This action is here on appeal from an order of the district -court of Grand Forks county, sustaining a demurrer to the alternative writ of mandamus theretofore issued by that court, commanding the respondent to recognize and treat the relator as the duly nominated Democratic candidate for the office of clerk of the district court of Grand Forks county, to be voted for at the next ensuing general election, or to show cause, etc. The only question raised is the constitutionality of section 12, c. 109, -p. 157, Laws 190-7, said chapter being the primary election law, and section 12 reading as follows: “If the total vote cast for any party candidate *152or candidates for any office for which nominations are' herein provided shall equal -less than 30- per cent, of the total number of votes cast for Secretary of State of the political party he or they represented at the last general election, no nomination shall be made in that party for such office, but if 30 per cent, or more of such vote is cast and there is more than one candidate for any such office, the person receiving the highest number of votes shall be declared the nominee of such party for such office; provided further, that where there is more than one person to be elected to the same office the persons to the numbers to be elected receiving the highest number of votes cast for such office shall be declared the nominees of the party for such offices.”
It is first contended that the 30 per cent, limitation is not intended to apply to candidates for offices to be filled by an electorate or constituency -comprising less than the entire voting population of the state; that is, that it does not apply to the nomination of candidates for county and district offices. This contention is based u-pon the language employed by the Legislature in the phrase “if the total vote cast for any party candidate or candidates for any office for which nominations are herein provided shall equal less than 30 per cent, of the total number of votes cast for Secretary of State of the political party he or they represent at the last general election, no nomination -shall be made in that party for such office.” It is contended that a literal construction of this provision would require the candidate for a county office merely to receive a vote equal to 30 per -cent, of the vote of the whole state for the office of Secretary of State at the last general election. The meaning -of this section is not expressed -as clearly as it might have been, but it is apparent to us that, considering the purpose of the .act, the subjects -covered by it, the context and the well-known fact, which must have been in the -minds of the legislators, that in no county of the state -c-ould there be any probabilit}»', if a posibility, of any candidate, -or any candidates, for any office receiving 3-0 per cent, of the total vote of the party -in the whole state, that this was not what the Legislature intended. On the contrary, we ar-e satisfied that the intention was, and a fair construction of the section is, that the candidates for an office must receive 30 per cent, of the vote cast for Secretary of State at the last general election by their party within the district or subdivision in which they are candidates; that is, the district or subdivision which th-e office which they are seeking to *153fill represents. As, for example, in a legislative district it must 'be 30 per cent, of’the party vote for Secretary of State cast at the last general election within that particular legislative district.
The second point urged by the appellant is that, if the 30 per cent, limitation clause does not apply to county and district officers, is is an unreasonable and unwarranted exercise by the Legislature of the police powers of the state, and is therefore unconstitutional. In determining this point, it becomes necessary to consider what the legislative assembly was attempting to do, and the object and purpose of this provision as gathered from the language of the section, and the knowledge possessed by the court of contemporaneous history. That the Legislature has the power to legislate on subjects not prohibited, either in express terms or by necessary implication by the Constitution, is so well established that it will not be controverted. This principle i,s forcibly expressed in Commonwealth ex rel. McCormick v. Reeder, 171 Pa. 505, 33 Atl. 67, 33 L. R. A. 141, wherein the court says: “Whatever the people have not, by their -Constitution, restrained themselves from doing, they, through their representatives in the Legislature, may do. This latter body represents their will, just as completely as a constitutional convention, in all matters left by the written Constitution. Certain grants of power very specifically set forth were made by the states to the United States, and these cannot be revoked or destroyed by state legislation. Then come the specific restraints imposed by our own Constitution upon our own Legislature. These must be respected; but, in that wide domain not included in either of these boundaries, the right of the people, through the Legislature, to enact such laws as they choose is absolute. Of the use the people may make of this unrestrained power it is not the business of the courts to inquire. We peruse the expressions of their will in the statute, then examine the Constitution, and ascertain if this -instrument says ‘Thou shalt not’ and if we find no inhibition, then the. statute is the law simply because it is the will of the people, and not because it is wise or unwise.” It is not contended that the Legislature lacks the power to regulate the nomination of party candidates for office, and provide for holding party conventions or so-called primary elections for that purpose. The only requirements are that the regulations provided shall be just and reasonable, and operate on voters and candidates of the same class with substantial equality. In Kenneweg v. Alleghany Co. Commissioners, 102 Md. 119, 62 *154Atl. 249, the Court of Appeals of Maryland held that the Legislature had the power to pass a law regulating the primaries of the numerically stronger parties only, and excluding from its provisions the smaller parties, and, among other things, the opinion says: “The General Assembly being then the depositary of all legislative power, except when restrained by the organic law, it follows that it is clothed with full power to enact a primary election law, as there is no provision in the Constitution to deprive it of that authorty.” And it holds that power to enact a primary election law is inherent in the Legislature. It is said in State ex rel. McCarthy v. Moore, 87 Minn, 308, 92 N. W. 4, that it cannot be expected that any system can accomplish absolute equality in all things, and that no plan will ever ,be devised which will place all candidates -on a perfectly similar footing.
