Mills v. Shelby County Election Commission

218 S.W.3d 33, 2006 Tenn. App. LEXIS 589, 2006 WL 2257313
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedAugust 8, 2006
DocketW2005-02883-COA-R3-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 218 S.W.3d 33 (Mills v. Shelby County Election Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mills v. Shelby County Election Commission, 218 S.W.3d 33, 2006 Tenn. App. LEXIS 589, 2006 WL 2257313 (Tenn. Ct. App. 2006).

Opinion

OPINION

W. FRANK CRAWFORD, P.J., W.S.,

delivered the opinion of the court,

in which ALAN E. HIGHERS, J. and DAVID R. FARMER, J., joined.

Plaintiff/Appellant filed suit under the Tennessee Declaratory Judgment Act asserting that the legislation authorizing the use of electronic voting machines in some jurisdictions violated Art. I, § 5 and Art. IV, § 1 of the Tennessee Constitution. The Shelby County Chancery Court dis *35 missed Plaintiff/Appellant’s complaint pursuant to Tenn. R. Civ. P. 12.02(6). We affirm.

David G. Mills (“Appellant”) is an attorney and a registered voter in Shelby County, Tennessee. On August 24, 2005, Mr. Mills filed suit under the Declaratory Judgment Act against the Shelby County Election Commission (the “Commission”). Mr. Mills asserts that the use of electronic voting machines by the Commission violates Art. I, § 5 and Art. IV, § 1 of the Tennessee Constitution, and the statutes so authorizing electronic voting are unconstitutional. 1 Mr. Mills seeks, inter alia, to have the trial court declare that the Commission “must use a system of voter verified, tangible paper ballots that are capable of being placed by the voters into an appropriate ballot box for later tabulation.” Pursuant to Tenn. R. Civ. P. 24, on August 30, 2005, Mr. Mills served a copy of the Complaint on the Attorney General (together with the Commission, “Appellees”). Pursuant to Tenn. R. Civ. P. 24.01 and T.C.A. § 8-6-109(b)(9), on September 29, 2005, the Attorney General petitioned the trial court to intervene in the case. On November 30, 2005, Mills filed, by consent, an amended complaint. The parties agreed to the Attorney General’s intervention and, on December 9, 2005, an Agreed Order of Intervention was entered by the trial court. In the interim, on November 3, 2005, the Attorney General filed a motion to dismiss Mr. Mills’ Complaint in its entirety on the grounds of lack of standing and failure to state a claim upon which relief can be granted under either Art. I, § 5 or Art. IV, § 1 of the Tennessee Constitution. On November 7, 2005, the Commission also filed a Motion to Dismiss, which adopted and incorporated the Motion and memorandum of law filed by the Attorney General.

On November 30, 2005, Mr. Mills filed a motion for leave to amend his Complaint, asserting that only minor changes had been made to the Complaint and that no prejudice would result to the Commission or to the Attorney General. The parties ultimately agreed to the filing of the Amended Complaint. The Amended Complaint was filed on December 2, 2005 and reads, in pertinent part, as follows:

BACKGROUND
5. Shelby County, Tennessee presently requires its citizens to vote on electronic voting machines that produce no paper ballot or no paper verification of the vote cast.
6. The Plaintiff has been required, as have most, if not all of Shelby County residents, to vote on these paperless machines for the last several elections, and Plaintiff presently intends to be a Shelby County resident voter for many years to come.
7. The Plaintiff, and the other citizens of Shelby County have no means of verifying that their votes are actually being properly recorded when their votes are cast on paperless mechanical or electronic voting machines.
8. The Plaintiff, as well as other citizens of Shelby County, knows that when the ballot is paperless, poll workers have no means to review a questionable vote to determine the intent of the voter.
9. The Plaintiff, as well as the other citizens of this county, knows that with paperless mechanical or electronic voting, the poll workers or other interested citizens have no means to statistically *36 estimate whether the votes are being properly recorded and tabulated.
10. The Plaintiff, as well as other citizens of this county, knows that with paperless mechanical or electronic voting there is only one system of tabulation and that no secondary system of tabulation exists to verify or check the one and only system of tabulation.
11. The Plaintiff, as well as other citizens of this county, knows that with paperless mechanical or electronic voting, since no secondary system of cross-tabulation exists, there is no verifiable means of performing a legitimate recount of any election that might be questionable, close, or suspicious; with paperless voting, a recount is merely a copycat procedure, not a legitimate crosscheck.
12. Upon information and belief, the Plaintiff avers that these electronic voting systems may also disenfranchise voters in the event that voter turnout is far greater than expected; since each voter must wait his turn to use the machine, the possibility of too few machines, causing discouraging delays, is quite real.
13. Upon information and belief, the Plaintiff avers that these electronic voting systems may disenfranchise voters when there are power outages or other malfunctions of the paperless machines during the election process.
14. Upon information and belief, the Plaintiff would aver that even in a state election contest, a paperless voting machine’s cumulative tabulations are not an equivalent evidentiary replacement for paper ballots; paperless voting makes judicial review of state election contests far less legitimate than election contests involving paper ballots.
[[Image here]]
16.Paperless voting systems, especially paperless electronic voting systems, require the citizens of this county have unwarranted faith in the integrity of the system; they reduce both the recount process and election contests to near legal fictions.
17. Upon information and belief, the Plaintiff avers that one or more private corporations manufacture the electronic voting systems used by the Shelby County Election Commission and that the software used in these electronic systems remains the proprietary trade secret of the manufacturer.
18. Upon information and belief, the Plaintiff avers that the Shelby County Election Commission does not independently possess the means or the ability to produce its own software for these machines and must rely upon the training, skill and integrity of private corporations or their employees to determine whether the software running these machines can properly record and count the votes cast on these machines.
19.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Shelby Cnty. Advocates for Valid Elections v. Hargett
348 F. Supp. 3d 764 (W.D. Tennessee, 2018)
Pam Hayes v. City of Memphis
Court of Appeals of Tennessee, 2015
Stephen Michael West v. Derrick D. Schofield
460 S.W.3d 113 (Tennessee Supreme Court, 2015)
City of Memphis, Tennessee v. Tre Hargett, Secretary of State
414 S.W.3d 88 (Tennessee Supreme Court, 2013)
Favorito v. Handel
684 S.E.2d 257 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 2009)
King v. Sevier County Election Commission
282 S.W.3d 37 (Court of Appeals of Tennessee, 2008)
Highwoods Properties, Inc. v. City of Memphis
Court of Appeals of Tennessee, 2007

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
218 S.W.3d 33, 2006 Tenn. App. LEXIS 589, 2006 WL 2257313, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mills-v-shelby-county-election-commission-tennctapp-2006.