Untitled Texas Attorney General Opinion ( 1960 )


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  •                      THEAITORNEY                 GENERAL
    OF    TEXAS
    Aus-    IX.TEXA~
    WI&      WILSON
    *x-r0RNEY      GENERAI.      September 26, 1960
    Honorable Zollie Steakley               Opinion No. W-944
    Secretary of State
    Austin, Texas                           Re:   Whether nominations
    made by the county
    convention of a
    political party which
    is not required to
    hold primary elections
    should be certified to
    the Secretary of State
    or to the county clerk,
    Dear Mr. Steakley:
    Your request for an opinion reads as follows:
    "The Constitution Party has tendered to this
    office the certificate of the Harris County Chair-
    man of the Party'listing the candidates of said
    party for certain county offices in Harris County.
    The certificate was tendered for the purpose of
    certification by this office to the County Clerk
    of Harris County of such candidates for a place
    on the general election ballot in Harris County.
    "The Chairman stated In connection with his
    tender of the certificate that the County Clerk
    of Harris County has refused to accept such certi-
    ficate direotly to the county clerk and has taken
    the position that it Is the responsibility of the
    Secretary of State to certify these candidates for
    county office under Article 13.48 of the Texas
    Election Code.
    "Please advise Immediately whether or not it
    is the duty of this office to accept the certificate
    described above, and to certify the candidates for
    county office shown therein to the County Clerk of
    Harris County for the general election ballot, or
    if it is the legal duty of the County Clerk of Har-
    ris County to accept such a certificate tendered to
    him."
    Honorable Zollie Steakley, page 2 (Wk-944)
    Article 13.46 of the Election Code provides that
    the state committee of a political party which is not
    required to make nomination by a primary election shall
    decide whether the party will nominate state, district
    and county officers by convention or by primary elec-
    tions, and shall certify their decision to the Secretary
    of State. If nominations are to be made by convention,
    the nominations for county offices are made by the county
    conventions held in accordance with Article 13.47.
    Article 13.48 provides for certification of the
    party's nominees in the following language:
    "Allynominations so made by a State or dis-
    trict convention shall be certified by the ohalr-
    man of the State or district committee of such
    party to the Secretary of State and a nomination
    made by a county convention, by the chairman of
    the county committee."
    This statute as first enacted in 1905 as part of the Terre11
    Election Law (Acts 29th Leg., 1st C.S., Ch. 11, Sec. gg),
    read as follows:
    "All nominations so made by a State or dis-
    trict conventions shall be certified by the chalr-
    man of the State or district committees of such
    parties to the Secretary of State, and nomlna-
    tions made by county conventions by the chairman
    of the county committee.”
    It was carried forward into the Revisions of 1911 and 1925
    exactly in its present form, except that in these revisions
    there was a comma after "Secretary of State".
    The State Executive Committee of the Constitution
    Party, which comes within these statutes, decided that the
    party's nominations for the 1960 general election were to be
    made by convention and certified the deaision to the Secre-
    tary of State as required by Article 13.46.
    Unquestionably, a party whiah has complied with Ar-
    ticles 13.46 and 13.47 Is entitled to certify its nominees
    to some officer of the State, and the nominees are entitled
    to have their names placed on the ballot upon certification
    by the county chairman in proper form. Uncertainty of the
    State's administrative officers as to which of them has au-
    thority to aocept the certificate should not defeat the right
    of the candidates to appear on the ballot.
    .
    .‘..
    Honorable Zollie Steakley, page 3 (W-944)
    A reading of Article 13.48 reveals immediately that
    It does not clearly state to whom the nominations made by
    a county convention are to be certified. It Is susceptible
    of two constructions. The first Is that the statute fails
    to designate any officer to receive the certificate. The
    second is that the designation of the Secretary of State in
    the first clause should be read into the last clause; that
    Is, that a nomination by a county convention shall be certi-
    fied ---
    to the same officer by the chairman of the county
    committee.
