Cook v. Epperson, Co.

288 S.W. 556
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 13, 1926
DocketNo. 7626.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 288 S.W. 556 (Cook v. Epperson, Co.) 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
Cook v. Epperson, Co., 288 S.W. 556 (Tex. Ct. App. 1926).

Opinion

. FLY, C. J.

This suit was instituted by appellants against the county officers of Hidal-go county, to contest an election for fhe issuance of bonds to build roads in the sum of $3,500,000, on December 22, 1925. The petition was filed by John A. Cook, Clay Ever-hard, J. E. Eakin, and William Ferguson, on January 25, 1926, and attached thereto was an exhibit containing a full and complete notice of the suit and the grounds for the contest. It is admitted that the notice was served on appellees, and on February 4, 1926, appellees filed a paper styled “pleas to the jurisdiction, in abatement, of mis-joinder, and original answer and reply and cross-action of contestees.” The substance of the allegations in the petition, as stated by appellees, is as follows:

“In election precinct 14 at Weslaco, that 147 qualified voters, named in Exhibit A attached, voted against the bonds and tax; but the managers in said box counted and returned only 46 votes against, and 428 votes in favor of, the bonds and tax. That not less than 101 votes against were fraudulently removed from the ballot box, and spurious ballots marked in favor were substituted therefor, etc. That the true result in said box was not more than 327 votes in favor, and not less than 147 votes against, etc.
. “That large numbers of illegal votes were permitted and allowed to be cast by illegal' voters at said election in the several precincts in Hidalgo county, the names of which illegal voters at the several precincts are as set out and listed in the list attached hereto and marked Exhibit B. That the majority, if not all, of such voters voted, and their ballots were counted in favor of the bonds.
“That said voters and each of them were not qualified voters at said election, and the ballots, so cast by them were illegal for the following reasons, to wit:
“(1) That each of said voters was, at the time of said election, an alien, and not a citizen of the United States.
“(2) That each of said voters was, at the time of said election, under 21 years of age.
“(3) That each of said voters, at the time of said election, had not resided in the state of Texas for a period of 12 months next preceding the date of said election.
“(4) That each of said voters had not resided within the county of Hidalgo for the period of six months next preceding the date of said election.
“(5) That each of said voters, at the time of said election, resided outside the precinct in which he cast his ballot at said election.
“(6) That each of said voters, on .January 1, 1924, became indebted to the state of Texas for a poll tax for the year A. D. 1924, which said poll tax was not paid prior to the 1st day of February, A. D. 1925.
.“(7) That each of said voters owned and possessed no taxable property situated in Hi-dalgo county on the 1st day of January, A. D. 1926, and was not a property tax payer within and of Hidalgo county, Tex., at. the time of said election.
“(8) That each of said voters, at the time he cast his ballot at said election, received, instruction from one or more of the election officers or managers with reference to the marking of his ballot, which instruction was imparted and received in a language other than the English language.
“(9) That each of said voters was illegally and wrongfully given assistance in marking his ballot so east at said election, he being then and there physically able to mark his ballot, and being then and there under the age of 60 years. •
“(10) That each of said voters illegally, unlawfully, and wrongfully permitted himself to be conveyed in a vehicle to the voting place, at which he cast his ballot at said election, which conveyance in a vehicle was then and there furnished by persons other than said voter and by persons who favored the proposition submitted at said election.
“(11) That each of said voters, while marking and preparing his ballot at said election, then and there wrongfully and illegally failed to preserve the secrecy of his ballot, and then and there failed to prepare and mark his ballot in secrecy, and then and there marked and prepared his ballot in the presence and view of one or more of the election managers and voters then and there present at said voting place.”

An exhibit showed more than 800 names of voters alleged to have been illegal. The notice of contest was attacked on the grounds that it was based on an election contest based—

“upon false statements' known by contestants, one or all of them and or by contestants’ attorneys, whose names are signed thereto, to be false at the time that they were made, at the *558 time they were promulgated, and at the time that they were filed, and that the same were made with no expectancy of proving the same, but for the purpose of attempting to confer jurisdiction, upon this (the district) court, in a dragnet proceeding, and that same are in violation of the rules of this court promulgated for its conduct, and in contempt of this court, and should be dismissed and that this court should refuse to take jurisdiction of this cause by reason thereof.”

The court sustained the plea to the jurisdiction, and dismissed the cause.

The first ground of attack, set out in appellees’ answer, is that the notice is defective, in that it notifies them that the contest would be filed' before the judge, and not that it would be filed in the district court. The notice was attached to’a petition filed in the district court, and appellees had no difficulty in discovering the court and filing an answer therein. It is apparent that the ground of attack on the notice was without merit, and it was abandoned in the reasons given in the prayer for holding that the court had no jurisdiction.

The statute in regard to the contest of elections provides that in 30 days after the return day of election a contestant must give a notice in writing, and deliver to the party or parties interested a written statement of the ground on which such contestant' relies to sustain such contest. Articles 3042 and 3069, Rev. Civ. Stats. 1925. The law as to notice was complied with in this ease, and was sufficient to require appellees to' answer. The law does not require a contestant to file a petition or statement of the grounds of contest not subject to general demurrer or special exception, but merely that notice shall be given that the contestant intends to contest and the reasons for such contest. The grounds may not be reasonable or tenable, and still the notice would be given and the contestee would be compelled to answer as in any other ease. Should the grounds of contest be inconsistent and contradictory one of the other, that would not destroy the jurisdiction of the court, but would subject the statement to attack through exceptions. The form of the pleadings or lack of form would not be a jurisdictional matter. The district court in this instance had jurisdiction of the subject-matter, and that jurisdiction could not be destroyed by imperfect, or even impertinent, allegations.

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Bluebook (online)
288 S.W. 556, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cook-v-epperson-co-texapp-1926.