Roe v. Mobile Cty. Appointing Board

52 F.3d 300
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit
DecidedApril 26, 1995
Docket94-7138
StatusPublished

This text of 52 F.3d 300 (Roe v. Mobile Cty. Appointing Board) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Roe v. Mobile Cty. Appointing Board, 52 F.3d 300 (11th Cir. 1995).

Opinion

United States Court of Appeals,

Eleventh Circuit.

Nos. 94-7138, 94-7155.

Larry ROE, Perry O. Hooper, Sr., James D. Martin, Plaintiffs- Appellees,

v.

STATE OF ALABAMA, By and Through its Attorney General James EVANS, Defendant-Appellant,

James Bennett, Honorable Alabama Secretary of State, Defendant- Appellant,

John W. Davis, a representative of a class of persons who have sought to have their ballots counted in an action in the Circuit Court of Coosa County, Alabama, Defendant-Appellant,

Mobile County Appointing Board, Lionel W. Noonan, Defendants,

Wilcox County Appointing Board, Jerry Boggan, Defendants- Appellants,

O.P. Woodruff, Honorable Probate Judge of Lowndes County, Willie Vaughner, Honorable Sheriff of Lowndes County, et al., Defendants,

Elsie Davis, Honorable Circuit Clerk of Lowndes County, W.A. Kynard, Honorable Circuit Clerk of Dallas County, Mary C. Moore, Honorable Circuit Clerk of Perry County, Curtis J. Elzie, Honorable Circuit Clerk of Bullock County, David S. Nix, Honorable Circuit Clerk of Barbour County, Devon Kiker, Honorable Circuit Clerk of Russell County, Eddie D. Mallard, Honorable Circuit Clerk of Macon County, Debra P. Hackett, Honorable Circuit Clerk of Montgomery County, Barbara Craft, Honorable Circuit Clerk of Calhoun County, Polly Conradi, Honorable Circuit Clerk of Jefferson County, Billy S. Yates, Honorable Circuit Clerk of Etowah County, Earl Carter, Honorable Circuit Clerk of Jefferson County, Bessemer Division, Carolyn M. Smith, Honorable Circuit Clerk of Cherokee County, Jean Browning, Honorable Circuit Clerk of St. Clair County, Samuel L. Grice, Honorable Circuit Clerk of Talladega County, Jackie Calhoun, Honorable Circuit Clerk of Baldwin County, Jackie B. Howard, Honorable Circuit Clerk of Washington County, Susan F. Wilson, Honorable Circuit Clerk of Mobile County, Donald R. Gibson, Honorable Circuit Clerk of Choctaw County, Wayne Brunson, Honorable Circuit Clerk of Clarke County, John Sawyer, Honorable Circuit Clerk of Monroe County, James D. Taylor, Honorable Circuit Clerk of Escambia County, Brenda M. Peacock, Honorable Circuit Clerk of Pike County, Ann W. Tate, Honorable Circuit Clerk of Crenshaw County, Bobby T. Branum, Honorable Circuit Clerk of Butler County, Jean E. Riley, Honorable Circuit Clerk of Conecuh County, Julia L. Trant, Honorable Circuit Clerk of Houston County, Jim Ellis, Honorable Circuit Clerk of Coffee County, Roger A. Powell, Honorable Circuit Clerk of Covington County, Connie Burdeshaw, Honorable Circuit Clerk of Henry County, Willie Powell, Honorable Circuit Clerk of Wilcox County, Veleria Thomley, Honorable Circuit Clerk of Geneva County, Bettye B. Garrett, Honorable Circuit Clerk of Dale County, Vinita B. Thompson, Honorable Circuit Clerk of Walker County, James E. Renfroe, Honorable Circuit Clerk of Fayette County, Carl F. Woods, Honorable Circuit Clerk of Lamar County, Seyaine Sealy, Honorable Circuit Clerk of Marengo County, Jack T. Pate, Honorable Circuit Clerk of Pickens County, Johnnie Knott, Honorable Circuit Clerk of Greene County, Carole Smith, Honorable Circuit Clerk of Sumter County, Betty Gayle Pate, Honorable Circuit Clerk of Hale County, Kim S. Benefield, Honorable Circuit Clerk of Randolph County, Frank Lucas, Honorable Circuit Clerk of Tallapoosa County, Fred Posey, Honorable Circuit Clerk of Autauga County, Horace D. Perry, Honorable Circuit Clerk of Cleburne County, Robert Giddens, Honorable Circuit Clerk of Clay County, Phyllis Cumbee, Honorable Circuit Clerk of Chambers County, Earl Sayers, Honorable Circuit Clerk of Elmore County, Dan Reeves, Honorable Circuit Clerk of Shelby County, Doris T. Turner, Honorable Circuit Clerk of Tuscaloosa County, Mike Smith, Honorable Circuit Clerk of Chilton County, Gerald D. Parker, Honorable Circuit Clerk of Coosa County, R.L. Foster, Honorable Circuit Clerk of Bibb County, Billy D. Harbin, Honorable Circuit Clerk of Madison County, Jimmy Lindsey, Honorable Circuit Clerk of DeKalb County, Jean Albert Scott, Honorable Circuit Clerk of Marshall County, Charles Page, Jr., Honorable Circuit Clerk of Limestone County, Leonard V. Griggs, Honorable Circuit Clerk of Jackson County, J.T. Newton, Honorable Circuit Clerk of Franklin County, James O. Garrard, Honorable Circuit Clerk of Marion County, W.F. Bailey, Honorable Circuit Clerk of Winston County, Robert G. Bates, Honorable Circuit Clerk of Cullman County, Michael E. Criswell, Honorable Circuit Clerk of Blount County, C. Phillip Bowling, Honorable Circuit Clerk of Colbert County, Kenneth C. Austin, Honorable Circuit Clerk of Lauderdale County, W. Larry Smith, Honorable Circuit Clerk of Lawrence County, Cleo D. Teague, Honorable Circuit Clerk of Morgan County, Defendants-Appellants.