    We have not found any court decision resolving this
    question of construction. Couch v. Hill, 
    10 S.W.2d 170
    (Tex.
    Civ.App. 1928, error diem.), and Pulliam v. Trawalter, 
    120 S.W.2d 108
    (Tex.Civ.App. 1938), are the only cases we have
    found Involving a oertification of a nomination made by a
    county convention which was governed by Article 13.48. In
    the Couch case, the certification had been made directly to
    the county clerk. In Pulliam v. Trawalter, the opinion does
    not disclose whether the certifi ti    h d been made directly
    to the county clerk, but you hav~ain~rm~d us that the records
    of your office do not show that the certificate passed through
    the Secretary of State's office. The question of whether the
    certificate had been submitted to the proper officer was not
    before the oourt in either of these oases, and the question was
    not raised or disoussed in either opinion.
    The question also has not been previously ruled on by
    the Attorney General's office. Attorney General's Opinion
    V-1529 (1952) considered the county clerk's,authority to pass
    on the validity of nominations whiah had been made by a county
    convention and certified directly to him by the county chair-
    man, but the question of whether the nominees should originally
    have been certified to some other officer was not involved in
    the request. That opinion was written by the writer of the
    present opinion. For reasons similar to those to be developed
    in the present opinion, it was thought that oertiflcation
    directly to the oounty clerk would not be fatal to his au-
    thority to place the names of the nominees on the ballot and
    that it was therefore unnecessary for this office to raise
    and discuss the propriety of the direct certification when it
    had not been raised in the opinion request.
    Since the courts have not ruled on your authority to
    accept certifications of nominations made by county conven-
    tions, your request makes it necessary to review the argu-
    ments which can be advanced In support of the two possible
    construotlons and to advise you on what course you should
    take in the present situation.
    Honorable Zollie Steakley, page 4 (WW-944)
    In opposition to the construction that the statute
    designates the Secretary of State as the officer to re-
    ceive the certificate, it could be argued that certlfica-
    tion of county nominations to the Secretary of State is in-
    congruous with other provisions of the Election Code and there
    appears to be no reason why the Legislature should have in-
    tended to deviate from the pattern for requiring certifica-
    tion of county nominations to a county officer. In all other
    instances, the certlfioation is either to the county clerk
    or to the county judge. Certification of county nominations
    in primary eleations is made to the county clerk. Art. 13.25.
    A substitute nomination to fill a vacancy in a nomination is
    certified to the county judge. Art. 13.56. Nominations by
    parties without state organization, whether made by primary
    election or by convention, are certified to the county clerk.
    Art. 13.54. Applications of independent candidates are filed
    with the county judge. Art. 13.53. It is a settled rule of
    construction that a statute is to be construed in conjunction
    with other statutes in pari materia, and this rule of con-
    struction lends suppvment               that the Legislature
    did not intend to route these county nominations through the
    Secretary of State.
    A possible argument in refutation of the contention
    that there would be no reason for routing the certifications
    through the Secretary of State is that the propriety of con-
    vention nominations depends on the adoption of that method
    of nomination by the state executive committee, whose deci-
    sion is certified to the Secretary of State (Art. 13.46),
    and he would be the officer possessed of knowledge as to
    the method which the committee had chosen. On the other
    hand, it could be argued that if the Legislature intended
    to require certification to the Secretary of State, there
    would have been no reason for placin county nominations
    in a separate clause in Article 13.4% , as this meaning could
    have been expressed more directly and clearly by making the
    statute read that "all nominations so made by a State, dis-
    trict, or county convention shall be certified by the chair-
    man of the State, districtnor county committee of such party
    to the Secretary of State.
