GENERAL ASSEMBLY OF NORTH CAROLINA
SESSION LAW 2001-403
AN ACT TO PROVIDE FOR NONPARTISAN ELECTION OF DISTRICT COURT JUDGES.
The General Assembly of North Carolina enacts:
SECTION 1. Article 25 of Chapter 163 of the General Statutes reads as rewritten:
"SUBCHAPTER X. ELECTION OF SUPERIOR AND DISTRICT
COURT JUDGES.
"ARTICLE 25.
"Nomination and Election of Superior and District Court Judges.
"§ 163-321. Applicability.
The nomination and election of superior and district court judges of the General Court of Justice shall be as provided by this Article.
"§ 163-322. Nonpartisan primary election method.
(a) General. - Except as provided in G.S. 163-329, there shall be a primary to narrow the field of candidates to two candidates for each position to be filled if, when the filing period closes, there are more than two candidates for a single office or the number of candidates for a group of offices exceeds twice the number of positions to be filled. If only one or two candidates file for a single office, no primary shall be held for that office and the candidates shall be declared nominated. If the number of candidates for a group of offices does not exceed twice the number of positions to be filled, no primary shall be held for those offices and the candidates shall be declared nominated.
(b) Determination of Nominees. - In the primary, the two candidates for a single office receiving the highest number of votes, and those candidates for a group of offices receiving the highest number of votes, equal to twice the number of positions to be filled, shall be declared nominated. If two or more candidates receiving the highest number of votes each receive the same number of votes, the State Board of Elections shall determine their relative ranking by lot, and shall declare the nominees accordingly. The canvass of the primary shall be held on the same date as the primary canvass fixed under G.S. 163-188. The canvass shall be conducted in accordance with Article 16 of this Chapter.
(c) Determination of Election Winners. - In the election, the names of those candidates declared nominated without a primary and those candidates nominated in the primary shall be placed on the ballot. The candidate for a single office receiving the highest number of votes shall be elected. Those candidates for a group of offices receiving the highest number of votes, equal in number to the number of positions to be filled, shall be elected. If two candidates receiving the highest number of votes each received the same number of votes, the State Board of Elections shall determine the winner by lot.
"§ 163-323. Notice of candidacy.
(a) Form of Notice. - Each person offering to be a candidate for election shall do so by filing a notice of candidacy with the State Board of Elections in the following form, inserting the words in parentheses when appropriate:
Date____________________________________ :
I hereby file notice that I am a candidate for election to the office of_______ in the regular election to be held ________, ________.
Signed__________________________________ :
(Name of Candidate)
Witness:_____________________________________________________________
The notice of candidacy shall be either signed in the presence of the chairman or secretary of the State Board of Elections, or signed and acknowledged before an officer authorized to take acknowledgments who shall certify the notice under seal. An acknowledged and certified notice may be mailed to the State Board of Elections. In signing a notice of candidacy, the candidate shall use only the candidate's legal name and, in his discretion, any nickname by which commonly known. A candidate may also, in lieu of that candidate's first name and legal middle initial or middle name, if any, sign that candidate's nickname, provided the candidate appends to the notice of candidacy an affidavit that the candidate has been commonly known by that nickname for at least five years prior to the date of making the affidavit. The candidate shall also include with the affidavit the way the candidate's name (as permitted by law) should be listed on the ballot if another candidate with the same last name files a notice of candidacy for that office.
A notice of candidacy signed by an agent or any person other than the candidate himself shall be invalid.
(b) Time for Filing Notice of Candidacy. - Candidates seeking election to the following offices shall file their notice of candidacy with the State Board of Elections no earlier than 12:00 noon on the first Monday in January and no later than 12:00 noon on the first Monday in February preceding the election:
Judges of the superior courts.
Judges of the district courts.
(c) Withdrawal of Notice of Candidacy. - Any person who has filed a notice of candidacy for an office shall have the right to withdraw it at any time prior to the date on which the right to file for that office expires under the terms of subsection (b) of this section.
(d) Certificate That Candidate Is Registered Voter. - Candidates shall file along with their notice a certificate signed by the chairman of the board of elections or the supervisor of elections of the county in which they are registered to vote, stating that the person is registered to vote in that county, and if the candidacy is for superior court judge and the county contains more than one superior court district, stating the superior court district of which the person is a resident. In issuing such certificate, the chairman or supervisor shall check the registration records of the county to verify such information. During the period commencing 36 hours immediately preceding the filing deadline, the State Board of Elections shall accept, on a conditional basis, the notice of candidacy of a candidate who has failed to secure the verification ordered herein subject to receipt of verification no later than three days following the filing deadline. The State Board of Elections shall prescribe the form for such certificate, and distribute it to each county board of elections no later than the last Monday in December of each odd-numbered year.
