Regina Morrison Newman v. Shelby County Election Commission

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedFebruary 13, 2012
DocketW2011-00550-COA-R3-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Regina Morrison Newman v. Shelby County Election Commission (Regina Morrison Newman v. Shelby County Election Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Regina Morrison Newman v. Shelby County Election Commission, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2012).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT JACKSON January 17, 2012 Session

REGINA MORRISON NEWMAN, ET AL. v. SHELBY COUNTY ELECTION COMMISSION

Direct Appeal from the Chancery Court for Shelby County No. CH10-1538 Arnold B. Goldin, Chancellor

No. W2011-00550-COA-R3-CV - Filed February 13, 2012

This is an election contest case brought pursuant to Tennessee Code Annotated Section § 2-17-101, et seq. Appellants, unsuccessful candidates for various offices in the August 5, 2010 Shelby County general election, filed suit against the Appellee Shelby County Election Commission. Appellants aver that the election process was incurably flawed to the extent that Appellants and the citizens of Shelby County were denied a free and equal election as required by Article I, Section V of the Tennessee Constitution. The trial court granted an involuntary dismissal, under Tennessee Rule of Civil Procedure 41.02(2), finding that Appellants’ proof was insufficient to prove that the election was incurably uncertain. We affirm.

Tenn. R. App. P. 3. Appeal as of Right; Judgment of the Chancery Court Affirmed.

J. S TEVEN S TAFFORD, J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which A LAN E. H IGHERS, P.J., W.S.,and David R. Farmer, J., joined.

James G. Stranch, III and James G. Stranch, IV, Nashville, Tennessee, and David Cocke, Memphis, TN for the appellants, Regina Morrison Newsom, Minerva Johnican, Venita Marie Martin, Shep Wilbun, Corey Maclin, Randy L. Wade, Coleman Thompson, Ricky Dixon, Sondra Becton, and Glenn Wright.

John L. Ryder, Pablo Adrian Varela, and Samuel J. Muldavin, Memphis, Tennessee, for the appellee, Shelby County Election Commission.

OPINION

Regina Morrison Newman was an unsuccessful candidate for the office of County Trustee during the general election held in Shelby County on August 5, 2010. According to the record, Ms. Newman lost the election by 4,509 votes.1 Minerva Johnican was an unsuccessful candidate for the office of Criminal Court Clerk; she lost that contest by 4,886 votes. Venita Marie Martin was a candidate for the office of Circuit Court Judge for Division VIII in the August 5, 2010 election. Ms. Martin was unsuccessful, losing by 24,787 votes. Shep Wilbun was a candidate for the office of Juvenile Court Clerk and was unsuccessful, losing by 12,462 votes. Corey Maclin was an unsuccessful candidate for the Register of Deeds position; he lost the election by 27,720 votes. Randy Wade was a candidate for Sheriff in the August 5 election and was unsuccessful, losing by 6,602 votes. Ricky Dixon was a candidate for the office of Circuit Court Clerk; he lost by 17,431 votes. Sondra Becton was an unsuccessful candidate for the office of Probate Court Clerk; she lost by 6,519 votes. Glenn Wright (together with Ms. Newman, Ms. Johnican, Ms. Martin, Ms. Becton and Messrs. Wilbun, Maclin, and Wade, “Plaintiffs,” or “Appellants”)2 was an unsuccessful candidate for Criminal Court Judge for Division 3, losing by 1,516 votes.

Following the August 5, 2010 election, under Tennessee Law, the Shelby County Election Commission (the “Commission,” or “Appellee”) had until August 26, 2010 to certify the results of the election pursuant to Tennessee Code Annotated Section 2-8-113.3 Although the deadline for certification was not until August 26, 2010, the Commission certified the election early on August 19, 2010. Tennessee Code Annotated Section 2-17-105 provides that a “complaint contesting an election under §2-17-101 shall be filed within five (5) days after certification of the election.” On August 24, 2010, Appellants filed an emergency petition for temporary restraining order, injunctive relief, and declaratory judgment, contesting the August 5, 2010 election. An amended petition was filed on August

1 The margin of loss for each candidate is set out in the Tabulation of Votes Recorded for the State and Federal Primary and County Election, which is part of our record. 2 Ricky Dixon, a named plaintiff in the trial court, has chosen not to appeal. 3 Tennessee Code Annotated Section 2-8-113 provides, in relevant part, as follows:

(a) On the fourth Thursday after a primary election, the state coordinator of elections shall publicly calculate and compare the votes received by each person and declare who has been nominated for office in the primary or elected to the state executive committee. The candidates who receive the highest number of votes shall be declared elected or nominated; provided, that in order for any person to receive a party nomination by write-in ballots, such person must receive a number of write-in votes equal to or greater than five percent (5%) of the total number of registered voters of the district. However, this section shall not apply where there are candidates for the office involved listed on the official ballot.

-2- 25, 2010. The amended petition names the Commission, Shelby County Government, and the winning candidates for each of the offices sought by each of the Appellants as defendants.

The amended petition, which was filed pursuant to Tennessee Code Annotated Section 2-17-101 et seq., challenges the August 5, 2010 election asserting that the “election process was incurably flawed to the extent that Plaintiffs and [the] citizens of Shelby County were denied a free and equal election as required by Article I, Section V of the Tennessee Constitution.” In their prayer for relief, Appellants requested the Chancery Court to declare the August 5, 2010 election a nullity on two grounds: (1) “as a result of the current fraud, illegality, and irregularities which have occurred so far during the early voting process;” and (2) “as a result of the fraud, illegality, and substantial irregularities which have occurred during the voting process and afterward.” In their petition, Appellants alleged numerous irregularities in the August 5, 2010 election, including: (1) “vote swap,” where voters would touch their candidate’s name on the electronic touch-screen, only to have another candidate’s name appear; (2) incorrect “party identifiers,” where candidates in non-partisan races would incorrectly be identified as Republicans or Democrats; (3) a malfunction where incorrect data designated citizens who had voted in the May 2010 election as having early voted in the August 2010 election and that, as a result, some 5,400 voters who arrived at the polls to vote on August 5 were incorrectly told that they had already voted; (4) media coverage of the arrest of two individuals for having allegedly voted twice in a 2006 election, which Appellant’s asserted had a “chilling effect” on voters who, as a result of the malfunction involving the uploading of incorrect data were incorrectly told that they had already voted; (5) at the majority of voting locations, the voter tallies retrieved by Democratic poll watchers were inconsistent with the voter tallies subsequently given by the Commission; (6) inconsistent entries of provisional ballots in the GEMS audit log; (7) numerous improprieties regarding the handling of poll tapes all in violation of Tennessee Code Annotated Section 2-8-108;4 (8) allegations that many voting machines were not sealed; (9) the existence of a

4 Tennessee Code Annotated Section 2-8-108 provides:

(a) The commission shall preserve all paper ballots for six (6) months after the election to which they were cast or offered to be; cast and may then dispose of them. During the period in which they are preserved, the packages of ballots shall be kept securely locked and may be opened and the ballots examined only on court order or under chapter 18 of this title.

(b) All other election documents such as applications for all ballots, spoiled and rejected ballots, voter affidavits, records of assistance to voters, etc., shall be preserved by the county election commission for six (6) months or (continued...)

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Bluebook (online)
Regina Morrison Newman v. Shelby County Election Commission, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/regina-morrison-newman-v-shelby-county-election-co-tennctapp-2012.