Court Opinion

ID: 3871222
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-06 09:05:38.05508+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T07:41:41.893361
License: Public Domain

This is a petition for a writ of mandamus, brought by the Attorney General, at the relation of Edward M. Sullivan, for himself and other citizens, to compel the respondent, as town clerk of the town of Cranston, to place upon the official ballot to be used in the election to be held in said Cranston on the nineteenth day of April, 1910, the names of said Sullivan and the other candidates for office named in the "Independent Citizens" nomination papers. The said nomination papers were filed in the town clerk's office, with the respondent, on the sixth day of April. The respondent based his refusal upon the ground that said nomination papers should have been filed on or before April 4, 1910, under the provisions of Gen. Laws, 1909, cap. 11, § 18, which reads as follows: "Certificates of nomination and nomination-papers for officers referred to in section one of this chapter shall be filed at least twenty days, and such certificates and papers for officers referred to in sections two and three of this chapter shall be filed at least fifteen days, previous to the day of the election for which the candidates are nominated, and may be filed by any person lawfully in possession of the same for that purpose."
The petitioner claims that the provisions of section 33 of "An act incorporating the city of Cranston" control the present election. Section 33 reads as follows: "The first meeting of electors for the election of a mayor and members of the city council of the city of Cranston, under this act, shall be held on the 19th day of April, A.D. 1910, and shall be called and warned by the town clerk of the town of Cranston in the manner prescribed by law for the calling of town meetings. The town council of said town shall designate one or more voting-places within each voting-district of said town for said first election, and at least five days prior to the date of such election shall appoint a warden and clerk for each of such voting-places, to serve at such election, who shall be engaged to the faithful performance of their duties as prescribed by law. At said first election the voters of said town qualified to vote for general officers shall give in their votes for a mayor of the city of Cranston, and the voters of said town qualified to vote for the imposition of a *Page 449 
tax or the expenditure of money, and residing within the boundary of a ward of the city of Cranston as such ward is hereinbefore described, shall give in their votes for four members of the city council to represent such ward in the city council of the city of Cranston, and four members of said city council shall be elected from each of such wards. The chairman of the town committee of any political party which shall have, at the election for general officers next preceding such first election, polled at least two per cent. of the total votes cast for the candidates for governor, and which desires to hold caucuses for the purpose of selecting candidates to be voted for at said first election, shall at least two days before any such caucus appoint a caucus chairman and a caucus clerk for each ward caucus, which said caucus chairman and clerk shall be qualified electors residing within the boundaries of the ward in which they are to serve, and members of such political party: Provided, however, that such chairman shall have given to the town clerk of said town ten days' notice, in writing, of the date selected for such caucuses. It shall be the duty of the town clerk of said town, in and at the expense of said town, to provide meeting places within the boundaries of each ward, for such caucuses, and to notify, in writing, such chairman, as to the places so provided, at least five days prior to the date selected for holding such caucuses; but no such caucus shall be held within two days, exclusive of Sundays, of the last day for filing the certificates of nomination for said first election. All certificates of nomination of candidates to be voted for at said first election shall be filed with the town clerk at least nine days before said first election. Within twenty-four hours, exclusive of Sunday, after the filing of any such certificate, every person so nominated for any office shall file with the said town clerk his acceptance of such nomination, signed by him, and in making up the ballot to be used at said first election said town clerk shall not place thereon the name of any person who has failed to so signify his acceptance of such nomination." *Page 450 
The contention of the petitioner is that the words "All certificates of nomination of candidates to be voted for at said first election shall be filed with the town clerk at least nine days before said first election," are sufficiently broad to include nomination papers as well as certificates of nomination. It is provided by section 31 of said act that: "At all elections held under the provisions of this act the polls shall be opened at six o'clock in the morning and shall remain open until seven o'clock in the evening, and no longer; and at all such elections the provisions of Chapter 11 of the General Laws, 1909, entitled `Of election by secret ballot,' and of all acts in amendment thereof and in addition thereto, shall be observed, in so far as the same are not inconsistent with the requirements of this act." Gen. Laws, 1909, cap. 11, provides for "Nomination of candidates in convention or caucus" (sections 4 to 7, both inclusive), and for "nomination of candidates by individual voters" (sections 8 to 15, both inclusive). The nominations in convention or caucus are evidenced by "certificates of nomination," while the nomination by individual voters is contained in the "nomination papers" signed by the voters. While both of said papers, without violence to the language, could easily have been regarded as "certificates of nomination," the legislature did not see fit to so combine them. or to consider them as synonymous terms, but for many years has seen fit to classify them as separate and distinct. In the face of such consistent usage, continued for so long a time, without exception, so far as we know, can we say that it was clearly the legislative intent in section 33 of the act incorporating the city of Cranston, to disregard their previous classification, continued through various revisions of the statutes, and to combine "certificates of nomination" and "nomination papers" in the same class? We think not. An examination of said section 33 discloses the fact that caucuses are therein provided for; "caucuses for the purpose of selecting candidates to be voted for at said election;" that "no such caucus shall be held within two days, exclusive of Sundays, of the last day for filing the `certificates of nomination' for said first election," and *Page 451 
that "all `certificates of nomination' of candidates to be voted for at said first election shall be filed with the town clerk at least nine days before said first election." The town of Cranston had no caucus law before this, and this caucus law is limited to the first election to be held thereunder. As this was a new provision concerning the town and city of Cranston, and confined to one election, it was proper to direct what steps should be taken to ensure a compliance with its direction, even to the fixing of the time within which certificates should be filed with the town clerk. It would have been competent for the legislature to have added the words "and nomination papers" after the word "nomination," so that the clause would have read, "All certificates of nomination and nomination papers of candidates to be voted for at said first election shall be filed with the town clerk at least nine days before said first election;" but they did not. They could have fixed different times, if they had seen fit, with equal propriety; it being a question of expediency, and consequently purely legislative. But this they did not do. They merely provided for the certificates, and left the nomination papers to be filed under the provisions of Gen. Laws, 1909, cap. 11 § 18. Individual voters have not been deprived of the privilege of making their nominations as usual, and no complaint is made that the time was too brief in which to obtain nominations on nomination papers for filing fifteen days before election; on the contrary, it was stated that the petitioners were cautioned to return such nomination papers under the provisions of Gen. Laws, 1909, cap. 11, § 18, but did not see fit to do so. In these circumstances we can not say that the legislature intended to have the word certificates include nomination papers.
The petition is therefore denied and dismissed.
BLODGETT AND PARKHURST, JJ., concur.