(e) Candidacy for More Than One Office Prohibited. - No person may file a notice of candidacy for more than one office or group of offices described in subsection (b) of this section, or for an office or group of offices described in subsection (b) of this section and an office described in G.S. 163-106(c), for any one election. If a person has filed a notice of candidacy with a board of elections under this section or under G.S. 163-106(c) for one office or group of offices, then a notice of candidacy may not later be filed for any other office or group of offices under this section when the election is on the same date unless the notice of candidacy for the first office is withdrawn under subsection (c) of this section.
(f) Notice of Candidacy for Certain Offices to Indicate Vacancy. - In any election in which there are two or more vacancies for the office of district court judge to be filled by nominations, each candidate shall, at the time of filing notice of candidacy, file with the State Board of Elections a written statement designating the vacancy to which he seeks election. Votes cast for a candidate shall be effective only for his election to the vacancy for which the candidate has given notice of candidacy as provided in this subsection.
A person seeking election for a specialized district judgeship established under G.S. 7A-147 shall, at the time of filing notice of candidacy, file with the State Board of Elections a written statement designating the specialized judgeship to which the person seeks nomination.
(g) No person may file a notice of candidacy for superior court judge unless that person is at the time of filing the notice of candidacy a resident of the judicial district as it will exist at the time the person would take office if elected. No person may be nominated as a superior court judge under G.S. 163-114 unless that person is at the time of nomination a resident of the judicial district as it will exist at the time the person would take office if elected. This subsection implements Article IV, Section 9(1) of the North Carolina Constitution which requires regular Superior Court Judges to reside in the district for which elected.
"§ 163-324. Filing fees required of candidates; refunds.
(a) Fee Schedule. - At the time of filing a notice of candidacy under this Article, each candidate shall pay to the State Board of Elections a filing fee for the office he seeks in the amount of one percent (1%) of the annual salary of the office sought.
(b) Refund of Fees. - If any person who has filed a notice of candidacy and paid the filing fee prescribed in subsection (a) of this section withdraws his notice of candidacy within the period prescribed in G.S. 163-323(c), he shall be entitled to have the fee he paid refunded. The chairman of the State Board of Elections shall cause a warrant to be drawn on the State Treasurer for the refund payment.
If any person who has filed a notice of candidacy and paid the filing fee prescribed in subsection (a) of this section dies prior to the date of the election, the personal representative of the estate shall be entitled to have the fee refunded if application is made to the board of elections to which the fee was paid no later than one year after the date of death, and refund shall be made in the same manner as in withdrawal of notice of candidacy.
"§ 163-325. Petition in lieu of payment of filing fee.
(a) General. - Any qualified voter who seeks election under this Article may, in lieu of payment of any filing fee required for the office he seeks, file a written petition requesting him to be a candidate for a specified office with the State Board of Elections.
(b) Requirements of Petition; Deadline for Filing. - If the candidate is seeking the office of superior or district court judge, that individual shall file a written petition with the State Board of Elections no later than 12:00 noon on Monday preceding the filing deadline before the primary. The petition shall be signed by ten percent (10%) of the registered voters of the election area in which the office will be voted for. The board of elections shall verify the names on the petition, and if the petition and notice of candidacy are found to be sufficient, the candidate's name shall be printed on the appropriate ballot. Petitions must be presented to the county board of elections for verification at least 15 days before the petition is due to be filed with the State Board of Elections. The State Board of Elections may adopt rules to implement this section and to provide standard petition forms.
"§ 163-326. Certification of notices of candidacy.
(a) Names of Candidates Sent to Secretary of State. - Within three days after the time for filing notices of candidacy with the State Board of Elections under the provisions of G.S. 163-323(b) has expired, the chairman or secretary of that Board shall certify to the Secretary of State the name and address of each person who has filed with the State Board of Elections, indicating in each instance the office sought.
(b) Notification of Local Boards. - No later than 10 days after the time for filing notices of candidacy under the provisions of G.S. 163-323(b) has expired, the chairman of the State Board of Elections shall certify to the chairman of the county board of elections in each county in the appropriate district the names of candidates for nomination to the offices of superior and district court judge who have filed the required notice and paid the required filing fee or presented the required petition to the State Board of Elections, so that their names may be printed on the official judicial ballot for superior and district court.
