City of Milan, TN v. Frederick H. Agee

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedMay 2, 2025
DocketW2024-00200-COA-R3-CV
StatusPublished

This text of City of Milan, TN v. Frederick H. Agee (City of Milan, TN v. Frederick H. Agee) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
City of Milan, TN v. Frederick H. Agee, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

05/02/2025 IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT JACKSON November 12, 2024 Session

CITY OF MILAN, TENNESSEE, ET AL. v. FREDERICK H. AGEE

Appeal from the Chancery Court for Gibson County No. 24295 Michael Mansfield, Chancellor ___________________________________

No. W2024-00200-COA-R3-CV ___________________________________

This appeal arises from a dispute between two municipalities and the district attorney general responsible for prosecuting cases in the jurisdiction in which the municipalities lie. The district attorney general threatened to cease the prosecution of cases in the courts of the municipalities and stated that he would only continue to do so if the municipalities provided an additional assistant attorney general position for his office or funding for such a position. The district attorney general justifies his threat by citing Tennessee Code Annotated section 8-7-103(1), which he asserts requires municipalities to fund additional prosecutorial personnel in order for his duty to prosecute cases in municipal court to be triggered. The municipalities filed a complaint for writ of mandamus and later amended their claims to include a request for declaratory judgment. The trial court ordered that the municipalities were entitled to a declaratory judgment “that they ha[d] provided ‘sufficient personnel’” to the district attorney general and that he could not avoid the responsibility of prosecuting cases “by invoking Tenn. Code Ann. § 8-7-103(6).” The trial court also determined that the district attorney general had a “clear statutory mandate” and issued a “peremptory writ of mandamus” compelling the district attorney general to comply with the statute. The district attorney general appeals. Finding that Tennessee Code Annotated section 8-7-103(1)’s “personnel requirement” does not refer to prosecutorial personnel, we affirm in part and reverse in part.

Tenn. R. App. P. 3 Appeal as of Right; Judgment of the Chancery Court Affirmed in Part and Reversed in Part

CARMA DENNIS MCGEE, J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which ARNOLD B. GOLDIN and KENNY W. ARMSTRONG, JJ., joined.

Jonathan Skrmetti, Attorney General and Reporter, Cody N. Brandon, Senior Assistant Attorney General, Scott C. Sutherland, Senior Deputy Attorney General, and Liz Evan, Assistant Attorney General, for the appellant, District Attorney General Frederick H. Agee. Michael A. Carter, Milan, Tennessee, and Michael R. Hill, Trenton, Tennessee, for the appellees, City of Milan, Tennessee, and City of Trenton, Tennessee.

OPINION

I. FACTS & PROCEDURAL HISTORY

This action involves a conflict between Mr. Frederick H. Agee, District Attorney General for the 28th Judicial District of Tennessee and two of the municipalities within his district. As relevant to the office of the District Attorney General, the 28th Judicial District includes four circuit courts, three juvenile courts, one domestic violence court, four general sessions courts, and two municipal courts located in Trenton and Milan, Tennessee. This conflict involves the municipal courts in Trenton and Milan, and those cities are the appellees.

General Agee was sworn in as District Attorney General for the 28th Judicial District on October 21, 2020. He was appointed to finish out the term of General Garry Brown, who retired. General Agee completed General Brown’s term and then won an elected term in August 2022. At some point in the fall of 2021, General Agee began to inquire about certain changes to be made to the municipal court in Milan, Tennessee, as court days were running past the “normal close of business hours.” General Agee, Milan Municipal Court Judge Collins Bonds, the Milan Police Chief, and other city officials attended a meeting and discussed the idea of Milan Municipal Court meeting weekly instead of bi-weekly. After this meeting, General Agee began to consider what his office was “getting out of staffing this Municipal Court.”1 He reached out to other district attorney generals in Tennessee and the Tennessee Attorney General’s office. Later, Tennessee Code Annotated section 8-7-103 and various Attorney General opinions were brought to his attention. He concluded that, pursuant to the statute, the municipalities “should be staffing a prosecutor – at a minimum” and that he “did not have to staff the court unless they provided a prosecutor.”

1 Municipal courts typically hold jurisdiction in cases involving the violation of laws and ordinances of the municipality, arising under the law and ordinances of the municipality, and to enforce any municipal law or ordinances that mirrors, substantially duplicates, or incorporates by cross-reference the language of a state criminal statute, if the criminal statute is a Class C misdemeanor and maximum penalty prescribed is a civil fine not I excess of fifty dollars. Tenn. Code Ann. § 16-18-302(a)(2). However, a municipal court may also exercise concurrent jurisdiction with courts of general sessions if the municipal court possessed and exercised such jurisdiction on and before May 11, 2003, or since that time has had such jurisdiction conferred upon it in accordance with Tennessee Code Annotated section 16-18-311. Tenn. Code Ann. § 16-18-302(c). Both the cities’ municipal courts in this matter have concurrent jurisdiction with the General Sessions Court of Gibson County for criminal cases which occur in each city’s respective corporate limits. -2- After coming to this conclusion, General Agee contacted the City of Milan to inform it of his conclusion. Various meetings and negotiations about the issue took place, and at some point, the City of Trenton was also informed of the conclusion. After eight or nine months of negotiation, no agreement had been reached. At that point, General Agee sent a letter to the City of Milan stating that, beginning on September 1, 2022, he would no longer be prosecuting cases in the city’s municipal court, and at some point, he communicated with the City of Trenton to inform it of the same thing. In response, both the City of Milan and the City of Trenton (“the Cities”) filed a “complaint for writ of mandamus” on September 6, 2022, seeking to compel General Agee to continue prosecuting cases in their respective municipal courts.

The trial court entered an Alternative Writ of Mandamus on September 6, 2022, directing General Agee to continue prosecuting criminal law violations in the cities’ municipal courts “pending further orders” and ordered him to show cause, if any, why he should not be required to do so. Subsequently, General Agee filed a motion to dismiss and a motion to revise or vacate the alternative writ. In that motion, General Agee claimed the writ issued by the trial court did not comply with Tennessee Code Annotated section 29- 25-102(b) because it compelled him to continue prosecuting cases and to show cause as to why he should not be required to do so, rather than requiring him to perform one of those actions as an alternative to the other.2 This motion was discussed during a hearing on October 12, 2022, in which General Agee’s counsel indicated that it was his intent to not appear in municipal court and then to show cause as to why he was not required to do so. This led to an issue regarding whether the trial court should appoint a pro tempore district attorney general until the dispute was resolved.

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Bluebook (online)
City of Milan, TN v. Frederick H. Agee, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-milan-tn-v-frederick-h-agee-tennctapp-2025.