State Ex Rel. Davis v. Kivett

177 S.W.2d 551, 180 Tenn. 598, 16 Beeler 598
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 5, 1944
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 177 S.W.2d 551 (State Ex Rel. Davis v. Kivett) 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
State Ex Rel. Davis v. Kivett, 177 S.W.2d 551, 180 Tenn. 598, 16 Beeler 598 (Tenn. 1944).

Opinion

Me. Justice Gailob

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This appeal involves the election of County Judge of Claiborne County in the General Election of August, 1942. John P. Davis, himself an unsuccessful candidate for the office in that election, filed a bill in the Chancery Court against J. Kyle Kivett, the successful candidate for that office, according to the election returns, and against Glenn Pearman, I. N. Mink, and R. B. Parrott, Claiborne County Election Commissioners. The parties will be referred to hereip as complainant and defendants, according to their appearance in the Chancery Court.

Although complainant was a candidate for County Judge, he filed his bill, not seeking to have himself installed as such, but for the general welfare, to have the election annulled and declared void on account of the many illegal votes cast therein. The relief he seeks is merely that a regular and legal election may be held to fill the office. We find no identical counterpart of this proceeding in our reported cases. There are many cases in which suit is filed in the alternative, in which it is *600 sought either to have the complainant alleging himself to be the successful candidate, installed, or in the alternative to have the election declared void because of the illegal votes cast and counted therein. In this case the complainant proceeds upon the rule of law suggested in Maloney v. Collier, 112 Tenn., 78, 102, 83 S. W., 667, 673:

“These authorities also establish the proposition that such redress (i. e. declaring the election void) may be the sole purpose of an action, and that there need not be an assertion on the part of the party making such question that he received a sufficient number of votes at the election to entitle him to the office.”

Under the authority of Barham v. Denison, 159 Tenn., 226, 230, 17 S. W. (2d), 692, complainant seeks to have the entire election declared void because his specific charges of fraud and irregularity in the election affect a sufficient number of voting precincts to have changed the result of the election if all the voters in those precincts had voted one way. He does not insist that he would have been elected had the illegal votes been eliminated and the votes purged, but that his specifications of fraud and illegality in the election are sufficient to render the result of the election “incurably uncertain,” and necessitate our declaration that the entire election is void.

The appeal comes to this Court under section 2129 of the Code, and is to be governed, “in all respects, as appeals from the chancery court.” The issues presented do not necessitate the fixing of guilt on any individual or official. We are investigating the election itself to determine whether (1) the findings of the Chancellor are supported by the weight of the evidence and (2) whether on those findings of fraud and irregularity, the Chancellor *601 was justified in holding the election for County Judge void as not being a real and legal expression of the will of the electors.

■ The bill charges complainant was running on the Anti-Tax Payers Ticket and that defendant Kivett was a candidate on the Tax Payers Ticket, which was a fusion ticket of Democrats and Republicans; that the candidates running on the Tax Payers Ticket openly stated that they intended to steal the election; that the County Election Commissioners, who are made defendants, were open and enthusiastic partisans and supporters of the Tax Payers Ticket and its candidates, gave the other ticket no representation at the polls and without exception, appointed officers, judges, and clerks who were close relatives of candidates on the Tax Payers Ticket, or bootleggers, law violators and county employees dominated and controlled by the supporters of the Tax Payers Ticket. The Sheriff, who was a candidate on the Tax Payers Ticket, appointed many special deputies to serve on election day, not to keep the peace, 'but to bear arms and otherwise intimidate the voters and control the election. The bill further charges that complainant and the other candidates on his ticket were not permitted to have any watchers at the polls, and that when they undertook to send watchers to the polls, that such watchers were forcibly dejected and prevented from serving as such; that defendant Election Commissioners actively participated in stealing the election. That one of the Eleótion Commissioners, I: N. Mink, bought votes all day at the New Tazewell precinct; that R. B. P'arrott, another Election Commissioner, who was not even a resident of Claiborne County, and had not been for more than a year prior to the election, voted in the election and worked on *602 election day at the Fork Ridge precinct buying* votes, procuring people from Kentucky to vote in the election and actively committed other violations of the election laws; that Glenn Pearman, one of the Election Commissioners, acted as one of the judges in the Arthur precinct, permitted and assisted more than 100 people to vote illegally, marking their ballots when they were not physically disabled, and buying* votes; that further, the Election Commissioners, contrary to law, failed to file a copy of the election returns with the County Court Clerk within ten days after the election, and failed to forward a copy to the Secretary of State; that prior to the election, they voted on absentee ballots, many soldiers who were entering* the armed service without complying with the provisions of the statute in that regard.

That more than 60' days before the election the candidates of the Tax Payers Ticket and their supporters, made up a slush fund, to which the defendant Kivett contributed large sums of money, and that said fund of more than $6,000 was used illegally for the purchase of poll tax receipts and for influencing voters; that defendant Kivett employed a Mrs. Branson to procure the names of all residents in the 8th Civil District, and gave her $448 with which to buy poll tax receipts for those citizens, which she did, and said citizens voted illegally on such poll tax receipts.

The defendant Kivett filed a demurrer and an answer. He demurred to the bill insofar as it sought to enjoin him from being inducted into office pending the election contest, and in his answer he denied all allegations of fraud or irregularity so far as he was individually concerned. He denied that he had rendered himself ineligible to hold office and exhibited his certificate of election and commission from the Governor.

*603 On motion the Chancellor dissolved the injunction against defendant Kivett and there has been no appeal from that order.

The Election Commissioners who were also named as defendants, filed an unsworn formal answer, denying any wrongdoing on their part. The case was submitted to the Chancellor on depositions, of which there are .several thousand pages.

After taking the case under advisement the Chancellor, in a detailed opinion of some 13 type-written pages, in which his findings of fact on the many charges of illegality are carefully and clearly set out, held that the election for County Judge in the election of August 6, 1942, was void for these illegalities.

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Bluebook (online)
177 S.W.2d 551, 180 Tenn. 598, 16 Beeler 598, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-davis-v-kivett-tenn-1944.