(c) Receipt of Notification by County Board. - Within two days after receipt of each of the letters of certification from the chairman of the State Board of Elections required by subsection (b) of this section, each county elections board chairman shall acknowledge receipt by letter addressed to the chairman of the State Board of Elections.
"§ 163-327. Vacancies of candidates or elected officers.
(a) Death or Disqualification of Candidate Before Primary. - If a candidate for nomination in a primary dies or becomes disqualified before the primary but after the ballots have been printed, the State Board of Elections shall determine whether or not there is time to reprint the ballots. If the Board determines that there is not enough time to reprint the ballots, the deceased or disqualified candidate's name shall remain on the ballots. If that candidate receives enough votes for nomination, such votes shall be disregarded and the candidate receiving the next highest number of votes below the number necessary for nomination shall be declared nominated. If the death or disqualification of the candidate leaves only two candidates for each office to be filled, the nonpartisan primary shall not be held and all candidates shall be declared nominees.
(b) Death, Disqualification, or Resignation of Official After Election. - If a person elected to the office of superior or district court judge dies, becomes disqualified, or resigns on or after election day and before he has qualified by taking the oath of office, the office shall be deemed vacant and shall be filled as provided by law.
"§ 163-328. Failure of candidates to file; death or other disqualification of a candidate before election.
(a) Insufficient Number of Candidates. - If when the filing period expires, candidates have not filed for an office to be filled under this Article, the State Board of Elections shall extend the filing period for five days for any such offices.
(b) Death or Other Disqualification of Candidate; Reopening Filing. - If there is no primary because only one or two candidates have filed for a single office, or the number of candidates filed for a group of offices does not exceed twice the number of positions to be filled, and thereafter a candidate dies or otherwise becomes disqualified before the election and before the ballots are printed, the State Board of Elections shall, upon notification of the death or other disqualification, immediately reopen the filing period for an additional five days during which time additional candidates shall be permitted to file for election. If the ballots have been printed at the time the State Board of Elections receives notice of the candidate's death or other disqualification, the Board shall determine whether there will be sufficient time to reprint them before the election if the filing period is reopened for three days. If the Board determines that there will be sufficient time to reprint the ballots, it shall reopen the filing period for three days to allow other candidates to file for election, and such election shall be conducted on the plurality basis.
(c) Vacancy Caused by Nominated Candidate; Ballots Not Reprinted. - If the ballots have been printed at the time the State Board of Elections receives notice of a candidate's death, other disqualification, or resignation, and if the Board determines that there is not enough time to reprint the ballots before the election if the filing period is reopened for three days, then regardless of the number of candidates remaining for the office or group of offices, the ballots shall not be reprinted and the name of the vacated candidate shall remain on the ballots. If a vacated candidate should poll the highest number of votes in the election for a single office or enough votes to be elected to one of a group of offices, the State Board of Elections shall declare the office vacant and it shall be filled in the manner provided by law.
"§ 163-329. Elections to fill vacancy created after primary filing period to use plurality method.
(a) General. - If a vacancy is created in the office of judge of superior court after the filing period for the primary opens but more than 60 days before the general election, and under the Constitution of North Carolina an election is to be held for that position, such that the office shall be filled in the general election as provided in G.S. 163-9, the election to fill the office for the remainder of the term shall be conducted without a primary using the plurality method as provided in subsection (b) of this section. If a vacancy is created in the office of judge of superior court before the filing period for the primary opens, and under the Constitution of North Carolina an election is to be held for that position, such that the office shall be filled in the general election as provided in G.S. 163-9, the election to fill the office for the remainder of the term shall be conducted in accordance with G.S. 163-322.
(b) Plurality Election Rules. - Elections under this section shall be conducted using the following rules:
(1) The filing period shall be prescribed by the State Board of Elections, but in no event may it be less than five working days. If a vacancy occurs in a second office in the same superior court district after the first filing period established under the section has closed, the State Board of Elections shall reopen filing for a period of not less than five working days for the office of superior court judge. All persons filing in either filing period shall run as a group and the election results shall be determined by subdivision (3) of this subsection.
(2) When more than one person is seeking election to a single office, the candidate who receives the highest number of votes shall be declared elected.
