Ex Parte Graddick

495 So. 2d 1367
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedSeptember 3, 1986
Docket85-1408
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 495 So. 2d 1367 (Ex Parte Graddick) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ex Parte Graddick, 495 So. 2d 1367 (Ala. 1986).

Opinion

495 So.2d 1367 (1986)

Ex parte Charles A. GRADDICK.
(In re Charles A. GRADDICK v. John BAKER, etc., et al.)

85-1408.

Supreme Court of Alabama.

September 3, 1986.

Champ Lyons, Jr., Mobile, and Hobart A. McWhorter, Jr., and Walter J. Sears III, Birmingham, for petitioner.

David Cromwell Johnson, Edward Still, and Ralph Knowles, Birmingham, and Herman Watson, Jr., and Michael L. Fees, Huntsville, and Joe Espy III, Montgomery, for respondents.

PER CURIAM.

The procedural history of this bitter contest of the 1986 Democratic primary gubernatorial election is succinctly set out in the opinion of the three-judge federal court dated August 26, 1986, as follows:

"PROCEDURAL HISTORY
"Plaintiffs Jerry and Dejerilyn Henderson filed suit on behalf of themselves and all black citizens of Alabama who voted in both the Democratic primary on June 3, 1986 and the Democratic gubernatorial runoff on June 24, 1986. Plaintiffs sought relief under Section 5 of the Voting Rights Act of 1965, 42 U.S.C. § 1973c on the theory that Charles Graddick, the Attorney General of Alabama and apparent winner of the June 24 runoff, violated the Voting Rights Act by using his office to encourage crossover voting in the June 24 runoff. Crossover voting refers to the practice whereby persons voting in the June 3 Republican *1368 primary voted in the June 24 Democratic runoff.
"Before plaintiffs filed this suit, both Mr. Baxley and Kennith and Nellie Pike filed primary election contests of the June 24 runoff with the State Democratic Executive Committee (`SDEC') pursuant to Ala.Code § 17-16-71. John Baker, chairman of the SDEC, appointed a subcommittee to conduct the contest. Shortly thereafter, Mr. Graddick obtained a temporary restraining order from an Alabama circuit court enjoining the SDEC from holding hearings on the contest and forbidding Mr. Baxley from taking any discovery. The Alabama Supreme Court stayed the temporary restraining order and directed the circuit court to issue promptly a final order. The circuit court then held without any explanation that Mr. Graddick was the lawful winner of the June 24 runoff. The Alabama Supreme Court reversed, holding that Mr. Baxley's challenge was timely filed, that the hearings were timely commenced, that the SDEC was authorized to act through a subcommittee, and that the Democratic party had exclusive jurisdiction to hear the contest. [Ex parte Baxley, 496 So.2d 688 (Ala.1986).]
"Subsequent to the Alabama Supreme Court's decision, after receiving and considering the evidence offered by all parties, this Court concluded that crossover voting constituted a change within the meaning of Section 5 which had not been precleared by either the Attorney General of the United States or the United States District Court for the District of Columbia. Accordingly, this Court entered an order on August 1, 1986 enjoining the Democratic Party from certifying Mr. Graddick as its gubernatorial nominee on the basis of the June 24 runoff. This Court also directed the Democratic Party to conduct another runoff election between Mr. Graddick and Mr. Baxley unless the Democratic Party determined in a primary election contest that Mr. Baxley received the majority of legal votes cast in the June 24 runoff.
"After this Court issued its order, the subcommittee proceeded to hear the contest, and on August 15, 1986, the subcommittee held that Mr. Baxley received the majority of legally cast votes in the June 24 runoff. Mr. Graddick now petitions this court for `emergency relief,' requesting this Court to enjoin the SDEC from certifying Mr. Baxley as its nominee and to order a new runoff between the two. Because the Democratic Party has already certified Mr. Baxley as its gubernatorial nominee to the Alabama Secretary of State, Mr. Graddick further requests this Court to compel the Democratic Party to withdraw its certification of Mr. Baxley in addition to ordering a new runoff."

The three-judge court held that it had no authority to determine whether the primary election contests conducted by the State Democratic Executive Committee complied with state law or are unconstitutional.

Following the federal court order, Graddick filed in this Court, on August 27, 1986, an original petition styled "Petition for Writ of Mandamus, Writ of Prohibition and Other Extraordinary and Equitable Relief," in which he seeks an order from this Court:

(a) requiring the subcommittee of the State Democratic Executive Committee, which heard the contests, to produce and certify the record of the proceedings in the election contests;

(b) declaring that the election contests and the results are reversed and annulled;

(c) ordering the State Democratic Executive Committee to withdraw and vacate its certification of Baxley as nominee of the Alabama Democratic Party for governor; and

(d) requiring the State Democratic Executive Committee to schedule and hold another runoff election between Baxley and Graddick and certify the winner of that election as the nominee of the Alabama Democratic Party.

*1369 On August 28, 1986, Baxley filed a motion to dismiss Graddick's petition. In that motion, he alleges:

"1. Beginning August 11, 1986, the Alabama Democratic Party heard, through a duly appointed subcommittee, the election contest filed by William J. Baxley and Kennith and Nellie Pike. By decision dated August 15, 1986, the subcommittee found that William J. Baxley received the majority of the legally cast votes in the June 14, 1986 run-off election for the Democratic nomination for Governor in Alabama.
"2. Twelve days later, on August 27, 1986, Graddick filed this proceeding in the Alabama Supreme Court seeking to `obtain a determination as to whether the primary election contest conducted by the [subcommittee of the] State Democratic Executive Committee complied with Alabama law.' Graddick seeks this determination through his `petition for writ of mandamus, writ of prohibition, and other extraordinary and equitable relief.'
"3. The petition is due to be dismissed because Graddick failed to pursue his available legal and equitable remedies under the Alabama law. Section 17-16-88, Code of Alabama, explicitly provides that `The state executive committee may prescribe such other additional rules governing contests and other matters of party procedure as it may deem necessary not in conflict with the provisions of this Article.' The Rules of the Democratic Party of Alabama in Article VIII, Section [2]h, page 25 provide as follows:
"`The decision of any contest by a majority of the members of the contest subcommittee shall be final, and no appeal shall lie to the State Committee as a whole unless the decision was not supported by any substantial evidence or was void as a matter of law. Any such appeal must be filed with the State Chairman within ten days after the subcommittee's decision is rendered, and shall state with particularity the facts and circumstances on which the appeal is based.'
"4. Graddick totally failed to comply with the above-cited provision in that he did not appeal (and has not to this date appealed) the decision of the subcommittee to the full State Democratic Executive Committee.

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Bluebook (online)
495 So. 2d 1367, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ex-parte-graddick-ala-1986.