1 A.2d 831
Supreme Court of Pennsylvania.October 3, 1938.
October 13, 1938.
Elections — Nominations — Objection to nomination papers — Time for filing, hearing and decision — Directory and mandatory provisions — Election Code of June 3, 1937, P. L. 1333 — Affidavits — Competency of affiants — Personal knowledge of facts.
1. Section 977 of the Election Code of June 3, 1937, P. L. 1333, which provides that all nomination petitions and papers filed within the periods prescribed shall be deemed to be valid, unless a petition to set aside the nomination papers be presented within five days after the last day for filing the nomination papers, that the court shall make an order fixing the time for hearing which shall not be later than ten days after the last day for filing the nomination papers, and that the court shall finally determine the matter not later than fifteen days after the last day for filing the nomination papers, is directory, not mandatory. [79-82]
2. While courts will respect and follow legislative enactments pertaining to election procedure, they will not do so, where such enactments are infringements on the judicial power, or where the provision is clearly incompatible with important judicial business, or impossible of judicial performance. [80]
3. Under section 951(d) of the Election Code, the affiants to the affidavits required to be attached to the nomination papers must have some personal knowledge as to the first six requirements of the act. [82-3]
4. On appeal from a decree setting aside nomination papers, it was held, upon consideration of the whole record, that two of the affiants were not qualified as required by section 951(d). [83-4]
Argued October 3, 1938.
Before KEPHART, C. J., SCHAFFER, MAXEY, DREW, LINN, STERN and BARNES, JJ.
Appeal, No. 19, May T., 1939, from decree of C. P. Dauphin Co., March T., 1938, No. 376, in re objections
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to the nomination papers, nominating candidates of the political body under the name and style of “Socialist Labor.” Decree affirmed.
Petition to set aside nomination papers. Before RICHARDS, P. J., specially presiding.
The opinion of the Supreme Court states the facts.
Decree entered setting aside nomination papers. Proponents appealed.
Errors assigned were dismissal of motion to dismiss petition to set aside the nomination papers, and the final decree.
Edwin J. Morrell, with him Caldwell, Fox Stoner, for appellant.
David H. H. Felix, for appellee, was not heard.
OPINION BY MR. CHIEF JUSTICE KEPHART, October 13, 1938:
On May 2, 1938, within five days after the last day for filing nomination papers, a petition was presented to the court below to set aside the nomination papers of the Socialist Labor Party. May 19th, was the day fixed for hearing, and notice was given to the several candidates of the Socialist Labor Party on May 3d. On the day fixed for hearing, a motion was made to dismiss the petition because the hearing was not held within the time prescribed by section 977 of the Election Code of 1937.[1]
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The court below denied this motion and directed that testimony be taken on the petition. Later these nomination papers were set aside.
The intent and purpose of the legislature in enacting section 977 was to secure a prompt decision of questions affecting candidates for office.
The time within which such questions may be resolved is frequently very short. While courts will respect and follow legislative enactments pertaining to election procedure, they will not do so where such enactments are infringements on the judicial power, or where the provision is clearly incompatible with important judicial business, or impossible of judicial performance. This act requires the court not only to set a definite day for hearing but to determine and decide, within a fixed time, the various questions presented in election matters.
The legislature may fix a time within which ministerial acts of procedure must be performed by litigants and parties so that the court may acquire jurisdiction of the subject-matter and the courts will not alter this legislative mandate[2] : Meitner v. Scarborough, 321 Pa. 212, 214; Singer v. Del., L. W. R. R. Co., 254 Pa. 502, 504; Harris v. Mercur (No. 1), 202 Pa. 313, 316; but where the act to be performed within a fixed time involves the exercise of purely judicial functions, such as hearing and decision of matters properly before the
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court, or where it is impossible of judicial performance, as was the case here, within the time fixed by the legislature, such provisions will be held to be directory and not mandatory:Election Cases, 65 Pa. 20, 34; Stevenson v. Lawrence, 1 Brewst. 126. In Pearlman v. Newburger et al., 117 Pa. Super. 328, the provision of the Act of April 22, 1874, P. L. 109, governing trials without jury, that the decision of the court “shall be filed . . . as early as practicable, not exceeding sixty days after such decision shall have been made from the termination of the trial,” was held to be directory. In that case the decision was filed more than sixty days after the end of the trial because of the illness of the presiding judge. The court said at page 338: “Irrespective of what may be the proper construction of this section, we believe that this provision is directory only. Otherwise all the time consumed in the trial of the case would be for naught by reason of a failure to file the decision within sixty days from the termination of the trial, irrespective of the cause for delay. Such certainly was never the intention of the legislature.”[3]
In the Election Cases, supra, the Act (July 2, 1839, P. L. 559, 566) directed that election contests should be heard and determined “within the next term after the
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election.” A contest for the office of prothonotary had been instituted within the time prescribed, but it was not determined until after the next term. On appeal this court held that the time limit was directory. The court, however, will proceed with all diligence, circumscribed as little as possible by other judicial labors, to the end that this type of case may be promptly decided.