(3) When more persons are seeking election to two or more offices (constituting a group) than there are offices to be filled, those candidates receiving the highest number of votes, equal in number to the number of offices to be filled, shall be declared elected.
(4) If two or more candidates receiving the highest number of votes each receive the same number of votes, the board of elections shall determine the winner by lot.
(5) Except as provided in this section, the provisions of this Article apply to elections conducted under this section.
"§ 163-330. Voting in primary.
Any person who will become qualified by age or residence to register and vote in the general election for which the primary is held, even though not so qualified by the date of the primary, shall be entitled to register for the primary and general election prior to the primary and then to vote in the primary after being registered. Such person may register not earlier than 60 days nor later than the last day for making application to register under G.S. 163-82.6(c) prior to the primary.
"§ 163-331. Date of primary.
The primary shall be held on the same date as established for primary elections under G.S. 163-1(b).
"§ 163-332. Ballots.
(a) General. - In elections there shall be official ballots. The ballots shall be printed to conform to the requirement of G.S. 163-140(c) and to show the name of each person who has filed notice of candidacy, and the office for which each aspirant is a candidate.
Only those who have filed the required notice of candidacy with the proper board of elections, and who have paid the required filing fee or qualified by petition, shall have their names printed on the official primary ballots. Only those candidates properly nominated shall have their names appear on the official general election ballots.
(b) Ballots to beBe
Furnished by County Board of Elections. - It shall be the duty of the
county board of elections to print official ballots for the following offices
to be voted for in the primary:
Superior court judge.
District court judge.
In printing ballots, the county board of elections shall be governed by instructions of the State Board of Elections with regard to width, color, kind of paper, form, and size of type.
Three days before the election, the chairman of the county board of elections shall distribute official ballots to the chief judge of each precinct in his county, and the chief judge shall give a receipt for the ballots received. On the day of the primary, it shall be the chief judge's duty to have all the ballots so delivered available for use at the precinct voting place.
"§ 163-333. Canvass.
The county board of elections shall, in addition to the requirements contained in G.S. 163-175, canvass the results in judicial primaries and elections, the number of legal votes cast in each precinct for each candidate, the name of each person voted for, and the total number of votes cast in the county for each person for each different office.
"§ 163-334. Counting of ballots.
Counting of ballots in primaries and elections held under this Article shall be under the same rules as for counting of ballots in nonpartisan municipal elections under Article 24 of this Chapter.
"§ 163-335. Other rules.
Except as provided by this Article, the conduct of elections shall be governed by Subchapter VI of this Chapter."
SECTION 2.(a) G.S. 7A-142 reads as rewritten:
"§ 7A-142. Vacancies in office.
A vacancy in the office of district judge shall be filled for the unexpired term by appointment of the Governor from nominations submitted by the bar of the judicial district as defined in G.S. 84-19, except that in judicial District 9, when vacancies occur in District Court District 9 or 9B, only those members who reside in the district court district shall participate in the selection of the nominees. If the district court district is comprised of counties in more than one judicial district, the nominees shall be submitted jointly by the bars of those judicial districts, but only those members who reside in the district court district shall participate in the selection of the nominees. If the district court judge was elected as the nominee of a political party, then the district bar shall submit to the Governor the names of three persons who are residents of the district court district who are duly authorized to practice law in the district and who are members of the same political party as the vacating judge; provided that if there are not three persons who are available, the bar shall submit the names of two persons who meet the qualifications of this sentence. If the district court judge was not elected as the nominee of a political party, then the district bar shall submit to the Governor the names of three persons who are residents of the district court district and who are duly authorized to practice law in the district; provided that if there are not three persons who are available, the bar shall submit the names of two persons who meet the qualifications of this sentence. Within 60 days after the district bar submits nominations for a vacancy, the Governor shall appoint to fill the vacancy. If the Governor fails to appoint a district bar nominee within 60 days, then the district bar nominee who received the highest number of votes from the district bar shall fill the vacancy. If the district bar fails to submit nominations within 30 days from the date the vacancy occurs, the Governor may appoint to fill the vacancy without waiting for nominations."
SECTION 2.(b) Effective on the first Monday in December of 2002, G.S. 7A-142, as amended by subsection (a) of this section, reads as rewritten:
"§ 7A-142. Vacancies in office.
