State Ex Rel. Pace v. Logan

5 S.W.2d 247, 1928 Tex. App. LEXIS 340
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 3, 1928
DocketNo. 1644.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 5 S.W.2d 247 (State Ex Rel. Pace v. Logan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Ex Rel. Pace v. Logan, 5 S.W.2d 247, 1928 Tex. App. LEXIS 340 (Tex. Ct. App. 1928).

Opinion

O’QUINN, J.

This is a proceeding by information in the nature of a quo warranto by the state of Texas, upon the relation of Perry Pace, to oust appellee, J.' P. Logan, from the office of mayor of the city of Port Arthur, Tex., and to place relator, Perry Pace, in possession of said office.

The relator, Perry Pace, and appellee, J. P. Logan, were opposing candidates for the office of,mayor of Port Arthur, Tex., a city duly' incorporated under and by virtue of the laws of the state of Texas by a special act of the Legislature of March 20, 1911 (Sp. Laws 1911, c. 52), in an election for city officials held May 24, 1927. According to the result as announced by the officers who canvassed the returns of said election, relator, appellant, received 2,992 votes, and respondent, appellee, received 3,135 votes, whereupon appellee was declared by the city commission of said city of Port Arthur to have been elected mayor by a majority of 143 votes, and he qualified and took possession of said office and has been in possession thereof ever since.

We shall not undertake to. set out the pleadings of the parties, nor state the things done and -undertaken to be done, as the pleadings are very lengthy and the other matters are not, in our opinion, necessary to the disposition of the case. Suffice it to say:

That relator, appellant, alleged that the Charter of the City of Port Arthur, art. 1, c. 2, § 6, provided that:

“The commission of said city shall have power, on its own motion, or on petition of one hundred (100) qualified voters of said eity, to divide said eity, or said commissioners precincts, by ordinance, into as many wards, or voting precincts, or districts as they may deem necessary or desirable for the good of the inhabitants thereof, for voting purposes or otherwise; and may change the boundaries of same, but no such division or change shall be. made within six months before the city election next ensuing; such wards shall be as nearly square and regular in shape as practicable, and contain as nearly as practicable an equal number of voters.”

That acting under said authority to establish voting precincts, the eity commission, on January 7, 1924, created and divided said city into voting precincts or wards and named a place in each of the voting precincts thus created where elections should be held. That on January 20, 1927, respondent, appellee, who was then mayor of the city of Port Arthur, willfully and fraudulently, for the purpose of perpetuating himself in the office of mayor of said city of Port Arthur, and in violation of said section 6, c. 2, of the charter of said city, which provided that no change should be made in the voting precincts of said city within six months before the next ensuing city election, caused the city commission of said city to pass an ordinance creating out of a portion of two of the then existing voting precincts in said city a new voting precinct to be used in the primary election to be held on May 7, 1927, for the purpose of nominating city officials, and in the general election for city officials to be held May 24, 1927, and which new voting box is known herein as the “Grannis avenue” box. That the ordinance creating said new voting box was passed without authority, in violation of said section 6, c. 2, of the charter of said city, forbidding the creation of new voting precincts in said city within six months of the next ensuing city election, and that the voting precinct thus established was illegal and void. That the passing of said ordinance creating said new voting precinct was a willful and fraudulent attempt on the part of appellee to establish a voting place, including practically all of the negro voters in said city, for the purpose of influencing and controlling them and voting them for appellee. That appellee unlawfully and fraudulently designated certain ignorant, inexperienced, and incompetent negroes to act as election officers of said new voting precinct, inducing them to act according to his dictations in the conduct of said election and to induce all the negroes voting at said voting place to vote for him, appellee, at said election, for the purpose of thus unlawfully and fraudulently perpetuating himself in the office of mayor of said city. That 531 votes were cast at said voting box in said election, of which relator received 72 and respondent, appellee, received 459. That but for the-counting of said 531 illegal, fraudulent, and void votes polled at said illegal and void voting precinct and box, the result of said election would have been different, in that of the-remaining and only legal votes cast at said, election relator received 2,920 and respondent 2,670, showing relator to have been elected by a majority of 244 votes. That said' 531 illegal votes cast at said illegal and-void voting box should be rejected and eliminated, and that the result of said election should' be determined by the remaining votes cast at the regular and legal voting places, and that he was entitled to -be declared the duly and legally elected mayor of said city. "

In the alternative, relator, appellant, al- *249 ieged that if it should be held that the Gran-nis avenue voting bos was legally established and the votes thereat east be in that wise legal, that he, nevertheless, was legally, elected mayor, for in that there were 361 illegal votes cast in said election, 68 of which were east at said Grannis avenue bos, and 293 at the other boxes, naming the persons who cast said votes and stating their disqualifications, and that all of said illegal votes were cast and counted for respondent, appellee, which should be denied and thrown out, leaving appellant elected by a majority of 218 votes.

Relator prayed that said Grannis avenue box be declared illegal and void; that all ballots east at said box in said election be declared and held illegal and not to be counted ; that all ballots illegally east at the other voting boxes in said election be rejected; that all the legal ballots cast for mayor at said election be recounted, tabulated, and the result declared; that respondent, Logan, be adjudged not entitled to the office of mayor of said city, and be held to be an intruder and ejected; that he, relator, Pace, be declared duly and legally elected to the office of mayor of said city, and that he have his writ for the possession of same; that he have judgment for all salary, fees, and emoluments of said office unlawfully drawn, tafeen, and appropriated by appellee, for costs of suit, and relief generally.

Respondent, appellee, answered by general demurrer, several special exceptions, general denial, admitted that he and relator were the only candidates for mayor in the alleged election, and says that he was fairly and legally elected as mayor, and that the true and legal result of said election was canvassed and declared; that he thereupon duly qualified and began the. discharge of his duties as such mayor. Appellee then specially pleaded that a large number of voters who were not entitled to vote, naming them and stating their disqualifications, voted in said election, and that they all voted for relator, and that their votes should be rejected and not counted. His prayer was that relator tafee nothing by this suit, and that he have judgment declaring him the duly and legally elected mayor of the city of Port Arthur.

By supplemental petition, relator denied all the allegations in appellee’s answer, and by trial amendment alleged that appellee was disqualified to hold the office of mayor, for in that on May 23, 1927, he had challenged one N. M.

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Bluebook (online)
5 S.W.2d 247, 1928 Tex. App. LEXIS 340, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-pace-v-logan-texapp-1928.