Bowden v. Kerr
Bowden v. Kerr
Opinion of the Court
Petition for writ of mandate against the Registrar of Voters of the County of Los Angeles, directing said officer to strike from the files of his office the names of twenty-seven persons, each of whom has filed in the office of said registrar his or her declaration of intention to become a candidate for the office of superior judge in and for said county, and to restrain said registrar from placing the names of said persons on the official primary ballot as candidates for the office of superior judge at the coming August primary election to be held in said county. Each of said declarations of intention was filed in the office of said registrar on the twenty-sixth day of May, 1934. It is the contention of the petitioner that the last day on
In the county of Los Angeles two or more judges of the superior court are to be elected for the same term during the year 1934. By section 2 of chapter 316, Statutes of 1927, page 528 (Deéring’s Gen. Laws, 1931, Act 2274), it is provided that: “Bach candidate for judicial office for which two or more judges or justices are to be elected for the same term at the same election as herein provided, not more than ten days nor less than five days prior to the first day on which his nomination papers may be circulated and signed, shall file in the office in which his nomination papers are -required to be filed, a written and signed declaration of his intention to become a candidate for such office and shall state in such declaration for which of the said number-designated offices of courts of record he intends to become a candidate.”
By an examination of the primary law as now in force, we find that there is no express provision thereof fixing the first day on which the nomination papers of a candidate for a judicial office may be circulated and signed. However, section 5 of the General Primary Law (Stats. 1913, p. 1379), as amended in 1933 (Stats. 1933, p. 358; Deering’s Gen. Laws, 1931, Act 2256, Supp. 1933), provides for the filing by a candidate for public office of his declaration of candidacy and for the appointment by him of verification deputies to obtain signatures of sponsors to his nomination papers. The plain reading of this section of the primary law indicates that these verification deputies are to be appointed during the period within which the candidate may file his declaration of candidacy, but not before that period. If verification deputies are appointed on the first day the candidate can file his declaration of candidacy, it would be possible for a candidate to have his nomination papers circulated and signed on that day. Said section provides that said declaration of candidacy must be filed at least sixty days and not more than ninety days prior to the August primary election. It follows, therefore, from these provisions of this section of the pri
It is so ordered.
Preston, J., Langdon, J., Waste, C. J., Tyler, J., pro tern., and Shenk, J., concurred.
Rehearing denied.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- LESLIE S. BOWDEN v. W. M. KERR, as Registrar, etc., and LYNDEN BOWRING, Interveners
- Status
- Published