State Ex Rel. Carr v. Steele

200 So. 496
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 13, 1941
DocketNo. 6261.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 200 So. 496 (State Ex Rel. Carr v. Steele) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Ex Rel. Carr v. Steele, 200 So. 496 (La. Ct. App. 1941).

Opinion

HAMITER, Judge.

At a Democratic primary election held in the Fall of 1936, respondent E. B. Steele received the nomination for the position of member of the Caldwell Parish School Board from Ward 5. An opponent was relator, J. W. Carr. At the general election that followed, in which the said Carr ran as an independent, success again attended Steele’s efforts. In due time the successful candidate qualified for such office and in January, 1937, commenced serving the six-year term for which he was elected.

Acting upon a petition charging Steele’s removal from the State and the existence of a vacancy in the mentioned office, together with certain evidence tending to support the charge, the Governor of Louisiana on January 13, 1940, appointed and commissioned the said J. W. Carr to fill the asserted vacancy for the unexpired portion of the term. This appointee, on January IS, 1940, took the required oath and otherwise sought to qualify for the office.

When the Caldwell Parish School Board convened in regular session on April 2, 1940, Carr appeared before it, presented his' commission, and asked to be seated as a successor to Steele who was then present and sitting as a member. The request was denied, after due consideration had been given thereto, and Steele was recognized as the legal representative on the board from Ward 5.

Following such recognition, Carr instituted this action. He prays:

“ * * * That there be judgment rendered in favor of the State of Louisiana on the relation of John W. Carr and against the said defendant, E. B. Steele, recognizing relator as being entitled to and as such sent into possession of the office as a member of the Caldwell Parish School Board from Ward Five of said Parish, to the end *497 that he may exercise the duties of said office and receive the fees and emoluments of same.
“Relator further prays that this Court may decree that there existed a vacancy in said office at the time the Governor of this State issued a commission in favor of relator to said office, and especially on January 15, 1940, when relator took the oath of office and qualified for same.
“Relator further prays that this Court decree that the said E. B. Steele has been usurping, intruding into and unlawfully holding and exercising and attempting to remain in possession of said office all in bad faith and offending the rights of your relator, and to that end relator prays that this Court declare that said defendant be excluded from said office.”

The gravamen of relator’s complaint is:

“That on of about two years ago the exact date of which relator does not know, the said E. B. Steele permanently moved from Ward Five, Caldwell Parish, Louisiana, and changed and established his domicile at Birmingham, Alabama, where he has continued to live, reside and maintain his domicile for approximately the past two years. In this connection relator shows that in the summer of 1939, the exact date of which relator does not know, the entire family of E. B. Steele permanently moved from Ward Five, Caldwell Parish, Louisiana, and have since continued to live and reside with the said E. B. Steele at the home established by him and for all of them at Birmingham, Alabama, which is and has for the past two years been his domicile.”

Respondent filed exceptions of no cause of action, no right of action and non-join-der of parties. All were overruled. None is urged in this court.

Issue was joined through the filing of an appropriate answer. Respondent insists therein that continuously since his election as a school board member he has been a resident of Ward 5 of Caldwell Parish, Louisiana.

On a trial of the merits of the case, relator was granted judgment in accordance with the prayer of his petition; and respondent brings this appeal.

To be eligible to hold office in Louisiana, a person must be a citizen of this state and a duly qualified elector of the political subdivision wherein the functions of the office are to be performed; and if he changes his residence from such subdivision in which he holds the office, the office is thereby vacated. Article 8, Section 13, of the Louisiana Constitution of 1921. An essential factor for being a duly qualified elector is that “he shall have been an actual bona fide resident of the State for two years, of the parish one year, * * * and of the precinct, in which he offers to vote, three months next preceding the election.” Article 8, Section 1, of the Louisiana Constitution of 1921; Act 122 of the extra session of the Louisiana Legislature of 1921. Any vacancy in the membership of school boards caused by death or otherwise shall be filled by appointment by the Governor. Section 17 of Act 100 of 1922.

It is conceded by the litigants that the sole issue in this case involves the above stated provisions of law and is whether or not respondent Steele was an actual bona fide resident of Ward 5 of Caldwell Parish, Louisiana, on January 13, 1940, this being the date of the Governor’s appointment of relator. If he was, no vacancy then existed and the appointment was without effect. If otherwise, Carr was legally commissioned and is entitled to the office.

The pertinent facts disclosed by the record, in addition to those heretofore stated, are as follows:

Respondent Steele was born and reared in Ward 5 of Caldwell Parish, Louisiana, and was therein engaged in farming at the time of and for a while after his attaining the age of majority. In 1925, he commenced railroad work in the capacity of locomotive fireman with the Alabama and Great Southern Railroad, and followed that vocation until 1929. There was acquired by him, in the year 1930, a farm located in said Ward 5 and consisting of 150 acres of land. On this, he, together with his wife and two children, established a home, and carried on farming operations from year to year. In 1938, he sold 80 acres of the property, retaining the remaining 70 acres.

In 1937, after his election and the beginning of service as a school board member, Steele was solicited to work for his former railroad employer as a member of the extra-board. This classification provided only temporary work. Consideration was given the offer, however, because of financial reverses that had been experienced and had created for him a comparatively large indebtedness; and he journeyed to Birmingham, Alabama, as requested. His wife and children remained at home. This trip required his absence from the farm of ap *498 proximately three weeks. On December 15, 1937, he asked for and received an opinion from the Attorney General of Louisiana respecting the legal effect of the railroad employment on his school board position. That official advised in part as follows:

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200 So. 496, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-carr-v-steele-lactapp-1941.