State Ex Rel. Williams v. Jones

164 S.W.2d 823, 179 Tenn. 206, 15 Beeler 206, 1942 Tenn. LEXIS 13
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 10, 1942
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 164 S.W.2d 823 (State Ex Rel. Williams v. Jones) 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. Williams v. Jones, 164 S.W.2d 823, 179 Tenn. 206, 15 Beeler 206, 1942 Tenn. LEXIS 13 (Tenn. 1942).

Opinion

Mb,. Chief Justice Green

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This suit was instituted by petition for mandamus directed at defendants, the Davidson County Board of Election Commissioners. It appeared from the petition that an election for councilman for the Sixth 'Ward of the City of Nashville was held on September 3, 1912, in which relator Williams received 87 votes and one Hudson received 83 votes. A mandamus was sought to compel the defendant Board to issue a certificate of election to relator Williams.

The record exhibited to a Justice of this Court during the vacation, along with a petition for certiorari, showed that one of the circuit judges at Nashville had upon presentation of the petition for mandamus issued the peremptory writ as prayed in the petition, no alternative writ being issued and the defendants not being afforded an opportunity to answer. Conceiving that the circuit judge had exceeded his jurisdiction in granting the peremptory writ under such circumstances, the Justice of this Court directed the issue of the writs of certiorari and supersedeas to bring the case here upon authority *209 of State ex rel. v. Grindstaff, 144 Tenn., 554, 234 S. W., 510.

After the record was filed in this Conrt, counsel for the relator and counsel for the defendants entered into a stipulation by the terms of which counsel for defendants waived the right to answer and all counsel agreed that the case might be here determined on its merits upon the facts stated in the petition for mandamus and in the petition for certiorari and supersedeas addressed to this Court.

There is in truth no dispute about the facts. The Commissioners of Election declined to issue the certificate of election to relator Williams because the latter had not within more than five days before election filed a detailed statement of his campaign expenses with the chairman of the County Election Commission. The Commissioners declined to issue a certificate of election to the opposing candidate because he had not received a majority of the votes cast.

Section 2259 of the Code provides, among other things, that any candidate in an election for a State, city or district office shall, “not more than ten days nor less than five days before such . . ". final election,” file such a statement with the officer designated in Code, section 2261. In the case of a municipal election, this statement is to be filed with the chairman of the county board of election.

Code, section 2265, provides: “No officer or board, authorized to issue certificates of nomination or election, shall issue any such certificate to any person until the statements required by this statute shall have been made and filed, in accordance with its provisions.”

Code, sections 2262 and 2264 provide for the filing of post-election statement of expenses. Both these state *210 ments, under other sections of the Code, are required to be verified under oath.

Code, section 2203 provides that any person violating the sections providing for these statements of expenses shall be fined not less than $100.00 nor more than $5,000.00, or confined in the county jail noteless than thirty days nor more than twelve months, or both.

Code, section 2266' provides: “No person shall be permitted to qualify as an officer or to receive a certificate of nomination or election until he shall have filed the statement, as provided, and no officer shall receive any salary, or other emolument of office, until such statement shall have been filed as herein provided.”

Code, section 2267, provides that such statements when so filed shall be open to public inspection.

Other sections of the Code embodying this Corrupt Practices Act (chapter 59 of the Acts of 1927) are not material to this investigation.

It is' conceded by counsel for the defendant Commissioners that our Corrupt Practices Act was taken from a like statute enacted several years before our statute in the iState of Kentucky. Many of the provisions of our statute are identical with the provisions of the Kentucky statute.

When a statute of another State is adopted in Tennessee, the judicial construction in the State of its origin is imported and written in the statute in so far as this construction does not antagonize our laws and our public policy. Smith v. Dayton Coal, etc., Co., 115 Tenn., 543, 92 S. W., 62, 4 L. R. A. (N. S.), 1180 ; Gazzola v. Kimball, 156 Tenn., 229, 299 S. W., 1039.

In the case of Ridings v. Jones, 213 Ky., 810, 281 S. W., 999, 1001, the Court of Appeals of Kentucky, *211 speaking- of the Corrupt Practices Act in that State said this:

“Construing the statute, this court has steadily held that the statute is mandatory as to the filing of the pre-election expense account, hut directory only as to the time when it shall he filed, and a substantial compliance with the statute as time of filing is sufficient,” citing many of its previous decisions.

Now, in the case before us, according to the petition for mandamus, the relator prepared a detailed statement of his expenses and “he posted” this statement addressed to the Davidson County Board of Election Commissioners on August 29, 1942, which statement was signed but was not verified by oath.

This statement was received by the Board of Election Commissioners, together with the envelope in which it was enclosed. The statement and the envelope are filed as an exhibit to the petition for certiorari and the postmark on the envelope bears date August 31, 8:30 A. M.

The apparent contradiction between the relator’s statement and the postmark may be explained' by the fact that August 29 was Saturday and August 31 Monday. The statement may have been posted at a late hour on the 29th in a box in which mail was not taken up on Sunday.

At any rate, the Commissioners received this statement on August 31, three days before election, and under the construction given the statute by the Court of Appeals, this was a substantial compliance with the provisions as to the time such statement should have been filed.

In Hoskins v. McGuire, 194 Ky., 785, 241 S. W., 55, candidates for mayor and councilmen of a small city in which there were only two precincts were regarded as *212 having substantially complied with the requirement of filing pre-election statements fifteen days before election by filing such statements on the ninth day before the election.

The election here under consideration was held in one ward only, that being one of the small wards of the City of Nashville. The statement filed by relator showed that his only pre-election expenses were $6.00' for cards printed and $15.00 for workers, or a total of $21.00.

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Bluebook (online)
164 S.W.2d 823, 179 Tenn. 206, 15 Beeler 206, 1942 Tenn. LEXIS 13, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-williams-v-jones-tenn-1942.