To hold that the legislature may direct a court to stop all of its business (for instance, in the midst of a homicide case), to take up a case of this nature involving testimony and delay, would be as Judge AGNEW states,[4] “a mockery of justice” as it presents an impossible situation. In the case before us, the proceedings were instituted within the five days, but because of the pressure of judicial business the time for hearing was fixed later than ten days from the last day for filing petitions. The decision in the case was necessarily postponed by taking testimony and the consequent delay was not unreasonable but fully warranted by the circumstances. In the circumstances the court below did not err in concluding that it was within its discretion in holding the hearing when it did. Appellants are not harmed, if they were successful on the merits they would receive the decision of this court in ample time to place their names on the ballot in the ensuing election.
At the first hearing the court below permitted the nomination papers of the Socialist Labor Party to be amended by substituting proper affidavits. Conceding that this was proper, which we do not here decide, the sole question before the court when the amended papers were presented was the competency of the affiants to make the affidavits required by section 951(d) of the act.[5] There is no question but that the affiants must
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have some personal knowledge as to the first six requirements of the act. One of the two persons whose affidavits are challenged admitted that in the papers containing eight hundred and seventy names, he had personal knowledge of twenty-two, and the other affiant that he had personal knowledge of but a dozen of six hundred and sixty signers. The other names were obtained from strangers and passers-by.
We place in the footnote the relevant testimony of these two affiants,[6] and from an examination of the
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whole record we conclude that they were not qualified as required by this section of the Act of Assembly. On this point, the case of Yost’s Appeal, 253 Pa. 551, cited by appellant, has no application.
The legislature did not intend to make it impossible to file nomination petitions or papers to secure a place on the ballot, but it certainly intended that affiants should possess more acquaintance with the facts sworn to than is here expressed. It would be better that the affiant actually take the papers around for signature, and have some personal knowledge or direct information from the signers of the requirements of this section before the necessary affidavits are filed.
The decree of the court below is affirmed.
Section 951(d) of the Election Code provides: “Each sheet shall have appended thereto the affidavit of some person, not necessarily a signer, and not necessarily the same person on each sheet, setting forth — (1) that the affiant is a qualified elector of the State, or of the electoral district, as the case may be, referred to in the nomination paper; (2) his residence, giving city, borough or township, with street and number, if any; (3) that the signers signed with full knowledge of the contents of the nomination paper; (4) that their respective residences are correctly stated therein; (5) that they all reside in the county named in the affidavit; (6) that each signed on the date set opposite his name; and (7) that, to the best of affiant’s knowledge and belief, the signers are qualified electors of the State, or of the electoral district, as the case may be.”
(Second Hearing): “Q. Of whose residences as stated after their names and of whose residences within the county you have personal knowledge? . . . A. Twenty-two that I know personally who live at that address. Q. Now, . . ., the balance of the 870 names on the sheets last referred to were strangers . . . to you, were they not? A. Yes, sir. . . . Q. The only thing you know is what that person you stopped said? A. They didn’t say it, they wrote it. Q. And the only thing that you know about their residence was their respective names on those sheets, other than the ones we have eliminated, is that they wrote that down as their residence? A. That is right. . . .”
Q. George Cortsen (First Hearing): “Q. Did you circulate all of those papers yourself? A. I was in charge, I had a crew. Q. You don’t have personal knowledge that their correct addresses are shown? A. No. Q. You don’t have personal knowledge that they all reside in the County of Philadelphia? A. No personal knowledge.”
(Second Hearing): “Q. Now do you know with reference to any name on sheets 102, 108, 110, 116, 123 and 133, that the correct person’s name was put down there other than what they told you when they signed the paper? A. No I would not know. Q. How many signatures do you know? A. I would perhaps know a dozen, personal friends of mine. Q. Outside of that dozen you don’t know anything about the others? A. No. Q. Do you know anything about the residence outside of those dozen, . . . as shown on . . . any of those papers of any other single person as being a correct residence other than what this individual unknown to you told you? A. No. Q. You never tried to verify it in any manner? A. No. . . . Q. Were you present when all of them were obtained? A. No. . . .”
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