Harmon v. Tyler

112 Tenn. 8
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 15, 1903
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 112 Tenn. 8 (Harmon v. Tyler) 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
Harmon v. Tyler, 112 Tenn. 8 (Tenn. 1903).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Shields

delivered the opinion of the Court.'

[12]*12This is a proceeding instituted before Hon. Hal. H». Haynes, chancellor of the first chancery division of Tennessee, by Dana Harmon, contestant, a candidate for the-office of judge of the first judicial circuit at the general, election held August 7, 1902, against Alonzo J. Tyler, contestee, his opponent, who received the certificate of' election, to contest his election to that office.

Contestant presented to the chancellor his statement, of the grounds of his contest in the form of a bill inequity, properly verified, charging in general terms that contestee Tyler, and himself were candidates for the office of judge of the first judicial circuit at said election, and that he was legally and constitutionally elected to-said office, hut by means of the fraudulent suppression of the returns of the election in certain districts, the-fraudulent alteration of those of others, and the rejection of legal votes cast for contestant in another, it was. made to appear upon the face of the returns from the-counties composing the circuit that the contestee had received a majority of 102 votes, and was elected to said office, and the certificate of election rightfully belonging to contestant was wrongfully issued to contestee.

Contestant, proceeding to state the specific grounds of his contest, says that upon the full, correct, and legal returns of the election made and certified by the judges and clerks of the various voting precincts of the circuit he had a majority of the votes cast and was duly elected, but that the returns from the twelfth civil district of Hancock county, where he received a majority of 80 [13]*13■votes, those from the second district of Claiborne county, where he received a majority of 52 votes, and those of the sixteenth civil district of Sullivan county, where he received a majority of 13 votes, were fraudulently suppressed or destroyed, and omitted from the vote certified by the election commissioners of those counties to the secretary of state; that the returns of three districts •of Greene county, after the same were certified by the officers holding the election, were fraudulently altered by adding to the votes cast for contestee, Tyler, in the second district 20 tallies or votes, in the fifth district 15 votes, and in the eighteenth district 40 votes, whereby it was falsely made to appear upon the face of the returns from these districts that contestee had received 75 votes more than had in fact been cast for him, which' were counted and included in the aggregate vote certified to the secretary of state from that county; that in the first civil district of Johnson county, where the uniform ballot law applies, 4 ballots which were legal and ¡should have been counted for contestant were wrongfully rejected upon the pretense that they were marked; and that the total number of votes cast for contestee in Hancock county was fraudulently raised 31, but by whom and in what particular district or districts it was •done he is unable to state, but will be able to show the facts in’the proof. No other ground of contest is stated.

The number of votes shown by the returns of the election commissioners of the several counties to have been .received by contestant and contestee is then set out in [14]*14full, from which it appears that if the charges made in contestant’s bill are true, and corrections are made accordingly, he received a majority of the votes cast in the election, and was entitled to the certificate of election and office of circuit judge.

The bill concludes with a prayer' that the chancellor-designate a suitable place in the judicial circuit to hear-the contest, and name the earliest day possible for that purpose; that all orders necessary in the case be made -r and that, on the final hearing, contestant be declared to have been legally elected judge of the first judicial circuit of Tennessee.

The chancellor ordered that the case be heard September 30, 1902, at Johnson City, Tennessee, and that a ■copy of the bill be served upon the contestee at least twenty days before that day.

The parties made and filed with the chancellor September 1, 1902, an agreement in these words:

“In re Harmon v. Tyler, Election Contest.
“In this case it is agreed by counsel representing the parties, respectively, as follows:
“ (1) That contestee shall have until and during Saturday, September 6, in which to- file a reply to contestant’s petition. In the event contestee, in his said answer, set up new matter and ask for affirmative relief,, contestant shall have until and during Saturday, September 13,1902, in which to make defense thereto, so as not to delay the hearing. Contestant does not agree that contestee has the right to set up new matter or to [15]*15ask affirmative relief after the expiration of twenty days from the election of August 7, 1902, and this question is ^expressly reserved by contestant.
“(2) The contestant shall execute a bond in the sum of |250.00, conditioned for payment of cost in event of failure to prosecute successfully, and contestee shall give bond of like character if his petition asks affirmative. relief.
. “(3) The parties, respectively, shall have the right to take depositions in as many, but not more than four different localities at the same time, upon proper notice thereof.
“Either party may, upon five days’ notice, take depositions in the cause at any time after the fourth instant.
“It is further agreed, that all depositions, orders, etc., be sent to the clerk and master of the chancery court at Johnson City, who will file same, together with all other papers in the cause, and shall make note of same upon the rule docket, and in all matters pertaining to this cause he will have the same power he has in a chancery cause.”

Contestee filed his answer September 6, 1902, admitting that he and contestant were opposing candidates in the preceding August election for the office of circuit judge; that the returns certified to the secretary of state showed a majority in his favor, and that he had received a certificate of election; and charging that he had, in fact] received a majority of the legal votes cast [16]*16in the election, and was justly entitled to the office, and denying all charges of fraud.

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Bluebook (online)
112 Tenn. 8, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harmon-v-tyler-tenn-1903.