Ja'Nekia W. Barton v. Jennifer Adams-Williams

CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedJune 1, 2023
Docket2023-EC-00586-SCT
StatusPublished

This text of Ja'Nekia W. Barton v. Jennifer Adams-Williams (Ja'Nekia W. Barton v. Jennifer Adams-Williams) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ja'Nekia W. Barton v. Jennifer Adams-Williams, (Mich. 2023).

Opinion

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF MISSISSIPPI

NO. 2023-EC-00586-SCT

JA’NEKIA W. BARTON

v.

JENNIFER ADAMS-WILLIAMS

DATE OF JUDGMENT: 05/15/2023 TRIAL JUDGE: HON. JEFF WEILL, SR. TRIAL COURT ATTORNEYS: SAMUEL L. BEGLEY SENICA MANUEL TUBWELL JOHN R. REEVES COURT FROM WHICH APPEALED: BOLIVAR COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT ATTORNEY FOR APPELLANT: SENICA MANUEL TUBWELL ATTORNEY FOR APPELLEE: JOHN R. REEVES NATURE OF THE CASE: CIVIL - ELECTION CONTEST DISPOSITION: AFFIRMED - 06/01/2023

EN BANC.

BEAM, JUSTICE, FOR THE COURT:

¶1. Ja’nekia W. Barton sought to disqualify Jennifer Adams-Williams as a candidate for

county prosecutor in Bolivar County, Mississippi, for failing to meet the two-year residency

requirement set forth by Mississippi Code Section 23-15-300 (Supp. 2022). The Bolivar

County Circuit Court denied Barton’s petition, finding that Adams-Williams is clearly a

resident of Bolivar County and has been for the required two-year residency period. Finding

that the trial court applied the proper legal standard in its analysis and did not manifestly err

in its factual findings, we affirm the judgment of the trial court. FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

¶2. Barton, the incumbent county prosecutor for Bolivar County, filed a challenge with

the Bolivar County Democratic Executive Committee (BCDEC) to Adams-Williams’s

candidacy for that office in the Democratic primary election set for August 8, 2023. The sole

issue considered by the BCDEC was whether Adams-Williams had met the two-year

residency requirement for that county office. Finding in fact that Adams-Williams is a

qualified elector in Bolivar County, the BCDEC denied Barton’s challenge.

¶3. Barton petitioned the Boliver County Circuit Court for judicial review. The trial court

entered a final judgment on May 15, 2023, denying Barton’s petition, and incorporating its

findings of fact and conclusions of law in support of its decision. The trial court concluded

that although Adams-Williams has many connections to neighboring Grenada County,

Mississippi,

including significant political and voting activity, none outweigh the overwhelming proof that [Adams-Williams] is and has been a resident, along with her family, for more than the two-year required residency period in the Bolivar County home in which she enjoys homestead status and engages in all activities of daily living.

¶4. The trial court provided the unrebutted evidence concerning Adams-Williams’s

activities in Bolivar County and Grenada County, which we have summarized below.

¶5. Adams-Williams was born and raised in Grenada County, and she has practiced law

there since 2013. In October 2015, Adams-Williams married her husband, who is an

undisputed resident of Bolivar County. The marriage certificate was issued in Bolivar

County, and Adams-Williams and her daughter immediately moved themselves and all their

2 personal belongings into her husband’s Bolivar County home. The home is located in

Cleveland, Mississippi, a city located in Bolivar County. The husband was the sole owner

of the home prior to his marriage to Adams-Williams.

¶6. The husband applied for homestead exemption on the property in 2015. Adams-

Williams’s name appears on the homestead application from 2016 after their marriage.

Although Adams-Williams did not sign the application, she is listed as “spouse” on the

application.

¶7. Adams-Williams and her husband have had three children of their own since their

marriage. The three children are enrolled in school or daycare in Bolivar County and have

been since they were old enough to be enrolled. Adams-Williams’s daughter from her

previous marriage was admitted as a student in Cleveland public schools and has attended

school there since her mother’s marriage in 2015.

¶8. Adams-Williams’s vehicle, and her daughter’s, are both registered in Bolivar County.

In 2017, when renewing her driver’s license, Adams-Williams changed her former Grenada

address to her Bolivar address. She did not elect to change her voting registration at that time

to her Bolivar address from her previous listed Grenada address at 141 Tallahoma Drive,

Grenada County.

¶9. Since her marriage in October 2015, Adams-Williams has conducted the activities of

family life, including sleeping and eating at the Bolivar County residence with her husband

and family. She attends church regularly and visits her personal doctor in Bolivar County,

3 and she has done so since her marriage in 2015. No proof was offered that Adams-Williams

has spent one night at the Grenada County address in the seven years since her marriage.

¶10. Adams-Williams commutes from her home in Bolivar to her law office at 141

Tallahoma Drive in Grenada County. The building is used by Adams-Williams solely as her

law office. She receives most of her business mail at that address, and it is listed as her entry

in the Mississippi Bar Lawyer Directory, as well as her Facebook page and her law office

website.

¶11. The law office is located on a residential lot owned by Adams-Williams’s mother. It

has an exemption under the homestead statutes (Mississippi Code Sections 27-33-1 to -79

(Rev. 2017)) as the principal residence of her mother, who is age sixty-five or older. Her

mother has not lived at this Grenada address for at least three years, having moved in with

Adams-Williams’s sister in DeSoto County. In October 2020, Adams-Williams posted on

her Facebook page: “We have MOVED!!! Our new location is 141 Tallahoma Drive,

Grenada, MS 38901. We are now in a home office setting. Let us handle all your legal

needs!!!!”

¶12. Adams-Williams did not change her voter registration to Bolivar County until

November 22, 2022. Adams-Williams voted regularly in Grenada County, from 2010

through November 8, 2022 (including on two occasions during the past two years: June 7,

2022, and November 8, 2022), using the Grenada County address. Adams-Williams admitted

4 that as a purported resident of Bolivar County, she voted illegally in Grenada County in those

elections.1

¶13. Prior to her marriage in October 2015, Adams-Williams was a candidate in the August

2015 primary for the Grenada County prosecuting attorney, an election that she lost. Adams-

Williams currently is and has been the municipal court prosecutor for the City of Grenada

since before her 2015 marriage, and she has served as a special prosecutor for the City of

Winona, located in Montgomery County. She also has served as a municipal court

prosecutor in Indianola, Mississippi, located in Sunflower County. None of these appointed

positions has a residency requirement.

¶14. Adams-Williams also has served as a special prosecutor in Grenada County, appointed

by the Grenada County Board of Supervisors, which did not have a residency requirement.

1 Adams-Williams acknowledged that Mississippi Code Section 23-15-11 (Rev. 2018) requires that a person be a resident of the precinct of his or her residence and that casting a vote in an election other than where the voter resides is an illegal vote and likewise could be prosecuted. See Miss. Code Ann. § 97-13-35 (Rev. 2020).

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
Ja'Nekia W. Barton v. Jennifer Adams-Williams, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/janekia-w-barton-v-jennifer-adams-williams-miss-2023.