So, we must determine whether an elector's right of candidacy is or may be unreasonably restricted by administration and application of an interpretation of statutory law. That right may not be so restricted.
An affiliational requirement with a political party is a reasonable requirement and it should be sustained. A registration of one who is entitled to register as a qualified elector within the time to vote for a state officer to represent the elector is not an unreasonable restriction. "The right to run" is the matter before the court. Such an elector as petitioner has right of representation by another and to vote, if he registers, for the other of his choice. He seeks now to be a candidate for the office himself, to represent himself and the people. That which one may do through another, he may do himself, is the general rule to govern action of one who would represent himself, pro se, as well as the class he may represent.
The form statute requires such a candidate to cause to be filed with the State Election Board a verified notification and declaration and to cause to be filled in a form statutorily provided, wherein a statement is, by inference, required *Page 174 to be made by the candidate that the candidate is registered as an elector in the precinct of his residence. The requirement is held to be directory only and to exist as an informative, regulatory provision of statutory form in the law.
Substance is the thing that governs the public policy. The constitutional provision states the substance of the policy.
On April 22, 1917, the Congress of the United States declared a state of war to exist between the Allied Powers and the governments of Central Europe. In the same month and year, a boy was born in the State of Kentucky. He was christened "Easter," reminiscent of the resurrection of the Life. His surname was Brown, a name well known to the people of the deep South. Kentuckians are famous for belles, English breakfast steaks, and bourbon whisky. A United States Senator, of Missouri, a distinguished native Kentuckian, so said. He added a dog to the breakfast circle to eat the steak, but a Filippino lady, who understood English well, said the Filippinos did not eat dog, and the Senator was forced to admit the dog was not a regular diet of Kentuckians. The Senator, like Easter Brown, took up his residence in a foreign state, exercised his right of franchise, ran for office, and became a statesman.
Easter Brown is the petitioner before the court. He seeks a writ of mandamus to enforce his legal right as an elector in the State of Oklahoma, his state by choice and adoption. Easter Brown grew to young manhood in Kentucky, but looked to the future. He registered as a Democrat and exercised his right of franchise in. Kentucky and abroad.
The calamities of war again engulfed the world. Easter became an infantryman in the armed forces of his country. He served and voted at home and abroad. While in the South Pacific, where for three years and more he, in uniform, served democracy, he also served the Democratic party by the exercise of his franchise on a war ballot.
Victory crowned the general endeavor, political and governmental, in war and peace, in which Easter and others were engaged. He, with them, achieved the victory and they, or some of them, returned to these shores. Easter is a battle-scarred veteran, but, instead of making his home in his native State of Kentucky, subjecting himself to such influences as there exist — as depicted in the song "My Old Kentucky Home," stories told of Uncle Remus, and the like — at his own request, he was transferred to this service command and stationed at Fort Sill. There, in March, 1945, he was discharged from the armed forces to enlist in an ever-enduring matrimony with a miss in Oklahoma. For that purpose, he secured a certificate. Likewise, the petitioner determined upon citizenship in this land of opportunity, by overt act through the agency of his bride-to-be, a Miss Margaret Winans of Pauls Valley, selected his place of residence in the precinct, county, and nation, as stated, of his own free will and choice.
Apparently cognizant of constitutional provision and rule of law that no member of the Army or Navy of the United States shall gain or lose a residence in this state by reason ofhis service in this state or absence from this state in themilitary or naval service of the United States (sec. 2, art. 3, Const.), Easter Brown, during his military service and subsequent to it, and in addition to that service, within this state committed overt acts by which his citizenship in Oklahoma was established. Such acts have been recited; they work no hardship on any one, not even Kentuckians. It is admitted in the case at bar that petitioner is now in this state possessed of the constitutional qualifications of an elector. He has been afforded no opportunity to register as an elector for, under the regulatory provisions of statute, which are reasonable, the registration books have not been open during *Page 175 the period of time in which petitioner has established his citizenship as an Oklahoman. Registration is merely a certification of that which exists — substance is the thing that is real.
In due time petitioner filed his notification and declaration as a candidate at the ensuing primary and general elections for Democratic nomination and election to be a representative in the Legislature of Oklahoma and from the district of his residence, Garvin County, District No. 2. Petitioner's filing was stricken by the order of the respondent Election Board, for failure to show registration as required by rule of interpretation for the exercise of the right to vote. The result of the order striking the name from the ballot restricts petitioner's right and all others similarly situated, the right of the people in the district to select, and the right of Easter Brown to run for and be a public officer.
While petitioner may register, as provided by law, in sufficient time to exercise his right of ballot in the ensuing primary and general elections and thereby exercise his choice of representation in the Legislature from the district, the regulatory provisions of statute deemed to be mandatory by the board are, as shown by the order, an unreasonable restriction upon the right of the petitioner. The item of the form and the statutes, supra, as now construed, are not prerequisite to petitioner's right "to light a' running" or to stand for public office, in Oklahoma. Swindall v. State Election Board,168 Okla. 97, 32 P.2d 691; Cooley, Const. Lim. (6th Ed.) pp. 757, 758; McCreary on Elections (4th Ed.) 137; Woodward v. Barbur,59 Or. 70, 116 P. 101; State v. Olcott, 67 Or. 214, 135 P. 95, 902; Wilson v. Bartlett, 7 Idaho, 271, 62 P. 416; State v. Sullivan, 283 Mo. 546, 224 S.W. 327; Sayman v. Becker (Mo. Sup.) 269 S.W. 973; In re Sullivan, 307 Pa. 221, 160 A. 853; Meffert v. Brown, 132 Ky. 201, 116 S.W. 779, 1177; Piuser v. Sioux City, 220 Iowa 308, 262 N.W. 551, 100 A.L.R. 1298.
Under the provisions of Constitution denoting the public policy, the writ should issue.