Bejarano v. Hunter

899 S.W.2d 346, 1995 Tex. App. LEXIS 897, 1995 WL 248564
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 27, 1995
Docket08-95-00109-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 899 S.W.2d 346 (Bejarano v. Hunter) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bejarano v. Hunter, 899 S.W.2d 346, 1995 Tex. App. LEXIS 897, 1995 WL 248564 (Tex. Ct. App. 1995).

Opinion

OPINION

In this original proceeding in mandamus relator Manuel Bejarano, a candidate for El Paso city council, district 6 in the May 1995 election, requests that we order the El Paso city clerk to remove the name of his opponent, Barbara Perez, from the ballot. 1 We find that although candidate Perez’s petition in lieu of filing fee is insufficient on its face, the start of early voting has mooted the controversy. We therefore deny mandamus relief, ordering that both candidates remain on the ballot.

ANARCHY IN E.P.

This controversy results from the El Paso city clerk’s conscious decision to ignore the requirements of state law and of the city charter, coupled with a candidate’s apparent indifference to her own responsibility under those laws. Arrogance, ineptness, confusion, and carelessness have combined here to needlessly complicate the electoral process. Gamesmanship, although encompassing valid legal strategy, has compounded the difficulty and precluded the remedy relator seeks. The undisputed facts follow.

Barbara Perez is the incumbent in the race for El Paso city council, district 6 (the lower valley district). On February 20, 1995, the first day for filing as a candidate in the May 1995 city election, she filed her application for a place on the general election ballot with city clerk Carole Hunter. Rather than pay the $250 filing fee, Perez filed a petition in lieu thereof. Her petition included forty-seven signatures, only seventeen of which included the signer’s voter registration number along with other identifying information. Each signature was on a form supplied by the Texas Secretary of State; the top of each page contained blanks for the appropriate candidate’s name, the office sought, and the election date. Despite clear instructions accompanying the forms that this information must be filled out for each page of signatures obtained, of seven pages containing signa *348 tures in Perez’s petition only two were completed.

City clerk Hunter accepted Perez’s application, and certified her name to be placed on the 1995 city election ballot. By the clerk’s own admission, she did not require that Perez’s petition include the voter registration numbers of its signatories; neither did she require that signature pages include the completed declaration that the signatory knew the purpose for which he or she signed. In her affidavit before this Court, Hunter stated that she did not require such information because:

There is no requirement in the Charter or state law that the candidates [sic] name be at the top of every page, although the form states that such information should be filled in.
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I informed Ms. Perez and other similarly situated candidates for city office that their petitions, which did not contain voter registration numbers, complied with the City Charter. I did so using my discretion as the City Clerk in determining the validity of the petition.
If I believed that voter registration numbers were required, I could have filled those in. In fact, one candidate for a city representative position, Jesus Terrazas, requested that I give him access to the voter registration ballots so that he could fill in the voter registration numbers. I informed Mr. Terrazas that he did not need that information and that I could verify the signatures without that information. I have been accepting petitions without voter registration numbers for several years.
In my opinion, the requirement that voter registration numbers be placed on a nominating petition is a superfluous and unnecessary requirement....

The filing period for city elections closed on March 22, 1995. One other candidate, Manuel Bejarano, filed an application to run for the lower valley seat. On March 23, 1995, Hunter certified both candidates to be placed on the ballot. Also on March 23, Bejarano obtained a copy of Perez’s petition. On March 24, his lawyer sent clerk Hunter a letter informing her that he believed Perez’s petition was insufficient. Hunter made no reply to this letter. On April 7, 1995, the period to file as a write-in candidate expired. That day, Bejarano filed a mandamus action against the city clerk in the 171st District Court of El Paso County, asking that Perez’s name be removed from the ballot.

Candidate Perez obtained counsel and a number of legal maneuvers ensued in the district court. Perez attempted removal to federal district court, with remand the same day; the sitting judge was disqualified; 2 the presiding judge quickly appointed a visiting judge; Perez exercised a strike of that judge under Tex.Gov’t Code Ann. § 74.053 (Vernon Supp.1995); the presiding judge appointed a second visiting judge, and scheduled the case for hearing on April 14,1995 (which was both Good Friday and the last working day before the beginning of early voting). Bejarano requested mandamus against the regional presiding judge from this Court on April 13, asking that the district court be ordered to hold an immediate hearing. We denied mandamus on the grounds that any action by the district court would be void, as it possessed no jurisdiction over a challenge to a ballot application. Tex.Elec.Code Ann. § 273.061 (Vernon 1986). On Friday, April 14, 1995 at approximately 9 a.m., Bejarano filed in this Court another motion for leave to file a petition for writ of mandamus, this time against the El Paso city clerk, Carole Hunter. He did not serve the city attorney or real-party-in-interest Perez until 11:28 a.m. This Court granted leave to file, requested full briefing by all parties to be submitted by Monday, April 17, and scheduled oral argument for Tuesday, April 18, 1995. Argument from relator Bejarano, the City of El Paso, and real-party-in-interest Perez was heard by this Court en banc on that date.

*349 JURISDICTION

As a threshold matter, we note that jurisdiction to compel an election officer to remove a candidate’s name from the ballot is vested in the appellate courts. The Texas Election Code provides:

The supreme court or a court of appeals may issue a writ of mandamus to compel the performance of any duty imposed by law in connection with the holding of an election or a political party convention, regardless of whether the person responsible for performing the duty is a public officer. Tex.Elec.Codb Ann. § 273.061 (Vernon 1986).

Numerous mandamus cases in the appellate courts have addressed the very issue before us here: whether an application for a place on the ballot must be rejected because the petition in lieu of filing fee was defective. See Strachan v. Lanier, 867 S.W.2d 52, 53 (Tex.App.—Houston [1st Dist.] 1993) (orig. proceeding); Cohen v. Stroke, 743 S.W.2d 366, 367 (Tex.App.—Houston [14th Dist.] 1988) (orig. proceeding); Gray v. Vance,

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Bluebook (online)
899 S.W.2d 346, 1995 Tex. App. LEXIS 897, 1995 WL 248564, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bejarano-v-hunter-texapp-1995.