Allen v. Funchess

15 So. 2d 343, 195 Miss. 486, 1943 Miss. LEXIS 143
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 25, 1943
DocketNo. 35505.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 15 So. 2d 343 (Allen v. Funchess) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Allen v. Funchess, 15 So. 2d 343, 195 Miss. 486, 1943 Miss. LEXIS 143 (Mich. 1943).

Opinions

*491 Griffith, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an appeal from the unanimous judgment of a Special Tribunal of a trial judge, and the three election commissioners of the county, in a primary election contest over the nomination of the office of chancery clerk of Copiah County, the election in question being the second primary held on August 24, 1943. The official returns showed a total vote in the 24 precincts of the county of 1811 votes for appellee and 1788 for appellant. In accordance with Section 7 of the Corrupt Practices Act, Chapter 19, Laws 1935, Ex. Sess., appellant obtained an examination of all the 24 boxes, which examination was conducted, after due notice, on August 31, 1943, and disclosed that for 22 of the precinct boxes the official count corresponded with the recount but that at the East Hazlehurst box there was a difference between the official count, and the count made on the said examination of 13 votes in favor of appellant and a like number against appellee, and at the West Hazlehurst box there was the same difference of 13 votes in favor of appellant and against appellee — a situation which, under the ordinary law of chances, could not have arisen at two separate precincts in one case in a thousand except as a result of some subsequent and intermediate design.

The count made on the said examination would, if recognized, convert the majority of 23 votes for appellee, as *492 shown by the official returns, into a majority of 29 for appellant. The executive committee, on being reassembled, declined to act on the said examination and recount and adhered to its original determination that appellee was the nominee-, whereupon appellant took, in due course and order, the steps necessary to have the matter submitted to a judicial review, which review having been had, a judgment as stated was rendered by the Special Tribunal in favor of the contestee, hence this appeal as first above stated.

No attack was made in appellant’s petition before the executive committee, and to which his petition for a judicial review was confined, on any of the boxes except the East Hazlehurst and the West Hazlehurst boxes, and as to these no illegal voting or illegal receipt of votes was alleged, but the attack was confined to the manner in which the official counts were made- immediately after the polls were closed. The answer of appellee was by way of defense as to the integrity of the official count at these- two boxes, with the further averment that when the boxes, including the two attacked, were delivered to the circuit clerk, immediately after the executive committee-had made its examination of the boxes on Thursday, August 26', 1943, the circuit clerk had failed to reseal the boxes and to keep a récord of the seals as required by Secs. 6 and 7 of the said Corrupt Practices Act, and that therefore the boxes and their contents thereupon had lost their integrity in point of having any evidentiary value at the time the- examination and recount was made on August 31st, and appellee went further and alleged that not only was an opportunity to tamper with the ballots in the two challenged boxes afforded by this failure to reseal them, but that as a matter of fact the contents of the two boxes had actually been tampered with and in the manner to produce the discrepancy between the official returns and the ballots as found in the two boxes on the subsequent examination and recount, — although appellee has completely exonerated appellant, as does the *493 entire record as it stands before ns, of any part in what happened to these boxes or that he would by word, deed or knowledge have taken any part therein. Had these boxes been sealed, as required by the statute, it is entirely probable that this unfortunate controversy would never have proceeded to the course of an expensive litigation with its residue of doubts which will inevitably linger and rankle.

What has been said has been by way of disclosing in outline what were the issues which confronted the special tribunal. The record and the briefs in the case have been presented to us during the first part of the week next before a decision must be announced on this Monday in order that the nominee may get on the official ballot for the general election on November 2d. Under our usual course of procedure in all cases, the record and briefs must be examined by not less than two judges, and on the case not less than two conferences of all the judges must be had in the detailed consideration of everything presented; wherefore, we are without the time to prepare an opinion in that detail which the case would otherwise receive, and we must of necessity resort in a large degree to outlines and summaries.

Subsection (c), Sec. 15 of the Corrupt Practices Act provides that “the special tribunal . . . shall fully hear the contest or complaint de novo and make a finding dictated to the reporter covering all controverted material issues of fact, . . . and thereupon the trial judge shall enter the judgment which the county executive committee should have entered,” etc. The Special Tribunal did not “make a finding dictated to the reporter covering all controverted material issues of fact,” but instead, the tribunal, as such, made no finding save as embodied in its final order which is as follows:

“The Special Tribunal, selected to hear and decide this case, now having considered all of the testimony, together with the documentary evidence, have reached a unanimous decision herein,
*494 “And it is now ordered and considered by the court that the evidence in this case does not justify this court in overturning the decision of the legally constituted authorities who have acted heretofore, to-wit, the officers holding the election and the Democratic Executive Committee.
“It is therefore ordered by the court that H. T. Funchess be and he is declared the nominee of the Democratic party for office of chancery clerk of Copiah County, Mississippi. Four additional days are allowed for appeal and Bill of Exceptions.”

The record shows that neither party requested the Special Tribunal to make the findings in the manner as pointed out by the statute. Nevertheless, the record itself raises the question whether there is anything before us on the record as it now stands upon which we are authorized to act, a full transcript of the evidence not being here, and therefore whether we should not dismiss the appeal or affirm for that reason alone. However, appellee has not raised the point, or if so he has not insisted upon it, but has proceeded to the argument as if there were implicit in the order made by the Special Tribunal the decision of the two ultimate issues: That (1) under all the evidence the contents of the boxes on August 31st had lost their integrity as having a safe and dependable evidentiary value; and that (2) the evidence as a whole is sufficient to sustain the official counts as made immediately after the close of the polls.

In the view, but to which we do not commit ourselves as a precedent, that the order of the Special Tribunal does carry the said finding's as its ultimate conclusion upon the facts, then inasmuch as the order was unanimously entered, we are at once further confronted with the provision of Subsection (d) of Sec.

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Bluebook (online)
15 So. 2d 343, 195 Miss. 486, 1943 Miss. LEXIS 143, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/allen-v-funchess-miss-1943.