Black v. Board of Supervisors of Elections

Per Curiam Order

PER CURIAM ORDER OF COURT

For reasons to be stated in an opinion to be hereafter filed, this Court is of the opinion that the Order of the Superior Court of Baltimore City requiring the Respondents, the Board of Supervisors of Elections of Baltimore City, to remove the name of W. Rae Dempsey, Jr., as a candidate for election to the office of City Comptroller of Baltimore City at the municipal election to be held in said City on May 7, 1963, should be affirmed, and a majority of this Court being of the opinion that the Order of said Superior Court denying the petition insofar as it seeks to require the said Respondents to accept the nomination of Hyman A. Pressman as the candidate of the Republican Party for the office of City Comptroller should be reversed;

*77It is this 30th day of April, 1963, ORDERED by the Court of Appeals of Maryland:

(1) That the provisions of the Order of the Superior Court of Baltimore City, dated April 26, 1963, declaring the resignation of W. Rae Dempsey, Jr., as the candidate of the Republican Party Cor the office of City Comptroller of Baltimore City at the municipal election to be held in said City on May 7, 1963, to be valid, and directing that the writ of mandamus issue to require the deletion of his name as such candidate from all ballot labels and ballots to be used on voting machines and from all specimen ballots at said election, be and it is hereby affirmed;

(2) That the provisions of said Order of the Superior Court declaring that a vacancy has existed since the above resignation of the said W. Rae Dempsey, Jr., which can be filled by the nomination by action of an appropriate committee representing the Republican Party, of another qualified person as the candidate of said party for the office of City Comptroller of Baltimore City at said election, be and it is hereby affirmed; the question of which may be the appropriate committee having become moot by reason of an event below referred to and therefore not being decided; and

(3) That the portion of said Order of the Superior Court of Baltimore City which declares the Petitioner Hyman A. Pressman not to be qualified to be nominated as the candidate of the Republican Party for the office of City Comptroller of Baltimore City at said municipal election or to have his name appear on the ballot labels, ballots and specimen ballots to be used in the said election, be and it is hereby reversed ;

(4) That, this Court being advised through counsel for the Petitioners, with the acquiescence of counsel for the Respondents, that the said Petitioner Hyman A. Pressman has this day been nominated as the candidate of the Republican Party for the office of City Comptroller of Baltimore City at said municipal election, by the Republican State Central Committee, as he had previously been nominated (as the record shows) by the Republican City Committee, the case is remanded to the Superior Court of Baltimore City with direc*78tions to order that the writ of mandamus be issued forthwith, to require the Respondents to list the name of the said Petitioner Hyman A. Pressman as the candidate of the Republican Party for the office of City Comptroller of Baltimore City on the ballot labels, ballots and specimen ballots to be used in said election;

(5) That the mandate of this Court be issued forthwith; and

(6) That the costs be paid by the Board of Supervisors of Elections of Baltimore City.

Frederick W. BrunE Chief Judge

Henderson, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

On April 23, 1963, the appellants filed a petition seeking a writ of mandamus to require the Board of Supervisors of Elections of Baltimore City to delete from the ballot labels and specimen ballots the name of W. Rae Dempsey, Jr., as the candidate of the Republican party for the office of Comptroller of Baltimore City in the municipal election to be held on May 7, 1963, and also to list instead the name of Hyman A. Pressman as such candidate. The petition further sought a declaratory judgment that the resignation of Mr. Dempsey on April 22, 1963, as the candidate of the Republican party for such office in said election, was valid and effective, that the resignation created a vacancy, and that the Republican State Central Committee of Baltimore City lawfully nominated Mr. Pressman to fill such vacancy.

The Board of Supervisors answered the petition, the case was heard upon the petition and answer supplemented by a stipulation of facts, and on April 26, 1963, the court below declared that the Board of Supervisors had the duty to accept the resignation of Mr. Dempsey and delete his name, and that a vacancy existed to be filled by either the Republican State Central Committee or the Republican City Committee. He further declared, however, that Mr. Pressman was not qualified to be nominated as the candidate of the Republican party for the office of Comptroller of Baltimore City, because *79he was a registered Democrat who had been an unsuccessful candidate for the Democratic nomination for the same office in the preceding primary election. Both sides appealed from these orders, we advanced the case for argument in this Court on April 29, 1963, and on April 30, 1963, we handed down a per curiam order affirming the provisions of the trial court’s order as to the resignation of Mr. Dempsey and the creation of a vacancy. We held that the question as to whether the vacancy should be filled by the City or State Committee had become moot by reason of confirmatory action taken by the State Committee on April 30, 1963. We further held that the portion of the order declaring that Mr. Pressman was not qualified for the office should be reversed. We now state the reasons for our holdings in regard to the vacancy and Mr. Pressman’s qualification to fill it.