A vacancy in the office of district judge shall be filled for
the unexpired term by appointment of the Governor from nominations submitted by
the bar of the judicial district as defined in G.S. 84-19, except that in
judicial District 9, when vacancies occur in District Court District 9 or 9B,
only those members who reside in the district court district shall participate
in the selection of the nominees. If the district court district is comprised
of counties in more than one judicial district, the nominees shall be submitted
jointly by the bars of those judicial districts, but only those members who
reside in the district court district shall participate in the selection of the
nominees. If the district court judge was elected as the nominee of a
political party, then the district bar shall submit to the Governor the names
of three persons who are residents of the district court district who are duly
authorized to practice law in the district and who are members of the same
political party as the vacating judge; provided that if there are not three
persons who are available, the bar shall submit the names of two persons who
meet the qualifications of this sentence. If the district court judge was
not elected as the nominee of a political party, then the district bar shall
submit to the Governor the names of three persons who are residents of the
district court district and who are duly authorized to practice law in the
district; provided that if there are not three persons who are available, the
bar shall submit the names of two persons who meet the qualifications of this
sentence. Within 60 days after the district bar submits nominations for a
vacancy, the Governor shall appoint to fill the vacancy. If the Governor fails
to appoint a district bar nominee within 60 days, then the district bar nominee
who received the highest number of votes from the district bar shall fill the
vacancy. If the district bar fails to submit nominations within 30 days from
the date the vacancy occurs, the Governor may appoint to fill the vacancy
without waiting for nominations."
SECTION 3. G.S. 163-106 reads as rewritten:
"§ 163-106. Notices of candidacy; pledge; with whom filed; date for filing; withdrawal.
(a) Notice and Pledge. - No one shall be voted for in a primary election unless he shall have filed a notice of candidacy with the appropriate board of elections, State or county, as required by this section. To this end every candidate for selection as the nominee of a political party shall file with and place in the possession of the board of elections specified in subsection (c) of this section, a notice and pledge in the following form:
"Date________________________
I hereby file notice as a candidate for nomination as ___________ in the ___________ party primary election to be held on___________, ___________. I affiliate with the ___________ party, (and I certify that I am now registered on the registration records of the precinct in which I reside as an affiliate of the ___________ party.)
I pledge that if I am defeated in the primary, I will not run for any office as a write-in candidate in the next general election.
Signed __________________________________________________
Name of candidate
Witness:
_____________________________________________
_____________________________________________
(Title of witness)"
Each candidate shall sign his notice of candidacy in the presence of the chairman or secretary of the board of elections, State or county, with which he files. In the alternative, a candidate may have his signature on the notice of candidacy acknowledged and certified to by an officer authorized to take acknowledgments and administer oaths, in which case the candidate may mail his notice of candidacy to the appropriate board of elections.
In signing his notice of candidacy the candidate shall use only his legal name and, in his discretion, any nickname by which he is commonly known. A candidate may also, in lieu of his legal first name and legal middle initial or middle name (if any) sign his nickname, provided that he appends to the notice of candidacy an affidavit that he has been commonly known by that nickname for at least five years prior to the date of making the affidavit. The candidate shall also include with the affidavit the way his name (as permitted by law) should be listed on the ballot if another candidate with the same last name files a notice of candidacy for that office.
A notice of candidacy signed by an agent or any person other than the candidate himself shall be invalid.
Prior to the date on which candidates may commence filing, the State Board of Elections shall print and furnish, at State expense, to each county board of elections a sufficient number of the notice of candidacy forms prescribed by this subsection for use by candidates required to file with county boards of elections.
(b) Eligibility to File. - No person shall be permitted to file as a candidate in a primary if, at the time he offers to file notice of candidacy, he is registered on the appropriate registration book or record as an affiliate of a political party other than that in whose primary he is attempting to file. No person who has changed his political party affiliation or who has changed from unaffiliated status to party affiliation as permitted in G.S. 163-82.17, shall be permitted to file as a candidate in the primary of the party to which he changed unless he has been affiliated with the political party in which he seeks to be a candidate for at least 90 days prior to the filing date for the office for which he desires to file his notice of candidacy.
A person registered as "unaffiliated" shall be ineligible to file as a candidate in a party primary election.
(c) Time for Filing Notice of Candidacy. - Candidates seeking party primary nominations for the following offices shall file their notice of candidacy with the State Board of Elections no earlier than 12:00 noon on the first Monday in January and no later than 12:00 noon on the first Monday in February preceding the primary:
Governor
Lieutenant Governor
All State executive officers
Justices of the Supreme Court, Judges of the Court of Appeals
Judges of the district courts
United States Senators
Members of the House of Representatives of the United States
District attorneys
Candidates seeking party primary nominations for the following offices shall file their notice of candidacy with the county board of elections no earlier than 12:00 noon on the first Monday in January and no later than 12:00 noon on the first Monday in February preceding the primary:
State Senators
Members of the State House of Representatives
All county offices.
