Pridemore v. Fox

59 S.E.2d 899, 134 W. Va. 456, 1950 W. Va. LEXIS 50
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedMay 31, 1950
Docket10238
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 59 S.E.2d 899 (Pridemore v. Fox) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pridemore v. Fox, 59 S.E.2d 899, 134 W. Va. 456, 1950 W. Va. LEXIS 50 (W. Va. 1950).

Opinion

Fox, Judge:

The Town of Ansted was organized in the year 1891, under the provisions of what was then Chapter 47 of the Code, and has continued as a municipality to this date. On June 7, 1949, proceeding under Code, 8-3-4, an election was held to select a mayor, recorder and five members of the council. The following individuals were candidates for office on what was called the Progressive Ticket, namely: For mayor, Shirley Pridemore, hereinafter called contestant; for recorder, H. F. Stanton; and for members of the council, R. R. Dix, Jesse Keffer, Raymond McGraw, Quenton Britt and Emory Skaggs. On the Peoples Ticket, Melvin Fox was a candidate for mayor; W. D. Skaggs for recorder; and for members of the council, Kenneth Steele, *458 Chalmer Skaggs, M. L. Alley, Orval Eades and E. R. Vawter, all hereinafter called contestees. In said election, the result was ascertained and declared by the officers who conducted said election, and the candidates on the Peoples Ticket were declared elected. For the office of mayor, Shirley Pridemore received 186 votes, and Melvin Fox 199 votes. For the office of recorder, W. D. Skaggs received 217 votes, and H. F. Stanton 161 votes. For the office of member of the council, Kenneth Steele received 207 votes, Chalmer Skaggs, 199 votes, M. L. Alley, 194 votes, Orval Eades, 192 votes, E. R. Vawter, 188 votes, R. R. Dix, 183 votes, Jesse Keffer, 186 votes, Raymond McGraw, 183 votes, Quenton Britt, 178 votes, and Emory Skaggs, 172 votes.

Within the time prescribed by statute, Shirley Pride-more, a candidate for mayor on the Progressive Ticket, gave notice that he would contest the election of Melvin Fox, W. D. Skaggs, Kenneth Steele, Chalmer Skaggs, M. L. Alley, Orval Eades and E. R. Vawter, for the offices for which they were candidates. No notice of contest was filed by any candidate other than Shirley Pridemore, and he filed such notice, as a candidate for mayor, and as a citizen and legal voter of the Town- of Ansted. The contest was heard by the newly elected council, under the provisions of Code, 8-3-6, which provision has been applied by this Court in the case of Evans v. Charles, 133 W. Va. 463, 56 S. E. (2d) 880. Testimony touching the conduct of the election was heard by the council, and on August 3, 1949, an order was entered by said council holding that the municipal election, of June 7, 1949, was legally held and conducted, and that at such election Melvin Fox was elected mayor, W. D. Skaggs recorder, and Kenneth Steele, Chalmer Skaggs, M. L. Alley, Orval Eades and E. R. Vawter members of the council, to which order Shirley Pridemore objected and excepted at the time. Subsequent to the entry of this order, and on September 20, 1949, the Judge of the Circuit Court of Fayette County, upon the petition of Pridemore, awarded a writ of certio-rari by which the complete record of all orders and proceedings taken in the election contest aforesaid before the *459 council of the Town of Ansted were removed and transferred to said Circuit Court. On the 14th day of October, 1949, an order was entered by said Circuit Court in said proceeding finding that Shirley Pridemore, as a candidate for mayor, and as a citizen and legal voter of the Town of Ansted, had the right to contest the election of Melvin Fox and the other candidates on the Peoples Ticket who were declared elected at the election held on June 7, 1949; that it was impossible to ascertain the true result of said election by reason of the fact that fifty-eight persons who voted in said election were not registered in the municipal registration book for the Town of Ansted, and that they were permitted to vote unchallenged ballots, and their ballots were allowed to mingle with the ballots of qualified voters. The judgment of the court was that the certificates of election issued to Melvin Fox, W. D. Skaggs, M. L. Alley, Chalmer Skaggs, Kenneth Steele, E. R. Vawter and Orval Eades be set aside and held for naught; that the said election be declared void and of no effect; and that the offices attempted to be filled at the said election be declared vacant, to which ruling the contestees, and each of them, excepted at the time. On December 12, 1949, on motion of Melvin Fox, and the other named candidates on the Peoples Ticket, we granted this writ of error.

No ordinances were ever adopted by the council of the Town of Ansted concerning the conduct of municipal elections, except an ordinance which has no relation to this suit, and only covered nominations of candidates for offices to be filled in municipal elections. Section 3, Article 3, Chapter 8 of the Code, provides how the first election in a municipality organized under said chapter shall be held; but there is no provision in said chapter or elsewhere in the Code relating to the conduct of municipal elections required to be thereafter held under Code, 8-3-4. Nor is there, at the present time, any statute governing the registration of voters in municipalities, independently of the general statute setting up our “Permanent Registration System”, enacted by Chapters 43 and 44, Acts of the Legislature, 1941, which does provide for *460 the registration of voters in municipalities, and which Act, Article 3, Section 14, (Michie’s Code, 1949, 8-3-14), contains the provision that:

“It shall be the duty of each municipality by ordinance to make provision for integrating the conduct of all municipal elections with the system of ‘Permanent Registration of Voters’. Such ordinances shall, to the extent that they are reasonably applicable, parallel those provisions of chapter three of the official code, which integrate county-state elections with the ‘Permanent Registration System’. The provisions of this act shall supersede conflicting provisions in existing municipal charters and shall be deemed as amendments to such charters.”

It is probably the general practice in municipal elections to follow the rules prescribed by statute for the conduct of elections for state, county and district offices; but no statute so provides, nor has the Town of Ansted, by ordinance or otherwise, adopted, for the control of its elections, statutory provisions with respect to the election of state, county and district offices. These statements are made in order to emphasize the problem confronting this Court in attempting to pass upon the validity of a municipal election without a statutory guide, or a controlling ordinance. It presents a situation which ought not to be permitted to continue, but one with which this Court has no power to deal.

The first assignment of error on the part of the con-testees is that Shirley Pridemore did not, as a candidate for mayor on the Progressive Ticket, have the right to contest said election as to the offices of recorder or council members, for neither of which positions was he a candidate. As noted above, the contest was filed by Shirley Pridemore, as candidate for mayor and as a citizen and taxpayer of the Town of Ansted. No other candidate on the Progressive Ticket contested said election. In the notice of contest, the said Pridemore did not claim to have been elected to the office of mayor, but based his contest on the contention that there had been no legal or valid *461 election, and that no one had been elected to any office attempted to be filled thereby. The concluding paragraph of his notice of contest is as follows:

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Bluebook (online)
59 S.E.2d 899, 134 W. Va. 456, 1950 W. Va. LEXIS 50, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pridemore-v-fox-wva-1950.