Shutt v. Blount

249 S.W.2d 904, 194 Tenn. 1, 30 Beeler 1, 1952 Tenn. LEXIS 345
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedJune 7, 1952
StatusPublished
Cited by41 cases

This text of 249 S.W.2d 904 (Shutt v. Blount) 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
Shutt v. Blount, 249 S.W.2d 904, 194 Tenn. 1, 30 Beeler 1, 1952 Tenn. LEXIS 345 (Tenn. 1952).

Opinion

*3 Mr. Justice Gailor

delivered the opinion of the Court.

. This appeal presents an election contest rising from the General Election held on August 4, 1950. In this suit the only office involved is that of County Court Cleric for Hardin County, and in that race, by the official canvass of the returns of the election made by the County Election Commissioners, the contestee, Harold Blount, received 1899 votes, and the contestant, Joe P. Shutt, ceived 1890 votes. The contestee was given his certificate of election and duly inducted into the office of County Court Clerk.

This contest was filed in the County Court, and there, the County Judge, who had himself been a candidate in the election, found himself disqualified, and transferred the lawsuit to the Circuit Court.

The bill was filed in dual aspect, seeking alternative relief, either (1) to have the polls purged and the contestant declared elected, or (2) in the alternative, to have the election declared void on account of illegality of votes cast and irregularities of the returns made. The contestee demurred on several grounds, but we need consider only the second, which was specific and directed “to that portion of the bill filed in the alternative, as seeking to have the Court adjudge the Appellant elected to the office of County Court Clerk, because there was no allegation in the petition of a valid, legal election.” The bill, with no reservation, alleged that said election was illegal, fraudulent and void, and because the appellant could not seek to hold office under an illegal, fraudulent and void election, “the contestee demurred to the bill,” and the Trial Judge sustained that ground of the demurrer.

*4 By answer, the contestee joined issue on the other aspect of the bill, and denied that there was such irregularity, illegality and fraud in voting, as warranted a declaration that the election was void.

Upon this issue the case was tried in the Circuit Court, but the contestant was not limited in any way in introducing all evidence available to him of the irregularities and illegalities in the voting and the impropriety of returns made by the officers of election.

After the Trial Judge heard all the evidence introduced by both sides, he took the case under advisement, and incorporated an opinion and finding of facts in his judgment, decided the case for the contestee. After making motion for new trial, the contestant has perfected this appeal.

Error is assigned on the action of the Trial Judge in sustaining a part of the demurrer and limiting the triable issue to the question whether the election was void. Since it appears that if the testimony of contestant’s witnesses be accepted, that in spite of the miscounting that the contestee would nevertheless have been elected, by a majority of seven instead of nine votes, and since it appears that the contestant was in no way limited in putting on all proof available to him, clearly the action of the Trial Judge in sustaining one ground of the demurrer, resulted in no prejudice to the contestant, and this he, himself, realizes since he says in his brief, at page 72:

“The demurrer to that portion of contestant’s petition wherein he sought to have himself declared elected having been sustained and the case having gone to an issue on the question of the validity or invalidity of the election, we, frankly, see no value now *5 in assigning errors as to the action of the Circuit Judge in ruling upon the demurrer, # *

For the reasons stated, these assignments of error are overruled.

While it is true that under the authority of Maloney v. Collier, 112 Tenn. 78, 83 S. W. 667, a bill such as the present may be filed in dual aspect, and seek relief in the alternative, yet it is apparent from the following statement of the opinion, that at some stage an election of relief must he made:

“It seems to follow from the authorities cited, and as, in substance, is especially held in Lewis v. Wathins, ([71 Tenn. 174] 3 Lea 174) supra, that in every contested election case under the Code two distinct grounds of action may be alleged, namely, first, that the election is void, and, secondly, if valid, that the contestant is entitled to the office on the ground that, after a purging of the polls, it will appear that he has received the majority of the votes cast at such election. It likewise follow's that one of the grounds may he properly stated on the face of the petition and the other improperly or not sufficiently stated, and that one may he stricken out on demurrer for insufficiency and the other retained as being stated with sufficient fullness and accuracy to meet the objections raised by demurrer. It also follows that both may be stated on the face of the petition with sufficient fullness and accuracy to resist the assaults of a demurrer, and that the parties may go to proof, and one be sustained and the other rejected on the evidence.” (112 Tenn. at pages 102-103, 83 S. W. at page 673.)

This is a clear recognition that the relief in the alternative is inconsistent and contradictory, and there *6 must be at some stage, an election whether there will be a judgment that the election is void, or whether the polls will be purged of illegal votes, and the contestant declared elected, since only in a legal election can one be elected to public office. In the present case, because the Trial Judge concluded that there had been no sufficient allegation of a legal election, and that there had been an unconditional allegation that the election as held, was void, the election of remedies which would have been made at some stage in any event, was imposed on the contestant when the second ground of the demurrer was sustained.

It remains to consider whether, on all the evidence presented, the Trial Judge was warranted in declaring that the election of County Court Clerk in Hardin County, was not void on account of illegal voting and irregularity in the returns. 'Since many other candidates and officers were involved in the General Election of August 4, 1950', the Court would only be justified in declaring the election for Clerk void, if the evidence was clear and definite that the illegality and irregularity of which complaint was made, affected the race for County Court Clerk. The mere showing that unqualified persons voted (those not registered when the law required them to be registered, and those who had not paid their poll tax when they were liable therefore) would only be relevant on the issue if it was shown not only that unqualified voters voted, but that they voted in the Clerk’s race. While we recognize that such evidence would be difficult to obtain, it is nevertheless true that there is no such evidence in the record before us.

Prom the poll lists and tally sheets filed, it does not appear that public interest was centered in the Clerk’s race rather than on the other contests for county office. *7 The number of votes east for the other county officers were about the same as those cast in the Clerk’s race.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
249 S.W.2d 904, 194 Tenn. 1, 30 Beeler 1, 1952 Tenn. LEXIS 345, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shutt-v-blount-tenn-1952.