(d) Notice of Candidacy
for Certain Offices to Indicate Vacancy. - In any primary in which there are
two or more vacancies for Chief Justice and associate justices of the Supreme
Court, two or more vacancies for judge of the Court of Appeals, or two
vacancies for United States Senator from North Carolina or two or more
vacancies for the office of district court judge to be filled by nominations, Carolina,
each candidate shall, at the time of filing notice of candidacy, file with
the State Board of Elections a written statement designating the vacancy to
which he seeks nomination. Votes cast for a candidate shall be effective only
for his nomination to the vacancy for which he has given notice of candidacy as
provided in this subsection.
A person seeking party nomination for a specialized
district judgeship established under G.S. 7A-147 shall, at the time of filing
notice of candidacy, file with the State Board of Elections a written statement
designating the specialized judgeship to which he seeks nomination.
(e) Withdrawal of Notice of Candidacy. - Any person who has filed notice of candidacy for an office shall have the right to withdraw it at any time prior to the date on which the right to file for that office expires under the terms of subsection (c) of this section. If a candidate does not withdraw before the filing deadline, except as provided in G.S. 163-112, his name shall be printed on the primary ballot, any votes for him shall be counted, and he shall not be refunded his filing fee.
(f) Candidates required to file their notice of candidacy with the State Board of Elections under subsection (c) of this section shall file along with their notice a certificate signed by the chairman of the board of elections or the director of elections of the county in which they are registered to vote, stating that the person is registered to vote in that county, stating the party with which the person is affiliated, and that the person has not changed his affiliation from another party or from unaffiliated within three months prior to the filing deadline under subsection (c) of this section. In issuing such certificate, the chairman or director shall check the registration records of the county to verify such information. During the period commencing 36 hours immediately preceding the filing deadline the State Board of Elections shall accept, on a conditional basis, the notice of candidacy of a candidate who has failed to secure the verification ordered herein subject to receipt of verification no later than three days following the filing deadline. The State Board of Elections shall prescribe the form for such certificate, and distribute it to each county board of elections no later than the last Monday in December of each odd-numbered year.
(g) When any candidate files a notice of candidacy with a county board of elections under subsection (c) of this section or under G.S. 163-291(2), the chairman or director of elections shall, immediately upon receipt of the notice of candidacy, inspect the registration records of the county, and cancel the notice of candidacy of any person who is not eligible under subsection (c) of this section. The Board shall give notice of cancellation to any candidate whose notice of candidacy has been cancelled under this subsection by mail or by having the notice served on him by the sheriff.
(h) No person may file a notice of candidacy for more than one office described in subsection (c) of this section for any one election. If a person has filed a notice of candidacy with a board of elections under this section for one office, then a notice of candidacy may not later be filed for any other office under this section when the election is on the same date unless the notice of candidacy for the first office is withdrawn under subsection (e) of this section; provided that this subsection shall not apply unless the deadline for filing notices of candidacy for both offices is the same. Notwithstanding this subsection, a person may file a notice of candidacy for a full term as United States Senator, and also file a notice of candidacy for the remainder of the unexpired term of that same seat in an election held under G.S. 163-12, and may file a notice of candidacy for a full term as a member of the United States House of Representatives, and also file a notice of candidacy for the remainder of the unexpired term in an election held under G.S. 163-13.
(i) No
person may file a notice of candidacy for superior court judge unless that
person is at the time of filing the notice of candidacy a resident of the
judicial district as it will exist at the time the person would take office if
elected. No person may be nominated as a superior court judge under G.S.
163-114 unless that person is at the time of nomination a resident of the
judicial district as it will exist at the time the person would take office if elected.
This subsection implements Article IV Section 9(1) of the North Carolina
Constitution which requires regular Superior Court Judges to reside in the
district for which elected."