Jan. 4, 1995.

Appeals from the United States District Court for the Southern District of Alabama. (No. CV 94-885-AH-S), Alex T. Howard, Jr., Judge.

Before TJOFLAT, Chief Judge, EDMONDSON and BIRCH, Circuit Judges.

PER CURIAM:

In Alabama, a person voting by absentee ballot must execute an

"affidavit" in the presence of a " "notary public or other officer

authorized to acknowledge oaths or two witnesses 18 years of age or 1 older.' " Ala.Code § 17-10-7 (1980). Section 17-10-9 of the code

prescribes the physical form of the ballot and the affidavit. The

affidavit form must be printed on an envelope. A second, smaller

envelope, which does not identify the absentee voter and contains

the voter's completed ballot, must be sealed inside the affidavit

envelope, and that envelope must then be mailed to the appropriate

county election official. See Ala.Code § 17-10-9 (1980).

The affidavit envelopes are held unopened until noon on

election day. Beginning at noon, the "absentee election manager"

delivers the envelopes to the "election officials" for counting.

They, in turn, with poll watchers present, call the name of each

voter casting an absentee ballot, "open each affidavit envelope,

review the affidavit to certify that such voter is entitled to vote

and deposit the plain envelope containing the absentee ballot into

a sealed ballot box." Ala.Code § 17-10-10 (1980). These ballots

are then "counted and otherwise handled in all respects as if the

said absentee voter were present and voting in person." Id.2

1 The contents of this affidavit are prescribed by § 17-10-7 of the Alabama Code, the full text of which appears in the appendix to this opinion. 2 The Secretary of State's Election Handbook for 1994 interpreted these requirements as follows:

The task of absentee poll workers on election day falls into two phases. Beginning at noon (or later) they are to open the affidavit envelopes, review the affidavits, and deposit the plain envelopes in a sealed ballot box.

If, upon examination, the affidavit is not properly witnessed or notarized, is not signed by the voter, or does not otherwise contain sufficient information to determine that the person is a qualified elector and is entitled to vote absentee, the ballot should not be counted [Attorney General's opinion 80- Alabama law also provides a method of contesting statewide

elections such as those involved in this case. Section 17-15-50 of

the Alabama Code provides that any elector may contest certain

statewide elections by filing a written statement and a bond with

the state legislature within ten days after the Speaker of the

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52 F.3d 300, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/roe-v-mobile-cty-appointing-board-ca11-1995.