Opinion of the court by
Reversing.
Appellee, John B. Horst, was a candidate for county *696judge of Harlan county at the November election, 1901. Appellant Skidmore was the clerk of the county court. Appellee filed this petition against Skidmore as clerk, seeking a mandamus requiring him to place appellee’s name • on the official ballot as the Republican nominee for county judge under the Republican emblem. He alleged, in substance, that the Republican committee for the county was called together on February 3, April 20, and May 6, 1901, for the purpose of making provision for the nomination of candidates, for county offices, but on each occasion failed and refused to make any provision for such nomination, and adjourned after announcing publicly that it would not make any such provision; that he had on May 10, 1901, fi-led with the cleric a petition signed by 100 voters of the county, asking that his name be placed on the ballot as the Republican nominee for county judge; that there were several other candidates for the office, and they were preparing similar petitions,. asking that their names be placed on the ballot in the same way, and that the clerk was threatening to, and, unless restrained by the court, would, refuse to place his name on the ballot as the Republican nominee for county judge. The clerk demurred to the petition. His demurrer was overruled. He then filed an answer in which he alleged that one of the other candidates had filed a similar petition to that filed by Hurst, and that the others were getting up their petitions.' To this- answer the court sustained a demurrer, and on August 16th awarded the plaintiff a peremptory mandamus, requiring the clerk to place his name upon the ballot as the Republican nominee for county judge. From this judgment he appeals.
By section 1 of the act approved October 16, 1900 (see Acts Called Pess., 1900, p. 6), it is provided, in reference to petitions for a name to be placed on the ballot, as follows: *697“The signatures of such petition need not be appended to o'ne paper, but no petitioner shall be counted except his residence and post office address'be designated.” The petition filed by Hurst with the clerk had to it only 78 names where the residence and post-office address of the petitioner were designated. The other 21 names were written one after the other, without any designation of the post-office; address. The statute is peremptory, and under it the petition presented by Hurst was insufficient, as it was not signed by 100 petitioners who could be counted.
By the same section it is provided that, if any political party entitled to nominate by convention shall in any case fail to do so, the names of all nominees by petition for any office who shall be designated in their petition as members of and candidates of such party shall be printed under the device and title on the ballots, as if nominated by a convention. Fnder this provision .it. is immaterial whether the party authorities refuse or fail to act. A refusal is a failure to nominate. The clerk is not required to look beyond the records of his office. If there has not been filed in his office evidence of the action of the party in making a nomination by convention, or other party action, and a petition is filed, the condition referred to in the statute1 is fulfilled, and the candidate, by petition, is entitled to go on the ballot. The nonaction by the party gives the right to file the petition, and, whether the party had acted or not, the clerlr is only required to know from the records of his office. If two or more petitions are filed, asking that different candidates for the same office be placed under the same party device, by section 4 of the act it must be given to the one which first selected it, and the clerk must select a suitable device for the other.
But the party has the right, until the time for filing cer*698tiilcates of nomination lias expired, to act and make nominations; and if, within this time, a certificate- is filed with the cleric, it supersedes all petitions, and the name of the candidate alone nominated by the certificate should be placed under the party device. In this case when the judgment was entered the time for the party to act and make a nomination had not expired, and the court should not have directed the clerk peremptorily to place the name of any candidate by petition, on the ballot under the Republican device. lie thereby prevented the party from acting, as it still had a right to do, and make a nomination, and file its certificate with the clerk at any time, not less than 15 days, before the election. Kentucky Statutes, section 1450.
Appellant’s petition, therefore, when it was filed, stated no cause of action,_ and he had none when the judgment was entered. The judgment is therefore reversed, with directions to dismiss the petition.
Whole court sitting.