    It could also be urged in support of the second
    construction that, like Nature, the law abhors a vacuum,
    and that the statute should not be construed to leave a
    void if it can reasonably be construed otherwise. However,
    other instances can be pointed out where the Lagislature,
    apparently through oversight, failed to provide the method
    for certifying certain nominatlons,and it cannot be said
    with assurance that this is not another example of oversight.    ~:~
    For example, until the addition of the last sentence of Ar-
    ticle 13.25 in 1951, there was no provision for certification
    Honorable Zollie Steakley, Page 5 (WW-944)
    of district nominations made in second primary elections,
    and there is still no express provision governing certi-
    fication of county and precinct nominations made in the
    second primary, There is no statute providing how presl-
    dential elector candidates shall be certified. Prior to
    the addition of the last sentence of Article 1.03 In 1951,
    except for independent candidates (Art. 13.52) there was
    no provision directing the Secretary of State to certify
    to the county clerks the names of state and district candl-
    dates which had been certified to him.
    Against the construction that these county nomlna-
    tions are to be certified to the Secretary of State, It could
    be pointed out that Article 1.03 makes no mention of county
    nominations in providing for certification by the Secretary
    of State to the county clerks. The provision which was added
    to Article 1.03 in 1951 reads as follows:
    " l l l The Secretary of State shall at the
    seme time ,@at he is required to furnish forms
    of election blanks to each county judgg certify
    to each county clerk a list of all the candidates
    who have been nominated for state office and for
    district office where the district consists of
    more than one county, if said distriat nominees
    have not been certified directly to the county
    clerk."
    Since this statute makes no mention whatever of
    county nominations, It could be argued that It evidences a
    legislative construction that the Election Code does not re-
    quire certification of any county nominations to the Secre-
    tary of State.
    %Chere may still be a hiatus in Article 1.03 with respect
    to district offices in districts of only one county, inasmuch
    as Arts. 13.48 and 13.56 provide for certification of district
    nominations to the Secretary of State without excluding districts
    of only one county. Also cf. Arts. 13.50-13.52, relating to in-
    dependent candidates. What effect the addition of this provi-
    sion had on the method of making or certifying one-county dis-
    trict nominations, and conjecture on how it happened to be draft-
    ed in language omitting one-county districts, are outside the
    scope of this opinion. The significant fact for the purpose of
    this opinion is that the statute totally fails to mention county
    nominations, and it could be argued that this omission would not
    likely have occurred if the Legislature had intended that nomi-
    nations by county conventions were to be certified to the Secre-
    tary of State. However, if it should be held that Art. 13.48
    does require certification of county nominations to him, it is
    his duty to certify the nominations to the proper county clerks
    though there is no express statutory provision for it. Seay v.
    Latham, 
    143 Tex. 1
    , 
    182 S.W.2d 251
    (1944).
    .
    ._
    Honorable Zollle Steakley, page 6 (WW-944)
    The administrative construction which has been
    placed on a statute is of persuasive force in determining
    the meaning of a doubtful provision, and prior admlnistra-
    tive construction is of compelling force where the statute
    has been re-enacted without substantial change. "It is a
    very well-established rule there where a statute of doubtful
    construction has been construed by executive officers of the
    State charged with its execution, and it has subsequently
    been re-enacted without substantial change of language, it
    will continue to receive the same construction.R Stanford v.
    Butler, 
    142 Tex. 692
    , 
    181 S.W. 269
    1944). If we are correct
    in our conclusion that Article 13.4A does not clearly require
    certification to the Secretary of State, and if it could be
    shown that the established administrative construction prior
    to 1951 was against that interpretation, it would follow that
    the statute should continue to receive the same construction
    after its re-enactment in 1951.
    You have informed us that records of certifications
    in the Secretary of State's office prior to 1931 are not
    available, but that you have examined the records from 1931
    through 1958 and have found no instance where the Secretary
    of State has received and acted on a certification of a county
    nomination. Of course, the fact that the Secretary of State
    has not received any such certificates does not of itself show
    that such nominations have been made and certified directly
    to the county clerk. While nominations for county offices by
    statewide parties not holding primaries has been the exception
    more often than the rule, it seems unlikely that they have
    been so sporadic that no pattern of administrative construc-
    tion has been established. Three known instances of county
    nominations have been cited in this opinion (Couch v. Hill,
    Pulliam v. Trawalter, Att'y Qen. Op. 