SECTION 4. G.S. 163-107(a) reads as rewritten:
"(a) Fee Schedule. - At the time of filing a notice of candidacy, each candidate shall pay to the board of elections with which he files under the provisions of G.S. 163-106 a filing fee for the office he seeks in the amount specified in the following tabulation:
Office Sought Amount of Filing Fee
Governor One percent (1%) of the annual
salary of the office sought
Lieutenant Governor One percent (1%) of the annual
salary of the office sought
All State executive offices One percent (1%) of the annual
salary of the office sought
All Justices, Judges, and One percent (1%) of the annual
District Attorneys of the salary of the office sought
General Court of Justice
other than superior and
district court judge
United States Senator One percent (1%) of the annual
salary of the office sought
Members of the United States One percent (1%) of the annual
House of Representatives salary of the office sought
State Senator One percent (1%) of the annual
salary of the office sought
Member of the State House of One percent (1%) of the annual
Representatives salary of the office sought
All county offices not One percent (1%) of the annual
compensated by fees salary of the office sought
County commissioners, if Ten dollars ($10.00)
compensated entirely by fees
Members of county board of Five dollars ($5.00)
education, if compensated
entirely by fees
Sheriff, if compensated Forty dollars ($40.00), plus one
entirely by fees percent (1%) of the income of the
office above four thousand
dollars ($4,000)
Clerk of superior court, if Forty dollars ($40.00), plus one
compensated entirely by fees percent (1%) of the income of the
office above four thousand
dollars ($4,000)
Register of deeds, if Forty dollars ($40.00), plus one
compensated entirely by fees percent (1%) of the income of the
office above four thousand
dollars ($4,000)
Any other county office, if Twenty dollars ($20.00), plus one
compensated entirely by fees percent (1%) of the income of the
office above two thousand dollars
($2,000)
All county offices compensated One percent (1%) of the first
partly by salary and partly annual salary to be received
by fees (exclusive of fees)."
SECTION 5. G.S. 163-111(c)(1) reads as rewritten:
"(1) A candidate who is apparently entitled to demand a second primary, according to the unofficial results, for one of the offices listed below, and desiring to do so, shall file a request for a second primary in writing or by telegram with the Executive Secretary-Director of the State Board of Elections no later than 12:00 noon on the seventh day (including Saturdays and Sundays) following the date on which the primary was conducted, and such request shall be subject to the certification of the official results by the State Board of Elections. If the vote certification by the State Board of Elections determines that a candidate who was not originally thought to be eligible to call for a second primary is in fact eligible to call for a second primary, the Executive Secretary-Director of the State Board of Elections shall immediately notify such candidate and permit him to exercise any options available to him within a 48-hour period following the notification:
Governor,
Lieutenant Governor,
All State executive officers,
Justices,
Judges, or District Attorneys of the General Court of Justice, other than
superior and district court judge, judges,
United States Senators,
Members of the United States House of Representatives,
State Senators in multi-county senatorial districts, and
Members of the State House of Representatives in multi-county representative districts."
SECTION 6. G.S. 163-140(a)(8) reads as rewritten:
"(8) Judicial ballot for superior and district court."
SECTION 7. G.S. 163-107.1(c) reads as rewritten:
"(c) County, Municipal and
District Primaries. - If the candidate is seeking one of the offices set forth
in G.S. 163-106(c) but which is not listed in subsection (b) of this section,
or a municipal or any other office requiring a partisan primary which is not
set forth in G.S. 163-106(c) or (d), he shall file a written petition with the
appropriate board of elections no later than 12:00 noon on Monday preceding the
filing deadline before the primary. The petition shall be signed by ten percent
(10%) of the registered voters of the election area in which the office will be
voted for, who are affiliated with the same political party in whose primary
the candidate desires to run, or in the alternative, the petition shall be
signed by no less than 200 registered voters regardless of said voter's
political party affiliation, whichever requirement is greater. The board of
elections shall verify the names on the petition, and if the petition is found
to be sufficient, the candidate's name shall be printed on the appropriate
primary ballot. Petitions for candidates for member of the U.S. House of
Representatives, District Attorney, and judge of the District Court or members
of the State House of Representatives from multi-county districts or members of
the State Senate from multi-county districts must be presented to the county
board of elections for verification at least 15 days before the petition is due
to be filed with the State Board of Elections, and such petition must be filed
with the State Board of Elections no later than 12:00 noon on Monday preceding
the filing deadline. The State Board of Elections may adopt rules to implement
this section and to provide standard petition forms."
SECTION 8. G.S. 163-114 reads as rewritten:
"§ 163-114. Filling vacancies among party nominees occurring after nomination and before election.
