Pattillo, Jan v. Tarin, Herman and Bill Weinacht

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedAugust 29, 2002
Docket08-01-00091-CV
StatusPublished

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Bluebook
Pattillo, Jan v. Tarin, Herman and Bill Weinacht, (Tex. Ct. App. 2002).

Opinion

                                                            COURT OF APPEALS

                                                    EIGHTH DISTRICT OF TEXAS

                                                               EL PASO, TEXAS

JAN PATTILLO,                                                  )         )                      No.  08-01-00091-CV

                                                                              )

Appellant,                          )                             Appeal from

v.                                                                           )                     143rd District Court

HERMAN TARIN and BILL WEINACHT,          )                 of Reeves County, Texas

Appellees.                          )                 (TC# 00-05-16713-CVR)

O P I N I O N

Jan Pattillo appeals from a summary judgment granted in favor of Herman Tarin and Bill Weinacht.  We affirm.

FACTUAL SUMMARY

Jan Pattillo acted as her husband=s campaign treasurer during his race for Reeves County Commissioner in March of 2000.  Before the primary, Pattillo went to the Pecos Nursing Home and assisted Maria M. Garcia in completing an application for a ballot by mail.[1]  The Reeves County Clerk received the application on February 4, 2000.  Louise Cassell later helped Mrs. Garcia cast her ballot by mail.[2]


Around March 6, Mrs. Garcia=s granddaughter, Anabel Aguilar, visited her grandmother.  Mrs. Garcia complained that she had not received her ballot and wanted to know when she would get to vote.  It was a matter of some concern to her inasmuch as a family member was running for election.  Aguilar called the Reeves County Clerk=s office and was informed by someone in that office that Mrs. Garcia had already voted.[3]  The person in the clerk=s office mistakenly told Aguilar that Jan Pattillo had assisted Mrs. Garcia and added that Mrs. Garcia had signed her name with an AX.@[4]  Because she had already voted according to the records, Mrs. Garcia would not be permitted to vote again. 


Informed of these facts by Aguilar, Mrs. Garcia insisted that she had not voted, she did not know Jan Pattillo, and she could sign her name.  Aguilar contacted Bill Weinacht, an attorney she had known for many years.  Weinacht agreed to represent Mrs. Garcia not only to regain her right to vote but also to protect her from abusive campaign workers at the nursing home.  Weinacht knew that the mail-in ballot process in Reeves County had been the subject of public controversy in the past and that there had been many complaints filed regarding campaign workers who had taken advantage of the elderly in the nursing home.[5]  Weinacht reviewed the Election Code which requires a challenged voter to execute an affidavit stating the facts necessary to support the person=s eligibility to vote.[6]  Based upon the facts conveyed to him by Aguilar, Weinacht prepared an affidavit for Mrs. Garcia in order to establish her eligibility to vote.  The affidavit, which Mrs. Garcia executed on March 7, 2000, stated as follows:

My name is Maria M. Garcia.  I am 78 years of age and I am qualified to give this affidavit.  I have never been convicted of a felony.  The facts stated herein are all within my personal knowledge and are all true and correct. 

I live at 1819 Memorial Drive at the Pecos Nursing Home.  I am registered to vote here in Reeves County under the name Maria Garcia Martinez.  My granddaughter, Anabel Aguilar, came by to visit me and I asked her when I was going to get to vote because I never received my ballot.  Anabel called the County Clerk=s office and they said I had already voted and that my mail in ballot said that Jan Patillo [sic] had assisted me and that I signed my name with an X.  I have not voted and I do not know Jan Patillo [sic].  I know how to sign my name and I sign it like I am signing at this time. 

That same day, Weinacht filed the affidavit with the Reeves County Clerk, Dianne Florez,[7] in order to establish Mrs. Garcia=s eligibility to vote.  When Weinacht presented the affidavit to Florez for filing, he asked her whether the facts stated in it were true and correct, and she confirmed that they were.  Consequently, Weinacht believed the statements in the affidavit were true and correct. 

After filing the affidavit with Florez, Weinacht delivered a copy of it to Democratic Party Chair Bobby Dean, Sheriff Arnulfo AAndy@ Gomez, and District Attorney Randy Reynolds because he believed the presiding judge deciding Mrs. Garcia

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