    V-1529, supra
    ). How-
    ever, we have no readily available means of obtaining informa-
    tion on the number of times that county conventions have nomi-
    nated candidates, and in the absence of more evidence as to
    the number of such nominations we are unable to say that com-
    pelling weight should be given to prior administrative con-
    struction.
    If Article 13.48 fails to name the officer to whom
    county convention nominations are to be certified, it would
    be proper for the county chairman to make the certification
    to the officer named in other statutes regulating analogous
    nominations. Morris v. Mims, 
    224 S.W. 587
    (Tex.Civ.App. 1920).
    That case held that where the statute prescribed no method
    by which a new party might make nominations, it had the right
    to pursue any reasonable method not prohibited by law, and
    the party having made nominations for state offices by one
    of the methods presoribed by statute for making nominations
    .
    I       -
    Honorable Zollie Steakley, page 7 (WW-944)
    by pre-existing parties and having properly certified
    the nominations to the Searetary of State, it was his
    duty to certify the names of the candidates to the proper
    election officers to be placed on the official ballot as
    the nominees of the party. By like,reasoning, if Article
    13.48 does not specify the officer to whom county nomina-
    tions are to be made, the county chairman may pursue the
    course prescribed In some other statute relating to county
    nominations. As previously noted, all other county nomi-
    nations are certified either to the county judge or to the
    county clerk. Nominations which are certified to the county
    judge must in turn be certified by him to the county clerk,
    as the county clerk is the officer who posts the names of
    the nominees and orders their names placed on the ballot.
    Art. 13.32, Election Code. There is no apparent reason why
    a county convention nomination should be certified to the
    county judge. If Article 13.48 does not require certifica-
    tion to the Secretary of State, we are of the opinion that
    the nominations could be certified directly to the county
    clerk.
    After considering all the arguments, we are unable
    to   statecategorically that Article 13.48 does not require
    certification to the Secretary of State. We are equally
    unable to state that it does. Needless to say, neither
    your office nor our office has the final authority to con-
    strue the statute; that authority rests with the courts.
    'Iheopinion you are seeking from us is not for the purpose
    of finally resolving the question but to obtain advice on
    what you should do In the present situation. As we have
    said, the uncertainty of the State's officers as to which
    of them has the authority to accept the certificate should
    not defeat the right of the nominees to have their names
    placed on the ballot. Where there has been no prior judi-
    cial construction, we believe that a court would order the
    names of the nominees placed on the ballot upon tender of
    the certificate in proper form and in due time to either
    the Secretary  of State or the county clerk.  Our advice is
    that, in the absenae of a judicial construction, you should
    accept the certificate tendered to you and in turn certify
    the names of the nominees to the County Clerk of Harris
    County.
    SUMMARY
    Article 13.48 of the Election Code is suscep-
    tible of two constructions, the first being that
    the statute does not specify to whom county con-
    vention nominations are to be certified and the
    second being that the nominations are to be certi-
    fled to the Secretary of State. If the first
    Honorable Zollie Steakley, page 8 (WW-944)
    construction is correct, the certification may
    be made to the county clerk. There having been
    no judicial interpretation of the statute, the
    Secretary of State should accept a certificate
    of nominations by a county convention which has
    been tendered to him and should in turn certify
    the nominees to the county clerk.
    Yours very truly,
    WILL WILSON
    Attorney General of Texas
    Assistant
    MKW:lJb:bh
    APPROVED:
    OPINION COMMITTEE
    W. V. Qeppert, Chairman
    J. C. Davis, Jr.
    Riley Eugene Fletoher
    Tom I. McFarling
    Leon F. Pesek
    REVIEWED FOR THE ATTORNEY
    GENERAL BY:
    Leonard Passmore