It appears to be well settled that in the absence of a statutory prohibition against resignation a candidate has a natural or inherent right to resign at any time and to have his name deleted from the ballot. Another person may be named to fill the vacancy at any time when the change can be made without disrupting or interfering with the orderly progress of a general election. The general rule is well stated in 18 Am. Jur. Elections, § 127. The cases support the text. See Introcaso v. Burke, 65 A. 2d 786 (N. J.); Bordwell v. Williams, 159 Pac. 869 (Cal.); Elswick v. Ratliff, 179 S. W. 11 (Ky.); State v. Hunt, 81 P. 2d 883 (Wyo.); State v. Annear, 33 N. W. 2d 634 (Wis.). Even when one is elected, there is no restriction upon his right to decline the office simply by refusing to qualify. Illness or other causes may in fact require it in the public interest. It was not seriously contended that the time remaining after the resignation, which was 16 days before the election date, was too short to permit the vacancy to be filled and the appropriate changes made on the voting machines and ballots.

The cross-appellants rely upon Code (1957), Art. 33, sec. 73 (a), which provides: “General election. — Whenever any person nominated for public office as in this article provided shall, at least 65 days before election, in a writing signed by *80him or her and acknowledged * * *, notify the officer with whom the certificate nominating him is required to be filed by this article, that he or she declines such nomination, such nomination shall be void; and the name of any person so withdrawing shall not be printed upon the ballots.” But sec. 62 (b) provides that the primary election shall be held “nine weeks or sixty-three days prior to the Tuesday next after the first Monday in May of the year in which the municipal elections in the City of Baltimore are to be held.” Inasmuch as Mr. Dempsey did not become “nominated for public office” until 63 days before the scheduled municipal election, manifestly he had no opportunity to decline the nomination at least 65 days before the election.

We think section 73 (a) does not apply to municipal elections in Baltimore City for several reasons. It can hardly be supposed that the legislature intended to impose a mandatory time limitation that could not possibly be met. Cf. Foxwell v. Beck, 117 Md. 1, 8. Moreover, a construction that would, in effect, deprive the voters of a right to vote for a candidate who is willing to accept the office, should not be favored. Cf. Jackson v. Norris, 173 Md. 579, 599, Kemp v. Owens, 76 Md. 235, 241 and Hill v. Town of Colmar Manor, 210 Md. 46, 57. The courts in other states have generally held that time limitations imposed upon a right to withdraw are directory and not mandatory. See State v. Tollman, 143 Pac. 874 (Wash.) ; State v. Dewey, 102 N. W. 1015 (Neb.); In Re Substitute Nomination for Vacancy, Etc., 118 A. 2d 750 (Pa.). We need not go so far in the instant case. We simply hold that the time limitation is inapplicable in a case where it clearly cannot apply.

We also agree with the trial court that the resignation created a vacancy. The cross-appellants’ theory seems to be that even if Mr. Dempsey had a right to resign, there is a gap in the statutory authority. Section 74 (a) provides: “Manner.— Should any person so nominated die before election day or decline the nomination, as in this subtitle provided, or should any certificate of nomination be or become insufficient or inoperative from any cause occurring after the period of time *81for the filling of vacancies in party nominations as is prescribed by § 56 of this article, the vacancy or vacancies thus occasioned shall be filled in the manner prescribed as hereinafter set forth.” (The applicable reference here is to § 75, which authorizes the State or local central committee to fill local vacancies). The cross-appellants read the language as to the certificate of nomination becoming “insufficient or inoperative from any cause” as confined to technical deficiencies in the certificate itself. We find no support for the argument in Rosin v. Leaverton, 181 Md. 91, 96, but quite the contrary. See also Graham v. Wellington, 121 Md. 656. As noted in Pumphrey v. Stockett, 187 Md. 318, 321, section 74 (a) was amended by the legislature after the decision of this Court in the Rasin case, but the legislature did not attempt to alter or restrict the broad language used, but merely made the clause inapplicable to cases arising prior to 15 days before the primary election under § 56. We think the phrase “from any cause” would be rendered meaningless by the construction contended for. Finally, we think the language of § 274, in regard to write-in votes on absentee ballots, clearly contemplates and covers a situation where a candidate withdraws within a period of 50 days prior to the general election. The language not only covers vacancies by reason of death, but specifically refers to any candidate who “shall decline to be, or continue as, a candidate, or if a vacancy occurs from any other cause * * *.” The clear implication is both that a candidate may withdraw within the 65-day period mentioned in § 73 (a) and that another candidate may be selected to fill the vacancy.