If any person nominated as a candidate of a political party for one of the offices listed below (either in a primary or convention or by virtue of having no opposition in a primary) dies, resigns, or for any reason becomes ineligible or disqualified before the date of the ensuing general election, the vacancy shall be filled by appointment according to the following instructions:
Position Vacancy is to be filled by
Any elective State office appointment of State
United States Senator executive committee of
political party in which
vacancy occurs
A district office, including:
Member of the United States
House of Representatives
Judge of district court
Appropriate district executive
District Attorney committee of political party
State Senator in a multi- in which vacancy occurs
county senatorial district
Member of State House of
Representatives in a multi-
county representative
district
State Senator in a single- County executive committee
county senatorial district of political party in which
Member of State House of vacancy occurs, provided, in
Representatives in a the case of the State
Single-county Senator or State
representative district Representative in a
Any elective county office single-county district where
not all the county is
located in that district,
then in voting, only those
members of the county
executive committee who
reside within the
district shall vote
The party executive making a nomination in accordance with the provisions of this section shall certify the name of its nominee to the chairman of the board of elections, State or county, charged with the duty of printing the ballots on which the name is to appear. If at the time a nomination is made under this section the general election ballots have already been printed, the provisions of G.S. 163-139 shall apply. If any person nominated as a candidate of a political party vacates such nomination and such vacancy arises from a cause other than death and the vacancy in nomination occurs more than 120 days before the general election, the vacancy in nomination may be filled under this section only if the appropriate executive committee certifies the name of the nominee in accordance with this paragraph at least 75 days before the general election.
In a county not all of which is located in one congressional district, in choosing the congressional district executive committee member or members from that area of the county, only the county convention delegates or county executive committee members who reside within the area of the county which is within the congressional district may vote.
In a county which is partly in a multi-county senatorial district or which is partly in a multi-county House of Representatives district, in choosing that county's member or members of the senatorial district executive committee or House of Representatives district executive committee for the multi-county district, only the county convention delegates or county executive committee members who reside within the area of the county which is within that multi-county district may vote."
SECTION 9. G.S. 163-135(f) reads as rewritten:
"(f) Judicial Elections. -
Except as provided by Article 25 of this Chapter, this Article shall apply to
and control all elections for judges of the superior court. superior
and district courts."
SECTION 10. G.S. 163-140(b)(9) reads as rewritten:
"(9) Judicial ballot for superior and district court. The form of the judicial ballot for judges of the superior court and district court shall be prepared by the county board of elections. On the face of the ballot, shall be printed instructions for marking the voter's choice, in addition to the following instruction: "If you tear or deface or wrongly mark this ballot, return it and get another." On the bottom of the ballot shall be printed an identified facsimile of the signature of the chairman of the responsible county board of elections. This ballot may not be combined with any other ballot except another judicial ballot."
SECTION 11. G.S. 163-191 reads as rewritten:
"§ 163-191. Contested primaries and elections; how tie broken.
In a primary for party nomination for one or more of the offices to be canvassed by the State Board of Elections under the provisions of G.S. 163-187, the results shall be determined in accordance with the provisions of G.S. 163-111.
In a general election for one or more of the offices to be canvassed by the State Board of Elections under the provisions of G.S. 163-187, the persons having the highest number of votes for each office, respectively, shall be declared duly elected to that office by the State Board of Elections. But if two or more be equal and highest in votes for the office, then the State Board of Elections shall order a new election for the purpose of breaking the tie except if there is a tie for superior or district court judge the tie shall be broken in accordance with Article 25 of this Chapter."
SECTION 12. G.S. 163-123(g) reads as rewritten:
"(g) Municipal and Nonpartisan Elections Excluded. - This section does not apply to municipal elections conducted under Subchapter IX of Chapter 163 of the General Statutes, and does not apply to nonpartisan elections except for superior court judge and district court judge elections under Article 25 of this Chapter."
SECTION 12.1. If Senate Bill 14, 2001 Session (ratified August 22, 2001) becomes law, then Section 11 of this act is repealed, and instead G.S. 163-329(b)(4) reads as rewritten:
"(4) If two or more
candidates receiving the highest number of votes each receive the same number
of votes, the board of elections shall determine the winner by lot.
resolve the tie in accordance with G.S. 163-182.8."
SECTION 13. This act becomes effective January 1, 2002.
In the General Assembly read three times and ratified this the 29th day of August, 2001.
s/ Marc Basnight
President Pro Tempore of the Senate
s/ James B. Black
Speaker of the House of Representatives
s/ Michael F. Easley
Governor
Approved 11:14 a.m. this 6th day of September, 2001