Ann Saunders, Sabreen Sharrief, and Dorothy Triplett v. State of Mississippi; State of Mississippi, ex rel. Tate Reeves, In His Official Capacity as Governor of Mississippi; State of Mississippi, ex rel. Lynn Fitch, In Her Official Capacity as Attorney General of Mississippi; Honorable Michael K. Randolph, In His Official Capacity as Chief Justice of The Mississippi Supreme Court; Zack Wallace, In His Official Capacity as Circuit Clerk of the Circuit Court of Hinds County, Mississippi; and Greg Snowden, In His Official Capacity as Director of the Administrative Office of Courts

CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 21, 2023
Docket2023-CA-00584-SCT
StatusPublished

This text of Ann Saunders, Sabreen Sharrief, and Dorothy Triplett v. State of Mississippi; State of Mississippi, ex rel. Tate Reeves, In His Official Capacity as Governor of Mississippi; State of Mississippi, ex rel. Lynn Fitch, In Her Official Capacity as Attorney General of Mississippi; Honorable Michael K. Randolph, In His Official Capacity as Chief Justice of The Mississippi Supreme Court; Zack Wallace, In His Official Capacity as Circuit Clerk of the Circuit Court of Hinds County, Mississippi; and Greg Snowden, In His Official Capacity as Director of the Administrative Office of Courts (Ann Saunders, Sabreen Sharrief, and Dorothy Triplett v. State of Mississippi; State of Mississippi, ex rel. Tate Reeves, In His Official Capacity as Governor of Mississippi; State of Mississippi, ex rel. Lynn Fitch, In Her Official Capacity as Attorney General of Mississippi; Honorable Michael K. Randolph, In His Official Capacity as Chief Justice of The Mississippi Supreme Court; Zack Wallace, In His Official Capacity as Circuit Clerk of the Circuit Court of Hinds County, Mississippi; and Greg Snowden, In His Official Capacity as Director of the Administrative Office of Courts) 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
Ann Saunders, Sabreen Sharrief, and Dorothy Triplett v. State of Mississippi; State of Mississippi, ex rel. Tate Reeves, In His Official Capacity as Governor of Mississippi; State of Mississippi, ex rel. Lynn Fitch, In Her Official Capacity as Attorney General of Mississippi; Honorable Michael K. Randolph, In His Official Capacity as Chief Justice of The Mississippi Supreme Court; Zack Wallace, In His Official Capacity as Circuit Clerk of the Circuit Court of Hinds County, Mississippi; and Greg Snowden, In His Official Capacity as Director of the Administrative Office of Courts, (Mich. 2023).

Opinion

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF MISSISSIPPI

NO. 2023-CA-00584-SCT

ANN SAUNDERS, SABREEN SHARRIEF, AND DOROTHY TRIPLETT

v.

STATE OF MISSISSIPPI; STATE OF MISSISSIPPI, EX REL. TATE REEVES, IN HIS OFFICIAL CAPACITY AS GOVERNOR OF MISSISSIPPI; STATE OF MISSISSIPPI, EX REL. LYNN FITCH, IN HER OFFICIAL CAPACITY AS ATTORNEY GENERAL OF MISSISSIPPI; HONORABLE MICHAEL K. RANDOLPH, IN HIS OFFICIAL CAPACITY AS CHIEF JUSTICE OF THE MISSISSIPPI SUPREME COURT; ZACK WALLACE, IN HIS OFFICIAL CAPACITY AS CIRCUIT CLERK OF THE CIRCUIT COURT OF HINDS COUNTY, MISSISSIPPI; AND GREG SNOWDEN, IN HIS OFFICIAL CAPACITY AS DIRECTOR OF THE ADMINISTRATIVE OFFICE OF COURTS

DATE OF JUDGMENT: 05/15/2023 TRIAL JUDGE: HON. J. DEWAYNE THOMAS TRIAL COURT ATTORNEYS: PALOMA WU JOSHUA FIYENN TOM ROBERT B. McDUFF SCHERRIE LONNETTE PRINCE PIETER JOHN TEEUWISSEN ANTHONY RENARD SIMON MARK A. NELSON NED ANDREW NELSON WILSON DOUGLAS MINOR REX MORRIS SHANNON III GERALD LEE KUCIA DOUGLAS T. MIRACLE COURT FROM WHICH APPEALED: HINDS COUNTY CHANCERY COURT ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLANTS: J. CLIFTON JOHNSON II ROBERT B. McDUFF PALOMA WU JACOB WAYNE HOWARD JOSHUA TOM TANNER JOHN LOCKHEAD BRENDA WRIGHT BRITTANY CARTER ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEES: JUSTIN L. MATHENY REX MORRIS SHANNON III GERALD L. KUCIA SCOTT G. STEWART ANTHONY RENARD SIMON PIETER JOHN TEEUWISSEN SCHERRIE LONNETTE PRINCE MARK A. NELSON NED A. NELSON WILSON DOUGLAS MINOR NATURE OF THE CASE: CIVIL - UNCONSTITUTIONAL STATUTE DISPOSITION: AFFIRMED IN PART; REVERSED AND RENDERED IN PART - 09/21/2023 MOTION FOR REHEARING FILED:

EN BANC.

MAXWELL, JUSTICE, FOR THE COURT:

¶1. This appeal stems from the Legislature’s passing and the Governor’s recent signing

of House Bill 1020.1 The catalyst for the Legislature’s passing of House Bill 1020 is what

one judge recently described as the “sweltering, undisputed and suffocating” crime problem

in Jackson, Mississippi—a problem that has “crippled the criminal justice system.”2

¶2. While political and social controversy have surrounded this bill, the bulk of the bill’s

1 H.B. 1020, Reg. Sess., 2023 Miss. Laws ch. 546. 2 Order, NAACP v. Reeves, No. 3:23-CV-272-HTW-LGI, 2023 WL 3767059, at **5-6 (S.D. Miss. June 1, 2023).

