PONDER v. DAVIS

910 S.E.2d 195, 320 Ga. 532
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedDecember 10, 2024
DocketS25A0095
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 910 S.E.2d 195 (PONDER v. DAVIS) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
PONDER v. DAVIS, 910 S.E.2d 195, 320 Ga. 532 (Ga. 2024).

Opinion

320 Ga. 532 FINAL COPY

S25A0095. PONDER et al. v. DAVIS et al.

MCMILLIAN, Justice.

In May 2024, Appellant Tabitha Ponder ran against and lost to

Jeffrey Davis for a seat on the Georgia Court of Appeals. Three

weeks after her loss, Ponder, along with an elector, Randolph Frails,

filed the underlying election contest petition, asserting that Davis

was not qualified to run as a candidate in the election because he is

not a resident of Georgia. Appellants Ponder and Frails appeal from

the superior court’s dismissal of that election contest petition.

Because Appellants have failed to do “everything within their power

to have their claims decided before the election occurred,” we

“dismiss the appeal without reaching the merits (or lack thereof).”

Catoosa County Republican Party v. Henry, 319 Ga. 794, 794-95 (906

SE2d 750) (2024).

Prior to the election which took place on May 21, 2024, Frails

alone filed a challenge to Davis’s qualifications to run as a candidate under OCGA § 21-2-5, alleging that Davis was not a resident of

Georgia. That challenge requested the Secretary of State to “[p]lease

initiate proceedings into and expeditiously refer the matters to an

administrative law judge at the Office of State Administrative

Hearings for a hearing,” though it did not request a hearing or

decision by any particular date. An administrative law judge

initially found that Davis failed to prove that he actually resided at

the address he provided at the time he submitted his declaration of

candidacy and accompanying affidavit to qualify for the election.

Thereafter, the Secretary of State reviewed the administrative law

judge’s initial decision and issued his final decision on May 16, 2024,

finding that Davis satisfied his burden by proving by a

preponderance of the evidence that he was a Georgia resident at the

time of qualifying based on facts such as his voter’s registration,

voting history, and driver’s license. The next day, Frails filed in the

superior court a petition for judicial review of the Secretary’s final

decision under OCGA § 21-2-5 (e); Frails also moved for an

emergency hearing on his petition and moved to stay the

2 certification of the election results until his challenge was decided.

It does not appear, however, that Frails moved to stay the election

itself, and Frails has not otherwise shown how he has acted with

dispatch to resolve his claims prior to the election taking place. Also,

it does not appear that Ponder openly or formally participated in

Frails’s challenge or that she filed her own pre-election challenge.

On May 21, 2024, the election was held, with Davis receiving

57.1 percent of the votes and Ponder receiving 42.9 percent.

According to the superior court, “[a]s requested by Petitioner, the

Court held a hearing on Friday, June 7,” after which it entered an

order dismissing Frails’s petition as moot because the election had

already occurred and the results were certified by the Secretary of

State. Frails did not appeal that order.

Rather, on June 11, Ponder and Frails filed this separate post-

election contest petition under OCGA § 21-2-524 against Davis, the

Fulton County Board of Registration and Elections, the Fulton

County Department of Registration and Elections, and John or Jane

3 Doe as a Public Officer of the State of Georgia,1 asserting that Davis

was not a resident of Georgia and requesting that the superior court

declare Ponder the winner of the election. Motions to dismiss on

various grounds were filed, including that the petitioners’

verifications failed to assert “that according to the best of his or her

knowledge and belief the contested result of the primary or election

[was] illegal and the return thereof incorrect,” as required by OCGA

§ 21-2-524 (d). On July 22, Ponder and Frails moved for leave to

amend their original petition to substitute the Secretary of State as

a party and to correct the petition’s verifications. On August 5, the

superior court held a hearing on the parties’ motions, and on August

7, it entered an order dismissing Ponder and Frails’ petition against

all parties.

In the order, the superior court ruled that the verifications filed

with the original petitions failed to meet the requirements of OCGA

§ 21-2-524 (d). The court then denied Ponder and Frails’ request for

1 Appellants later voluntarily dismissed the Fulton County Department

of Registration and Elections and attempted to substitute the Secretary of State in place of John or Jane Doe. 4 leave to amend the defective verifications, reasoning that although

the Election Code requires “prompt disposition of election disputes,”

Ponder and Frails did not file their petition challenging the election

until 21 days after the election and then waited until 62 days after

the election to seek to amend the verifications. The court dismissed

the petition on the grounds that the verifications were defective and

then went on to make a number of alternative rulings supporting

dismissal. On appeal, Ponder and Frails enumerate several alleged

errors regarding the merits of the superior court’s rulings.

Before turning to the merits, we first consider the effect of

Appellants’ failure to pursue with dispatch their challenge to Davis’s

qualifications before the May 2024 election took place or to

otherwise seek a stay of that election so that their claims could be

resolved prior to the election occurring. We have explained that

challengers are required to do all they can to ensure that their

claims are resolved before an election occurs and that for prudential

reasons, courts generally should refrain from exercising their

jurisdiction to invalidate an election when a party has failed to act

5 with dispatch to resolve issues that could have been raised and

resolved before an election takes place. See Miller v. Hodge, 319 Ga.

543, 548-49 (1) (905 SE2d 562) (2024) (explaining that “the

occurrence of a subsequent election does not necessarily ‘moot’

issues related to a previous one[,]” but there are “various prudential

reasons for courts to limit their exercise of jurisdiction and to refrain

from invalidating elections after the fact when the challenging party

has not acted with dispatch to litigate their claims before a

subsequent election[,]” and such prudential considerations

“continue to counsel the courts in limiting the exercise of

jurisdiction”); see also Henry, 319 Ga. at 798 (noting these

prudential considerations include “in particular, preventing the

unnecessary expense of holding more than one election, assuring the

finality of results, and respecting the ‘sanctity’ of elections ‘wherein

the will of the people is the supreme law’” (quoting Miller, 319 Ga.

at 548 (1) (cleaned up))). In Miller, we held that “litigants in election

contests have a duty to expedite resolution of the dispute before an

election is held and that the failure to make every effort to dispose

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