In July, 1909, Frank J. Sullivan applied to this court for a writ of mandate to compel the election commissioners of the city and county of San Francisco to-receive and file nomination papers designating the petitioner as a candidate for the nomination of the Union Labor Party for the office of mayor of said city and county. An alternative writ was issued, returnable on July 15, 1909. On that day a hearing was had. It then appeared that the time for preparing ballots for the ensuing primary election was so short that a decision in favor of petitioner could be of no practical benefit to him unless rendered at once. The court was of opinion that said petitioner was entitled to the relief sought, and, accordingly, it was ordered from the bench that a peremptory writ issue as prayed. Our attention is now directed to the fact that no formal written opinion was filed in the case, and this opinion is prepared and filed in response to the suggestion so made.
The case turned on the construction of subdivision 5d of section 5 of the Primary Election Law of 1909 (Stats. 1909, p. 691). That section required nomination papers to be signed, in ease of a city and county primary election, by not less than three nor more than ten per cent of the vote of the party in such city and county. The basis of percentage was declared to be the vote of the party for presidential elector at the last preceding presidential election, or, if the party had had no candidate for elector, the basis was to be the vote of that one of its candidates for other offices receiving the greatest number of votes. The Union Labor Party had had no candidate for presidential elector in 1908. It had, however, at the general election of that year, nominated a candidate for judge of the superior court. Such candidate had also received nominations from the Democratic and Good Government Parties. At the election of 1906, the Union Labor Party had nominated a candidate for the office of state treasurer.
*200If the basis upon which the Union Labor vote was to be reckoned was the total vote of the candidate of the three parties for judge of the superior court, the nomination papers offered by Mr. Sullivan were not sufficient in number. If, however, the figure to be regarded was either the vote for the Union Labor nominee for state treasurer in 1906, or the balance remaining after deducting from the vote for judge of the superior court in 1908 the number of votes east for a candidate having a Democratic nomination only, the petitioner had presented nomination papers in such number as to entitle him to a place on the ballot. The court was of the view that one of the two last-mentioned methods of computation was correct. There was some difference of opinion as to which of these constructions should prevail, but as, under either, the petitioner was entitled to the writ sought, no final determination on the question was reached.
It can be of no possible benefit to any one for us to attempt at this time to state at length the arguments for or against any particular construction of the statute, or the reasons which led the different members of the court to the conclusions expressed by them at the hearing. The statute has been superseded by later enactments radically changing the mode of conducting primary elections in the city land county (amendments to charter of San Francisco, ratified February 23, 1911; Stats. 1911, p. 1661), as well as in the state generally. (Stats. 1913, p. 1379.) The questions raised in the proceeding under discussion cannot arise under the laws now in force, and we therefore content ourselves with the foregoing statement of those questions and of the disposition of the application.