Court Opinion

ID: 5585102
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-01-11 01:51:10.83685+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:36:12.904864
License: Public Domain

Atkinson, J.
Included among the several militia districts in Colquitt County are the Moultrie militia district and the Doerun militia district. The Moultrie district includes the city of Moultrie and other territory. The Doerun district includes the city of Doerun and other territory. Independent school systems are operated in each of the above-named cities. On January 3, 1924, the County Democratic Executive Committee called a party primary election to be held on February 27, 1924, for the county officers, including, among others, a county school superintendent to be voted for in the general election for county officers to be held in November, 1924. Rules and regulations for the holding of the election were duly provided, including a resolution providing that all voters of Colquitt County, including those in the cities of Moultrie and Doerun, should be permitted to vote in the primary election for all candidates for nomination as county school superintendent. After the adoption of the rules Frank Clark became a candidate for nomination as county school superintendent, *643and solicited votes in the cities above mentioned and elsewhere in the county. He was opposed by L. 0. Rogers, another candidate for the same nomination. The county registrars furnished the managers of election at the precincts in each of the above-mentioned militia districts with only one list of voters, and such lists failed to show which voters of the respective districts resided within the city limits and which resided without the city limits, and there was no law or rule of the political party by which the managers could officially determine which of the voters resided within and which resided without the limits of the respective cities. But nevertheless Clark requested one member of the executive committee from each of the districts to keep count of the votes cast in those districts in such manner as to separate the city vote from the vote of the districts at large. This was assented to unofficially by such members; and accordingly, at the request of such members, the election managers in each district undertook to comply with the request, acting upon their personal knowledge or inquiry as to the residence of voters. After the polls were closed the managers counted all the ballots cast in the districts, and separately counted the ballots of those persons who they had determined, in the manner above indicated, resided in the respective cities, and after such counts, certified them separately to the executive committee for consolidation and declaration of the result. The returns showed a majority in the county for Clark, if the ballots of persons declared to be residents of the cities were excluded, but a majority for Rogers if they were included in the count. At the consolidation of the returns by the executive committee on the day following the election the executive committee refused, upon demand of Clark, to accept the returns that excluded the city votes, but did accept the returns which showed the total vote of the Moultrie and Doerun districts including the city votes. Hpon acceptance of such returns Rogers was formally declared by the executive committee the nominee of the party. On March 8, following the declaration of the result as above indicated, Clark instituted mandamus proceedings against the members of the democratic executive committee to compel them to declare him “to be the nominee” of the part3q “by virtue of the result of said primary election.” An allegation in the petition that the executive committee was “charged with the duty of declaring the nominees for said *644offices in accordance with the result of said election” was admitted in the answer. The case was submitted to the judge upon an agreed statement of facts as indicated above, and a mandamus absolute was refused. The plaintiff excepted.
The questions raised by the record are dealt with in the head-notes, without need of further elaboration.

Judgment affirmed.

All the Justices concur.