It is important to consider at the outset what the objects sought to be accomplished by the 30 per cent, provision are. In our opinion they are: (1) To prevent the nomination of candidates to represent a party by accident, or without intention on the part of the voters to nominate; (2) doubtless, as contended, one object is to restrain the action of voters at primary elections within the parties to which they of right belong; (3) that the Legislature sought by the limitation in question to define what constitutes an expression of the party will, or what is the act of the party as a party.
On the first proposition, which leads into the third, our attention has been directed to the results in some subdivisions of the state of the vote at the recent primary. • No- candidates filed petitions for certain local offices, but in several subdivisions where a party vote equals several hundred, candidates for such offices received two or three or five votes each. To hold that such candidates should be considered nominees of the party on thé strength of so insignificant a vote would thwart the purpose of the primary election law as expressed in the first section, and be destructive of all party organization and discipline. It is just such accidents as this that we -construe this section as intended to guard against and prevent. In other words, it was the intention of the Legislature in enacting it to secure a fair, just, and unquestionable expression of the voters of a party as to who should be its nominees, and to prevent candidates receiving an insignificant number of votes from posing as representatives of the party by securing the printing of their names upon the party ticket.
*155The second feature is likewise a legitimate and necessary element in a primary election law. It provides for all parties making nominations at the same time and places, and in meetings presided over by the same officers. It is strenuously argued that when 30 per cent, of the voters have attended the meetings and voted for some of the officers, inasmuch as they cannot call for ballots of more than one party, this purpose is accomplished. There is much force in this argument, but because the Legislature might have provided for a more effectual, and perhaps a more reasonable, method of keeping voters within their own parties than the one they saw fit to provide, will not alone justify this court in holding the provision which was made invalid. It undoubtedly has, as it stands, a tendency in the direction mentioned. The New Jersey court says: “A difference of opinion between the courts and the Legislature as to the expedience of making such a distinction” (that is, a distinction in the method of nomination) “if such a difference 'existed, could not find expression in any judicial action; this being one of those matters in respect to which the court cannot, as Judge Cooley phrases it, 'run a race with the. Legislature.’ ”. In the same opinion it is said that, “primary elections are so matters of public concern that they are proper objects of legislative oversight; that the question of their reasonable regulation presents a problem in the legislative discretion, the solution of which is solely a legislative function.” Hooper v. Stack, 69 N. J. Law, 562, 56 Atl. 1. In Dapper v. Smith, 138 Mich. 104, 101 N. W. 60, the Supreme Court of Michigan in holding an oath, required on the part of the candidate by the primary election law of Michigan, unconstitutional says: “It by no means follows that reasonable provision may not be made by legislation for an initiative in placing on the ballot the names of those to be voted for; as, for instance, by requiring a petition by a stated percentage of the voters of the party.”