The more difficult question in the case is whether the Republican State Central Committee (State or local) is precluded from selecting a registered Democrat to fill the vacancy and particularly one who was an unsuccessful candidate for the office on the Democratic ticket in the primary election. It seems clear that prior to the adoption of the Australian ballot law in 1890, “parties were free to nominate their candidates in any way they saw fit, and it was usual to do it, in the case of the larger parties, by unofficial primaries which sent delegates to conventions where the nominations were made.” Munsell *82v. Hennegan, 182 Md. 15, 19. After 1890, the law has provided three methods of nomination. See § 54. But the adoption of the Australian ballot and the primary election laws did not prevent a party from nominating a member of another party as its candidate. See Fisher v. Dudley, 74 Md. 242 (1891), and German v. Sauter, 136 Md. 52. It was not until 1922 that the legislature sought to impose any limitation. It was then provided, in what is now Code (1957), Art. 33, sec. 67 (d), that a losing candidate in a primary election could not thereafter be nominated by petition. The section is now meaningless because § 67 (b) provides that nominations by petition must be at least 15 days before the date set by law for the primary election.

In 1943, the legislature enacted what is now Code (1957), Art. 33, sec. 60, providing, in effect (except as to nominations for judicial office) that persons seeking nomination in primary elections must be affiliated on the registration book with the party whose nomination he seeks. This statute was sustained in Hennegan v. Geartner, 186 Md. 551. See also the article on party-raiding statutes in 47 Col. L. Rev. 1207. It seems clear, however, that there is no Maryland statute that limits the right of a party central committee to select a candidate of another party to fill a vacancy, in the exercise of the broad powers conferred by Code (1957), Art. 33, sec. 81. The complete absence of limitation on the power to fill vacancies conferred by §§ 74 (b), 75 and 56 (c), may be contrasted with the limitation contained in Art. III, sec. 13 of the Maryland Constitution. See Tyler v. Board of Supervisors, 213 Md. 37.

We have been referred to only one case in which a court has held that a statute requiring party affiliation for candidates in primary elections is, by implication, a bar to the nomination of a defeated candidate of the other party in the event of a vacancy. That case is Francis v. Sturgill, 174 S. W. 753 (Ky.). It has been qualified or ignored in later cases, see Napier v. Roberts, 189 S. W. 206 (Ky.) and Broughton v. Pursifull, 53 S. W. 2d 200 (Ky.). The matter is now controlled by statute. See Mullins v. Jackson, 109 S. W. 2d 387 (Ky.) and Rosenberg v. Queenan, 261 S. W. 2d 617 (Ky.). *83The case of Stevenson v. Gilfert, 100 A. 2d 490 (N. J.), relied on by the appellees, is distinguishable for there the matter was controlled by the express terms of the New Jersey statute. We may note that Chief Justice Vanderbilt and Justice Oliphant dissented. Sadloch v. Allan, 135 A. 2d 173 (N. J.), is to the same effect. On the other hand, there are a host of cases refusing to draw the implication. See Martonick v. Beattie, 117 A. 2d 715 (Pa.); Sutphen v. Enking, 230 Pac. 38 (Ida.); George v. Board of Ballot Com’rs., 90 S. E. 550 (W. Va.); State v. Seibel, 171 S. W. 69 (Mo.); State v. Tipton, 199 P. 2d 463 (Kan.); People v. Smith, 43 N. W. 2d 871 (Mich.) ; In Re Callahan, 93 N. E. 262 (N. Y.); Shaffer v. Jordan, 213 F. 2d 393 (9th cir.).

Fundamentally, the appellees’ contention, like the reasoning of the Kentucky Court in the Sturgill case, is based on the argument that it is repugnant to public policy to allow a switch of party allegiance after the battle lines are drawn. The argument, we think, confuses party policy with public policy. The latter may well be best served by permitting the widest latitude of selection. The appellees seem to concede that Mr. Pressman would not have been ineligible as a write-in candidate. In any event, we think the wisdom or expediency of the matter is for the legislature and not for the Courts.