McGee v. Lee
This text of 328 So. 2d 159 (McGee v. Lee) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
Roger Dale McGEE
v.
Walter LEE, Clerk of Court, et al. Roger Dale McGEE
v.
BOARD OF SUPERVISORS OF ELECTIONS.
Supreme Court of Louisiana.
*160 J. Clyde Fontenot, Ville Platte, for plaintiff-appellant.
J. Jake Fontenot and Donald J. Tate, Mamou, for defendants-appellees.
DENNIS, Justice.
These consolidated cases present election contests under La. R.S. 18:420 (added, Acts of 1975, No. 1). The plaintiff appeals from judgments declaring the statute unconstitutional and dismissing his suits.
The plaintiff in each case, Roger Dale McGee, and Conrad Fusilier, were candidates for the office of justice of the peace in Evangeline Parish. According to the allegations of the petitions, the tabulations following the general election on December 13, 1975 indicated that Fusilier received 1372 votes to 1371 votes for the plaintiff.
The main demand of the petition in each case is for a recount of the absentee ballots in certain precincts of the parish. The only difference in the two suits is that in No. 57,321 plaintiff joined Fusilier and the Clerk of Court of Evangeline Parish as defendants, and in No. 57,323 plaintiff sued for a recount by mandamus against the Board of Supervisors of Elections of Evangeline Parish. After hearings on rules to show cause in both cases, the trial judge dismissed the suits on the ground that the statute relied on by plaintiff, La. R.S. 18:420, was unconstitutional because it sought to require the court to perform a non-judicial function, i.e., the appointment of counters for the purpose of recounting the absentee ballots.
The statute in question, La. R.S. 18:420, provides as follows:
"A. In elections under this Part all contests shall be made before the courts of the state, as herein prescribed, which courts have the necessary power, authority and jurisdiction to hear, try and determine them.
"B. Any candidate for nomination to any office who claims that but for irregularities or fraud he would have been nominated and/or he would have been entitled to enter a general election and who desires to contest the election, shall present a petition to the judge of the district court of the parish in which the capitol of the state is situated, if the office be that of governor, lieutenant governor, attorney general, secretary of state, state treasurer, superintendent of public education or other state officer. If the office be a municipal, parochial or district office, the petition shall be presented to the district court of the parish in which the contestee resides. The petition shall set forth specifically and in detail the grounds on which the contest is based and the irregularities or frauds of which complaint is made. In addition to the procedure set forth above, the contestant or the contestee may, on allegation made on information and belief that a proper recount of any absentee ballots in the municipality, district, parish or state, as the case may be, would change the result of the election, require the recount of all or any specified absentee ballots. In order to obtain the recount the candidate shall accompany his *161 petition or answer with a deposit in cash of twenty dollars for each precinct in which a recount of absentee ballots is demanded, which sum shall be used to defray the expenses of the recount, including a reasonable fee to the counters of the absentee ballots. It shall not be necessary in order to obtain the recount to allege or prove any specific fraud or irregularity. Immediately upon the filing of a petition or answer containing such a request for a recount, accompanied by the required deposit, the judge having jurisdiction shall name sufficient counters to conduct the recount, and upon the date set for the trial of the contest as provided in this Part, shall proceed in open court or at the place where the absentee ballots are located to cause the absentee ballots to be recounted and the result of the recount to be announced publicly. Immediately upon the filing of the petition, whether the petition contains an application for a recount as hereinabove provided or not, the judge or, in his absence, the clerk of the court shall issue an order directing the contestee to answer the petition within five days after service upon him of a certified copy and order. The contestee shall answer not later than 10:00 a.m. on the fifth day after service, including any intervening Sunday and legal holiday. However, if the fifth day falls on a Sunday or other legal holiday, then it may be filed on the next succeeding legal day. At that time, whether the contestee has answered or not, the court shall proceed without further delay and in a summary manner to try the issue presented. The trial shall be in open court or in chambers, without a jury.
"C. Either party may take evidence relative to the facts specified or to be specified in the petition at any time before the trial, on giving the other party two days notice of the time and place the evidence is to be taken. The evidence may be taken before any officer authorized to administer oaths, who may issue process to compel the attendance of witnesses and the production of documentary evidence of any kind.
"D. The court of original jurisdiction shall render judgment within twentyfour hours after the case is submitted.
"E. The party cast may appeal as in other cases, upon giving bond for a sum to be fixed by the court to cover all costs of court. However, the appeal shall be filed in the court of appeal of appropriate jurisdiction within not more than five days from the rendition of the judgment, and shall be tried on the original record and by preference over all other cases whatsoever. The appellate court shall decide the issue within twenty-four hours after submission.
"F. Upon the perfecting of an appeal the clerk of court shall immediately notify the appellate court in writing. The appellate court shall immediately set the appeal down for hearing, without awaiting the actual lodging of the appeal, and shall hear the appeal at the earliest practicable moment.
"G. If a trial of a case appealed to the court of appeal is desired when the courts are in vacation, the judges composing the court shall meet in special session without delay. No application for a rehearing shall be entertained by any court, but the courts may upon their own motion correct manifest errors to which their attention may be called.
"H. No contest shall be entertained unless brought within two days after the official promulgation of the result of the election."
La. R.S. 18:420 is part of the open election system adopted by the legislature in 1975. (Acts of 1975, No. 1). It provides a statutory vehicle for disputing the result of a primary election, and is also made applicable to the contest of a general election by La. R.S. 18:841. However, La. R.S. 18:420 was derived almost verbatim from *162 La. R.S. 18:364, which, before adoption of the open election system, provided the basis and procedure for contests of elections held by direct primary for political party nominations of candidates. Therefore, we will be guided by the jurisprudence under La. R.S. 18:364, and its predecessor statutes, in deciding issues arising from election contests involving the open election system.
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328 So. 2d 159, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcgee-v-lee-la-1976.