Poole v. Merritt

19 So. 2d 641
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 30, 1944
DocketNo. 6765.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 19 So. 2d 641 (Poole v. Merritt) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Poole v. Merritt, 19 So. 2d 641 (La. Ct. App. 1944).

Opinion

This suit grew out of a factional controversy between two groups of the Democratic Executive Committee of Bienville Parish. The primary objective of each group was to organize and politically control the Committee. Prior to the passage of Act 46 of 1940, the Committee consisted of twelve members, one each from the seven wards and five at large, but under the provisions of said Act the membership was increased to fifteen. This is due to the fact that three of the wards have two Police Jurors each, and this entitles them to two members each. Subsection (h) of Section 5. However, at the primary election held on January 18, 1944, only eleven members of the Committee were elected. No one qualified as a candidate for the position from Wards Five and Seven and only one qualified from Wards Two and Four, whereas each of these wards is entitled to two members.

The eleven members elected in January, 1944, are: W.W. Poole, Lloyd C. Stewart, A.L. Mosley, H.E. Davenport, Floyd Caskey and Ed Barnes, who will be hereinafter referred to as the Stewart faction; and Lorris M. Wimberly, J.S. Williams, Ed W. Merritt, J.H. Boddie and S.R. Wimberly, who will hereinafter be referred to as the Wimberly faction. W.A. Bryan, W.C. Carlile and H.E. Sudduth were elected in *Page 643 1940 to represent, respectively, Wards Two, Five and Seven. They are aligned with the the Wimberly faction.

Under the provisions of Section 15 of the 1940 Act, Parish Committeemen elected in January, 1944, were required to meet and organize on or before the 15th day after their election.

Mr. Stewart took the initiative looking to the organization of the Committee and mailed to the other ten newly elected members written notice that a meeting thereof would be held in the Court House in the Town of Arcadia, the parish seat, at ten o'clock A.M., January 31st. Four members of the Stewart faction appeared in person at the time and place named. The other two members of this faction were represented by proxy. Several members of the Wimberly faction were in and about the Court House while the meeting was in progress but they refrained from going into the room in which it was held. The members present and represented proceeded to organize the Committee by electing a Chairman and a Secretary, and after declaring that there were vacancies in the Committee from Wards Two, Four, Five and Seven, elected residents thereof to fill the vacancies.

Learning what had been done at this meeting, Mr. Wimberly, who is Chairman of the old Committee, proceeded to call a meeting of the entire Committee, including all of the eleven newly elected ones, and the old members from Wards Two, Four, Five and Seven to be held in the Parish Court House at two o'clock P.M. January 31st. At this meeting there were present the newly elected members comprising the Wimberly faction and Bryan, Carlile and Sudduth. They proceeded to perfect an organization of the Committee by the election of officers. The salary of the Assistant Secretary was fixed at Fifteen ($15) Dollars per month. The Chairman announced that no one had been elected member of the Committee from Wards Five and Seven and only one member had been elected from Ward Two, and "that the old members are now serving until their successors have been named by the Committee, and it now being the duty of the Committee to name the members to serve for the ensuing terms, and then called for nominations accordingly." W.A. Bryan, W.C. Carlile and H.E. Sudduth were unanimously elected to represent said wards on the Committee.

The present suit was instituted by the six members of the Committee, composing the Stewart faction, and several other citizens, tax payers and voters affiliated with the Democratic Party in Bienville Parish. The eight members of the other faction are impleaded as defendants.

Plaintiffs, in their petition, recite the history of the two meetings and affirm the legality and validity of the organization and proceedings of the meeting in which six of them participated, but, on various and sundry grounds, attack the legality of the organization effected and proceedings had in the meeting by defendants. In addition, plaintiffs seek to have their organization recognized as legal, and to enjoin the functioning of the officers elected by the Wimberly faction and to procure possession of the records and funds now in the custody of that Committee and its officers; and to prevent the disposing or dissipating of said funds or any portion thereof. A temporary restraining order issued, which, until hearing could be had on the rule nisi for preliminary injunction, restrained and prohibited the defendants from doing and performing any of the various acts sought to be prevented by plaintiffs.

Defendants, answering the rule, affirm the legality of the organization of the Committee effectuated by them, and its proceedings. They attack as illegal the organization of said Committee by the Stewart faction and the proceedings thereof, assigning several reasons for their position. They expressly aver that all of their number, including Bryan, Carlile and Sudduth, are lawful members of said Committee and constitute a majority thereof; that the records and funds in the possession of the officers elected by them should remain in their possession; that their status as legal members of the Committee and that of the officers by them elected should be recognized and upheld by the court. They pray that the temporary restraining order be set aside, the rule nisi be recalled, and that plaintiffs be cast for damages, itemized in their petition, in the sum of Seven Hundred Seventy ($770) Dollars, including Two Hundred Fifty ($250) Dollars attorneys' fees.

Prior to filing answer, defendants pleaded the unconstitutionality of Act 46 of 1940 insofar as it attempts to provide that members of the Parish Executive Committee do not hold office until the election and induction of their successors; that it, in such event, would be in violation of Section 6 *Page 644 of Article 19 of the Constitution of 1921. Defendants also in limine pleaded wrongful cumulation of and misjoinder of actions; misjoinder of parties plaintiffs and misjoinder of parties defendants. The petition was further excepted to as disclosing neither a cause nor a right of action.

Trial of the rule resulted in the issuance of preliminary injunction on the grounds alleged upon. The court overruled all of the exceptions and special pleas. Thereafter it was agreed that the answer of the defendants to the rule should stand as answer to the merits. The case on its merits was submitted for decision upon the evidence and testimony introduced on trial of the rule.

The court, giving written reasons therefor, held that the two meetings of members of the Committee on January 31st, and the proceedings had by each, were illegal, null, void and without lawful effect. It also held that the members of the Committee elected in 1940, but not re-elected in 1944, did not hold over and continue to exercise the duties of that office until their successors were inducted; that the failure to elect a member of the Committee automatically creates a vacancy. A permanent injunction issued.

The court further decreed and ordered:

"* * * that the eleven members of the Bienville Parish Democratic Executive Committee, nominated and elected in January, 1944, hold a meeting for the purpose of organization and the election of members to the vacancies because of a failure to elect four members of said committee, on or before the fifteenth day following the day on which the judgment rendered herein, or which may be rendered on appeal, becomes final; and that the defendant, Lorris M.

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

Related

Opinion Number
Louisiana Attorney General Reports, 2000
Higgins, Inc. v. Walker
129 So. 2d 840 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1961)
Chapin v. Federal Transportation Co.
70 So. 2d 189 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1953)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
19 So. 2d 641, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/poole-v-merritt-lactapp-1944.