As we view the purpose of this provision from the consideration which we have been able to give it in the brief time allowed us by the exigency of the occasion, the third proposition is the controlling one, namely, that the Legislature sought, by the limitation in question, to define what constitutes an expression of the party will. There is a marked analogy between the primary election provided for and a political convention. This election, in effect, constitutes political mass conventions of the various parties, composed of voters *156of the respective parties, each depositing his ballot in his own precinct instead of at one central point, and there is likewise a marked analogy, in the proceedings under this law, to those of a party convention or conventions. It cannot be doubted that in a party con- \ ention its members would have the right and power to adopt rules, and, among other provisions, fix the number or percentage of voters or delegates necessary to constitute a quorum or to express the will of the convention and its members in the nomination of a candidate. :We find that some party organizations require only a plurality vote, others a majority, and still others two-thirds or three-fourths of its membership, to nominate. Under the primary system the party does not assemble at one place, and is thereby precluded from making rules to. govern its proceedings. Rules or regulations must necessarily be provided by some means. The Legislature has provided such rules. They in all respects correspond to the rules almost uniformly adopted as one of the first steps in the proceedings of a party convention. It has said that to make a nomination for a designated office 30 per cent, of the voters of the party must cast their ballots for some candidate for such' office. In other words, if 30 per cent, of the party, as measured by the vote for Secretary of State at the last election, does not act on the nomination of a candidate for a particular office, a quorum of the party is lacking. While the legislative assembly might, and in our opinion could, have provided a simpler, more plainly expressed, and perhaps a more reasonable, method of determining the fact that a party does not care to make a nomination or present a candidate for a particular office, yet to us. one object of this provision seems to be to provide a method whereby the members of a political body can express, by their failure to vote on the different candidates for any specific office, their desire to make no nomination for that position. Under the terms of the law, taken all together, they cannot exercise their desire to leave an office unfilled on their party ticket in any other manner. Tio illustrate: Assume that a candidate of one party for clerk of court, which, so far as the nature of the duties is indicative, is a nonpolitical office, is satisfactory to the mass of voters of all other parties and they desire to nominate no candidate in opposition. No method is provided by the statute by means of which candidates can be prevented from filing petitions if they succeed in securing the number of signatures necessary. An individual succeeds in securing the requisite number *157of signers to a petition, gets a few votes, and in the ahesnce of .some such provision, he becomes the party nominee. The Legislature has said that unless candidates for that office receive 30 per cent, of the party strength, as measured by the vote designated, this failure to vote on that office constitutes a failure of the party to directly express its choice. The law provides specifically no other method for this, or for determining how a party may express its satisfaction with the candidacy of the member of another party, without directly nominating a member of the other party.
The provision of section 601, Rev. Codes 1905, that to enable a party to secure representation on the Australian ballot at the general election it must have cast 5 per cent, of the’ vote at the next preceding general election was for years, and may now be, in force. Its validity was never questioned in this state. Similar provisions have been upheld in other states wherein the percentages range from 1 to 10. The Legislature saw fit to say that it should take 5 per cent, of the actual vote of the state to constitute a party, or to evidence that a party was actually in existence, and of such respectable numbers as to justify its recognition as a political party. This principle has been sustained in Pennsylvania, Illinois, Kentucky, Ohio, Rhode Island, Nebraska, Massachusetts, Oregon, Minnesota, and perhaps in other states. We see no distinction between the power of the Legislature to prescribe what percentage of the voters of a state shall be deemed a party and its power to say what percentage of the members of a party shall be necessary to evidence that a specific act is the act of a party, or that a certain individual is the candidate of the party. If the Legislature has power to say that it shall require 5 per cent of the total vote of the state to constitute a party, it must certainly have the power to say that it shall require the votes of a definite percentage of the members of a party to evidence the act of the party. In other words, in this instance, the Legislature says that if 71 per cent, of the voters of a party are not sufficiently interested in the different party candidates for nomination for a particular office to vote on it, it is conclusive evidence that the members of that party desire to place no one in nomination for such office.