2 provisions, which are aimed at improving public safety and bolstering judicial resources in

Jackson, are not at issue.

¶3. For example, the petitioners—Ann Saunders, Sabreen Sharrief, and Dorothy Triplett

(collectively, Saunders)—all residents of Jackson—have not challenged the bill’s expansion

of the boundaries and overall footprint of the Capitol Complex Improvement District

(CCID).3 Nor have they challenged the diversion of taxes collected in Jackson to the CCID

Project Fund or the authorization for additional appointed assistant district attorneys and

public defenders for the Seventh Circuit Court District.4 There are also no complaints about

the legislative directive that the Department of Public Safety develop a 911 system within the

CCID boundaries.5 Instead, the petitioners challenge just two provisions in House Bill

1020—Section 1 and Section 4.

¶4. Section 1 of House Bill 1020, directs this Court’s Chief Justice to appoint four

additional (and unelected) circuit judges to the existing Seventh Circuit Court District—the

district comprised of the City of Jackson and all of Hinds County—for a term ending

December 31, 2026.6 The second challenged provision, Section 4 of House Bill 1020, is a

more ambitious endeavor that creates a new statutory inferior court, much like a municipal

court, to serve the CCID.7

3 H.B. 1020, Reg. Sess., 2023 Miss. Laws ch. 546, § 8. 4 Id. §§ 2, 3, & 9. 5 Id. § 13. 6 Id. § 1. 7 Id. § 4.

3 ¶5. Saunders’s lawsuit claims both provisions violate Mississippi’s Constitution. But

Hinds County Chancellor J. Dewayne Thomas, who held hearings on Saunders’s challenges,

disagreed and dismissed her complaint. She now appeals.

¶6. After review, we agree with the chancellor that the creation of the CCID inferior court

in Section 4 of House Bill 1020 is constitutional. Article 6, Section 172, of the Mississippi

Constitution expressly and undeniably confers on the Legislature the authority to establish

inferior courts, such as the CCID inferior court, as needed. And here the Legislature

exercised this authority, creating a municipal-like court to serve the CCID.

¶7. But we agree with Saunders that Section 1’s creation of four new appointed

“temporary special circuit judges” in the Seventh Circuit Court District for a specified,

almost-four-year term violates our Constitution’s requirement that circuit judges be elected

for a four-year term.8 While Section 1 calls these new judges “special circuit judges” on

paper, we see nothing special or unique about them—certainly nothing expressly tethering

them to a specific judicial need or exigency. Rather, Section 1’s text merely creates four

unelected circuit court judgeships, appointed into Hinds County to serve three-and-a-half

years instead of four.

¶8. That said, we emphasize there is no constitutional impediment to the Chief Justice

temporarily appointing special judges to assist the Seventh Circuit Court District—or any

other judicial district in Mississippi facing exigent circumstances. Additionally, the Chief

Justice enjoys statutory authority, under Mississippi Code Section 9-1-105(2) (Rev. 2019),

8 Miss. Const. art. 6, § 153.

4 expressly authorizing appointment of temporary special judges to address “emergenc[ies] or

overcrowded dockets” like those plaguing the Seventh Circuit Court District. Such special

judges may serve “for whatever period of time is designated by the Chief Justice.” Id. This

statutory authority has existed in various forms for more than thirty years. And it has been

utilized routinely by past Chief Justices and the present Chief Justice to address backlogs and

emergencies in the Seventh Circuit Court District and other Mississippi courts.

¶9. While Saunders claimed this statute is likewise unconstitutional, we disagree.

Contrary to House Bill 1020, Section 1, Section 9-1-105(2) does not codify new unelected

circuit judge positions in an already existing circuit court district, then direct the Chief Justice

to fill them for a specified term of office. Instead, Section 9-1-105(2) permits the Chief

Justice, in his discretion, and with advice and consent of a majority of the justices of this

Court, to make temporary appointments, either sua sponte or at the request of a court, tailored

to address specific emergencies or docket crises—judicial acts not prohibited by

Mississippi’s Constitution.

¶10. For these reasons, we affirm in part and reverse and render in part the chancellor’s

order dismissing Saunders’s complaint. Specifically, we affirm the dismissal of her claims

that House Bill 1020, Section 4, and Section 9-1-105(2) are unconstitutional. And we

reverse and render judgment on her claim that House Bill 1020, Section 1, is

unconstitutional. Finally, we affirm the dismissal of Chief Justice Randolph as a defendant

in this suit based on judicial immunity. We also affirm the dismissal of Hinds County Circuit

Clerk Zack Wallace.

5 Background Facts & Procedural History

I. The Legislature enacted Mississippi Code Section 9-1-105 in 1989.

¶11. In 1989, the Legislature enacted Section 9-1-105. Subsection 1 concerns judicial

appointments when a judicial officer is unwilling or unable to serve. Miss. Code Ann.

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Ann Saunders, Sabreen Sharrief, and Dorothy Triplett v. State of Mississippi; State of Mississippi, ex rel. Tate Reeves, In His Official Capacity as Governor of Mississippi; State of Mississippi, ex rel. Lynn Fitch, In Her Official Capacity as Attorney General of Mississippi; Honorable Michael K. Randolph, In His Official Capacity as Chief Justice of The Mississippi Supreme Court; Zack Wallace, In His Official Capacity as Circuit Clerk of the Circuit Court of Hinds County, Mississippi; and Greg Snowden, In His Official Capacity as Director of the Administrative Office of Courts, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ann-saunders-sabreen-sharrief-and-dorothy-triplett-v-state-of-miss-2023.