Evans v. White

201 S.W.2d 207, 184 Tenn. 435, 20 Beeler 435, 1947 Tenn. LEXIS 396
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedApril 14, 1947
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 201 S.W.2d 207 (Evans v. White) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Evans v. White, 201 S.W.2d 207, 184 Tenn. 435, 20 Beeler 435, 1947 Tenn. LEXIS 396 (Tenn. 1947).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Tomlinson,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This is an election contest wherein the contestant, Carmen Evans, asserts title to the office of sheriff of Unicoi County by reason of the general election held on August 1, 1946. The petition filed in Circuit Court admits that upon the face of the official returns the contestee, "White, was elected by a majority of thirty-seven, he having received a total of seventeen hundred and seventy-one votes, while contestant received seventeen hundred and thirty-four. A third and only other candidate received thirteen votes. The county election commissioners, whom the con- *437 testee calls nominal parties, have filed an answer fully denying the allegations of the petition as twice amended. Contestee filed no pleading until after the second amendment to the petition. He then filed his first pleading which he styled “Motion to Dismiss and/or Demfirrer of Paul White ’ ’. It is, in fact, a demurrer. The Court overruled this demurrer on October 23■, 1946 and required contestee to answer. No leave to rely on the demurrer upon the hearing was given him. Contestant filed a detailed answer in which he fully denied all of the material allegations of the petition. This answer makes no reference to his demurrer which had been overruled. Thus, the issues made were put to proof. The cause then came on on December 5, 1946 “upon the regular call of the docket”. At this time contestant by oral motion further amended the petition by striking therefrom two immaterial allegations. Then the contestee renewed his demurrer; again calling it a “Motion to Dismiss”.

The first ground of the demurrer which had been overruled on October 23,1946, is as follows:—

“Because the bill, as amended, seeks to have declared void the votes cast for ¡Sheriff in the 4th, 5th and 7th Civil Districts of Unicoi County. The votes in these Districts, or any one of them, are suffibient to change the result of the election had the voters in said District, or Districts, voted one way, and therefore, would render the whole election void. This suit is fqr the sole purpose of recovering the office of sheriff, and contestant could not have been legally elected if, as alleged by him the whole election is void”.

The final order entered December 5,1946 sustaining the demurrer and dismissing the petition- recites the following occurence:

*438 “At the conclusion of the reading of said bill, as amended, defendants, through counsel, moved to dismiss the suit, because:
“1st. The record shows upon its face that this is an action by the contestant seeking to recover from the con-testee, Paul White, the office of Sheriff of Unicoi County.
“2nd. Because the petition, as amended, both in the record and by statements of counsel during the course of the reading of the petition, alleges that the entire vote cast in the seventh civil district of Unicoi County is utterly void because of bribery and fraudulent practices, and the petition shows upon its face that the contestée, White, was certified as being elected to the office of Sheriff of Unicoi County by a plurality of 37 votes over the contestant Evans, and the petitions show upon their face that in the seventh civil district of Unicoi County a total of 226 votes were cast, and, the contestant, by his pleadings and amendment at the bar, to have said seventh district and the vote cast therein said election to be declared void, then, since there was a sufficient number of votes cast in said seventh district to change the result of the election, the contestant, as a matter of law cannot maintain his action.

Contestant resisted this motion on the ground that it simply presented for reconsideration that demurrer of contestee, White, which the Court had previously overruled and after which White had filed answer and that the Court was bound by its previous ruling thereon and could not redetermine the question.

The record shows at this point the following occurrence :—

“The Court: What is the difference in the way those were presented and now, those presented on demurrer t
*439 “Mr. Erwin: If your Honor please, there were certain answers and certain records showing the total number of votes cast which were not before the Court at that time. The record was not as it is now, nothing- before you to show that if all the voters in the seventh district voted one way would change the entire election, thereby under the law, making the election void, and that fact was not in the pleadings which your Honor could consider at that time. ’ ’

Thereafter the Court heard counsel for contestant in resistance to this motion on the ground hereinabove stated and then sustained the motion, dismissed the snit and taxed the contestant and his sureties with the costs.

Counsel for contestee was mistaken in his statement to the Court that “the record was not as it is now, nothing before you to show that if all the voters in the seventh district voted one way would change the entire election”, when the Court was considering the demurrer; As a matter of fact, the petition as amended without specification as to number more than fairly showed at the time of the filing of demurrer and the overruling thereof on October 23, 1946 that if all the voters in the Seventh District voted one way it could change the entire election in this contest wherein contestee had received only a majority of thirty-seven over contestant in a total of thirty-five hundred and .five votes cast for these two candidates for sheriff.

The second amendment to contestant’s petition filed on August 31,1946 alleged that eighty-eight people illegally voted in the Seventh District. There were in addition to a number of others specified in the original petition as having voted in that district. The demurrer, also styled a motion to dismiss, filed on September 9,1946 and overruled by the Court on October 23,1946, was, of course, *440 to this amended petition which, affirmatively showed the casting of these eighty-eight votes and others in the Seventh District. Therefore, the statement of connsel for contestant that there was nothing before the Court when that demurrer was overruled on October 23,1946 to “show that if all the voters in the seventh district voted one way would change the entire election” is necessarily an erroneous statement. Reference to the demurrer of contestee filed on September 9, 1946 specifically makes the point as heretofore' pointed out that the votes cast for sheriff in the Fourth, Fifth and Seventh Districts “or any one of them” are sufficient to change the results of the election had they all voted one way, and the Court expressly overruled that demurrer.

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Bluebook (online)
201 S.W.2d 207, 184 Tenn. 435, 20 Beeler 435, 1947 Tenn. LEXIS 396, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/evans-v-white-tenn-1947.