New will contend that a provision permitting only 1 per cent, of the voters of the state to nominate for a specified office would furnish any adequate or reasonable expression of the party as to who should represent it on the ticket for such office. On the other *158hand, a requirement that every member of the party must vote for candidates at the primary, or nominations are not made, would be clearly unreasonable. A reasonable number must be found somewhere between these two percentages. The Legislature, has fixed it at 30 per cent., and if this is not clearly either reasonable or unreasonable in the minds of sane and reasonable men, it is a legislative question, and the court is not justified in declaring the provision invalid. It is argued that, because a candidate may have had nearly votes enough to secure his nomination when, the only candidate seeking to represent his party, the few votes lacking should not be permitted, in effect, to nullify the many votes which he may have received, but this is an incident to all elections wherein a majority or any requisite number of votes is necessary to control. It is the last few votes which in every close election prevent the unsuccessful candidate or party from being the successful one. The-comparison may be extended by reference to the provisions of the law, which have never been questioned, requiring a certain percentage, or a fixed number of the voters, to sign a petition before a candidate can have his name printed on the official' ballot. Can it f-airly and justly be said that a candidate who may receive a smaller’vote at the primary election than the number of signatures necessary to secure the printing of his name on the official ballot should be the nominee of the party, or that the act of the few voters who may -have voted for him should evidence the will of the party as a party ? When the members or delegates met in a partisan convention, it was a simple matter for such body to adopt rules for the government of the party and of the members of the convention, but under the primary system, which abrogates party conventions, who can say what shall evidence the act of a party as a party, if not within the province of the Legislature to do so ? We do not deem this requirement a restriction on the elective franchise, but rather a legislative expression or definition of what percentage of a party vote is necessary to evidence that an act is the act of the party, or a candidate the candidate of a party.
The provision under discussion may well furnish an incentive to voters to attend the primaries, and in a measure to overcome their indifference. Certainly if the members of a party lack sufficient interest in its welfare and maintenance as an organization to attend the election, they have no reason to complain, and if, having attended and voted for candidates to fill most of the places on their *159party ticket, when only a cross is required to express their preference as to another candidate, they fail to make it while in the booth, it would .seem to strongly indicate a desire to refrain frorn placing a party con didate in nomination for that office. This is a contingency which cannot well be reasonably provided against by the legislative assembly, and unless the Legislature has failed to provide the opportunity for an expression of the individual preference of the voter and of the party, we are unable to see that the law is obnoxious to any constitutional provision. In the case of Johnson v. Grand Forks County, 16 N. D. 363, 113 N. W. 1071, which has been cited by both parties, we are treating of the rights of individuals and candidates. The purpose of the provision in question in this proceeding is to protect the party as a political body; and, while the language employed and the regulations established may not, in all respects, be the most expressive or simple, yet we are not prepared to say that the latter are so unreasonable as to render the provision in question invalid. In this connection the remarks of the court in De Walt v. Bradley, 146 Pa. 529, 24 Atl. 186, 15 L. R. A. 771, 28 Am. St. Rep. 814, are pertinent. In discussing an election law, that court says: “The act does not deny to any voter the exercise of the elective franchise because he happens to be the member of a party which at the last general election polled less than 3 per cent, of the entire vote cast. The provision referred to' is but a regulation, and we think a reasonable one, in regard to the printing of tickets. The use of official ballots renders it absolutely necessary to make some regulations in regard to nominations; in order to ascertain what names should be printed on the ballot. The right to vote can only be exercised by the individual voter. The right to nominate, flowing necessarily from the right to vote, can only be exercised by a number of voters acting together. Three persons may claim to be a political party, just as the three tailors of Tooley street assumed to be the people of England. It follows, if an official ballot is to be used, nominations must be regulated in some way; otherwise the scheme would be impracticable and the official ballot become the size of a blanket.” And in State v. Drexel, 74 Neb. 776, 105 N. W. 174, the Supreme Court of Nebraska says: “But it is equally necessary to recognize the existence of political parties, and to classify them by some convenient standard. The law would hardly serve its purpose without some limitations and *160restrictions as to a party’s numerical strength. To say that a number of voters, however small, may associate themselves together as the embodiment of some political principle or policy of government, and be entitled to representation on the primary ballot, would pave the way to endless confusion, and to destroy in a large measure the objects sought to be attained by such a law. The limitation as to numbers must be fixed at some point.’’ See, also, Healy v. Wipf (S. D.) 117 N. W. 521.
For these reasons the order of the district court is affirmed.
Morgan, C. J., concurs.