Hanover v. Boyd

121 S.W.2d 120, 173 Tenn. 426, 9 Beeler 426, 1938 Tenn. LEXIS 24
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 21, 1938
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 121 S.W.2d 120 (Hanover v. Boyd) 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
Hanover v. Boyd, 121 S.W.2d 120, 173 Tenn. 426, 9 Beeler 426, 1938 Tenn. LEXIS 24 (Tenn. 1938).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice Green

delivered the. opinion of the Court.

This suit was brought by Joseph Hanover contesting the right of Marion S. Boyd to hold the office of District Attorney-General for the Fifteenth Judicial Circuit. The bill was filed under sections 2123 et seq., of the Code providing for the contest of elections of judges, chancellors and district attorneys. In the alternative, the bill sought a declaration of rights of the parties under the declaratory judgments statute, Code sections 8835 et seq., if the court was of opinion the bill was not maintainable in the first aspect. The case was heard on demurrer. The court below entertained the bill in the latter aspect only —as one for a declaratory judgment, — and made a declaration adverse to complainant, from which decree he appealed.

The facts disclosed by the bill are that W. T. McLain was Attorney-General of the Fifteenth Judicial Circuit, elected in 1934 for a term of eight years. He died in the *429 forenoon of July 4, 1938. The next biennial election recurred on August 4, 1938. Although the Governor was apprised of McLain’s death, he refused to order a special election to fill the vacancy on August 4, 1938, being advised that such date — the date of the next biennial election — did not recur more than thirty days after the happening of the vacancy. The Governor, however, on July 7,1938, appointed the complainant to hold this office until his successor was “elected or appointed and qualified.”

It further appears that in another proceeding, hereafter again referred to, the Chancery Court of Shelby County, by a mandatory injunction issued July 18, 1938, required the county election commissioners to advertise and hold a special election on August 4 following, to select a District Attorney-General to fill McLain’s unexpired term.

This election was held, and from the official returns of the Election Commissioners of Shelby County filed with the Secretary of State, we judicially notice that defendant Boyd received 39,234 votes and Tom Collier 5,092. Complainant Hanover was not a candidate in this election.

The bill averred that the election was illegally held and void, gave Boyd no title to the office, and that complainant Hanover was entitled to hold over until a successor was elected at the biennial election in 1940 and was duly qualified.

Before going to the merits of the case, there are two preliminary matters of which we should dispose.

First, it is said that the court below erred in declining to treat this suit as an election contest and we thinh this is true. The bill malíes out a case of that nature under repeated decisions of this court. Stone v. *430 Edmondson, 168 Tenn., 698, 80 S. W. (2d), 665; Zirkle v. Stegall, 163 Tenn., 323, 43 S. W. (2d), 192; Hogan v. Hamilton County, 132 Tenn., 554, 179 S. W., 128; Maloney v. Collier, 112 Tenn., 78, 83 S, W., 667.

Second, the court below is criticized for taking notice of the official returns of this election. We think this criticism to be without justification. Under sections 1913 and 1914 of the Code, election returns are made to the Secretary of State and these returns recorded in a bound volume. Such returns can be noticed just as any other permanent official record. In re Denny, 156 Ind., 104, 59 N. E., 359, 51 L. R. A., 722; Casey v. Bryce, 173 Ala., 129, 55 So., 810; Kotes v. State, 55 Neb., 691, 76 N. W., 467; Thomas v. Commonwealth, 90 Va., 92, 17 S. E., 788.

It is insisted for the complainant Hanover that Mc-Lain’s death did not occur “more than thirty days” prior to the next biennial election. As stated before, McLain died July 4. The next biennial election recurred on August 4 following.

The argument for complainant is that the law does not take into account fractions of a day and that more than thirty days did not elapse between July 4 and August 4. This argument ignores the settled rule in Tennessee with respect to the computation of time.

Section 11 of the Code provides “The time within which any act provided by law is to be done, shall be computed by excluding the first day and including the last, unless the last day is Sunday, and then it also shall be excluded. ’ ’

This section of the Code has been considered in two rather late cases —Allen v. Reed, 147 Tenn., 612, 250 S. W., 546, and Allen v. Effler, 144 Tenn., 685, 235 S. W., *431 67. In the former ease, the statutory rule was held applicable for the determination of the time after which a thing might be done. Such method of computation of time has the sanction of very high authority noted in our cases just cited.

Applying the rule, the period of thirty days from July 4 expired on August 3. It was thirty-one days from July 4 to August 4. Since thirty-one days is more than thirty days, the general election, recurring on August 4, was a general election recurring more than thirty days after McLain’s death. If August 3 was the last day of the thirty-day period, August 4 was beyond that period.

Such method of counting time is of invariable use in this jurisdiction. The time after judgment for the issuance of an execution, the time after judgment in which an appeal is to be prayed, the time after judgment of the Court of Appeals in which petition for certiorari may be filed, the time after judgment in which a petition to rehear may be filed, the time after motion for new trial overruled in which a bill of exceptions may be filed — all these periods are so calculated.

The complainant then insists that if there was a period of more than thirty days between McLain’s death and the next biennial election that the special election held on August 4,1938, to fill the vacancy was illegal and void, and that defendant Boyd, successful in that election, acquired no title to the office in question.

The relevant constitutional and statutory provisions are as follows:

Article 6, section 5, of the Constitution is in part this: “An Attorney for the State for any circuit or district for which a Judge having criminal jurisdiction shall be provided by law, shall be elected by the qualified voters *432 of such circuit or district, and shall hold his office for a term of eight years, and shall have been a resident of the State five years, and of the circuit or district, one year.”

Article 7, section 5, of the Constitution is in these words: “Elections for judicial and other civil officers, shall be held on the first Thursday in August, one thousand eight hundred and seventy, and forever thereafter on the first Thursday in August next preceding the expiration of their respective terms of service. The term of each officer so elected shall be computed from the first day of September next succeeding his election.

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Bluebook (online)
121 S.W.2d 120, 173 Tenn. 426, 9 Beeler 426, 1938 Tenn. LEXIS 24, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hanover-v-boyd-tenn-1938.