Potter v. Robbins

290 S.W. 396, 155 Tenn. 1, 2 Smith & H. 1, 1927 Tenn. LEXIS 39
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 13, 1926
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 290 S.W. 396 (Potter v. Robbins) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Potter v. Robbins, 290 S.W. 396, 155 Tenn. 1, 2 Smith & H. 1, 1927 Tenn. LEXIS 39 (Tenn. 1926).

Opinion

*3 Mr. Justice Swiggart

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The appellant, W. H. Potter, duly filed his petition before.the Chancellor of the second division, to contest the election of the defendant, M. J. Bobbins, to the office of County Judge for Scott County, at the August election, 1926.

The petition averred that Potter received the majority of the legal votes cast at said election, and was entitled to the office, notwithstanding Bobbins was given a majority on the face of the returns.

The petition contained a prayer for a decree that Potter was entitled to the office, and also an alternative prayer that the election be declared void because Bobbins was not a licensed lawyer, and, therefore, is ineligible to hold the office.

The appeal is from the action of the Chancellor in sustaining a demurrer to the petition.

Averments of the petition that more than 100 voters were given unlawful aid in marking their ballots, and that by the illegal use of money the defendant procured sufficient illegal votes to bring'about his election, were held to be too general, and one of the grounds of demurrer directed at these averments was sustained by the Chancellor.

The appellant concedes on his brief that the demurrer was good as to these averments, and they need not be noticed in this opinion.

The petition avers that there were three candidates for the office of county judge; that petitioner received on the face of the returns 1001 votes; that the defendant received 1065 votes, and that the third candidate received 936 votes. It will be noted that the defendant’s plurality *4 over the third candidate is only 129 votes, and that the petitioner’s plurality over the third candidate is only 65 votes.

The petition contains averments expressly admitting and alleging that the irregularities pointed out did not render the election void, and that a valid election was held.

Petitioner averred “that of the legal votes cast in said election he received a clear majority and is entitled to said office. ’ ’

Then follow averments that in four precincts of the second civil district of the county the defendant was given 450 votes and petitioner only 68 votes; that in these four precincts 199 persons voted who were required by law to pay poll taxes as a condition precedent to their right to vote, and who had, in fact, not paid their poll taxes as much as sixty days prior to the date of the election, as required by law. Two other election precincts are then named, in one of which it is averred that the defendant was given 54 votes and the petitioner 19 votes, with 32 illegal votes cast, and in the other of these two precincts it is averred that the defendant was given 41 votes and the petitioner 6 votes, with 15 illegal votes cast. The names of the voters alleged to have been disqualified because of their failure to pay poll taxes are given in each of said six precincts.

Following the enumeration of the illegal votes in each of said precincts the petition contains the following:

“Petitioner charges that by eliminating these illegal voters he has a clear majority of all the votes cast in said election, and that he was legally and constitutionally elected County Judge of Scott County, and is entitled to said office. ’ ’

The quotation last made from the petition is explanatory of the averment made at the outset of the petition, *5 that the petitioner received a majority of the legal votes cast in the election. Petitioner’s claim is, on the face of the bill, that the polls should be purged of the illegal votes, and that he be declared elected because receiving a majority of the ballots after eliminating the illegal votes.

On the brief filed for the petitioner it is urged that the purging of the polls should be accomplished by apportioning the illegal votes between the candidates, according to the entire vote returned .for each candidate, each precinct or ballot box to be treated separately in this procedure. Moore v. Sharp, 98, Tenn., 491, is relied upon as supporting petitioner’s contention that this may be done.

It will be noted that the petition discloses a third candidate who received almost as many votes as either the petitioner or the defendant. The bill does not disclose how many votes this third candidate received in each of the six precincts named in the petition.

Neither does the petition disclose how many votes the petitioner and the defendant, respectively, received in each of the four precincts in the second civil district. These four precincts are grouped, with the statement in the bill that in the four precincts the defendant was given a vote of 450, and the petitioner a vote of 68.

Even if it could be conceded that the votes described as illegal could be apportioned according to the rules stated in Moore v. Sharp, supra, we think the averments of the petition fall short of showing a state of fact which would entitle the petitioner to be declared elected.

The failure to specify the vote of the petitioner and the defendant in each of the four precincts of the second civil district renders it impossible to determine how the illegal votes in each of said precincts would be apportioned between the two candidates under the- rule invoked, and *6 the bill fails to disclose the effect on the election result of applying the rule to the vote cast in these precincts.

Certainly it cannot be urged successfully that illegal votes cast in a given precinct should be apportioned between the two leading candidates, to the exclusion of the third candidate. The bill discloses that there was a third candidate whose total vote was within 1291 votes of the total received by the defendant, and failing to disclose the vote received by such candidate in the precincts in which the illegal votes were cast, it is impossible to ascertain from the averments of the bill how the illegal votes would be apportioned between the three candidates, under the rule invoked by petitioner, nor whether the purging of the polls of these illegal votes would disclose the election of the defendant, the petitioner,' or the third candidate.

The substance of the petition is that the defendant received a plurality of 64 votes on the face of the returns ; that in six election precincts a total of 246' illegal votes were cast; that in these six precincts the petitioner received only 93 votes, while the defendant received a total of 545' votes. The vote received by the third candidate in the six precincts is not disclosed.

The bill does not aver, even on information and belief, that any of said illegal votes were cast for and counted for the defendant.

In Furnace Co. v. Railroad, 113 Tenn., 697, 714, a suit to invalidate an election for a bond issue, this court said:

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Bluebook (online)
290 S.W. 396, 155 Tenn. 1, 2 Smith & H. 1, 1927 Tenn. LEXIS 39, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/potter-v-robbins-tenn-1926.