Town of Terry v. Smith

48 So. 3d 507, 2010 Miss. LEXIS 567, 2010 WL 4242568
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 28, 2010
DocketNo. 2009-EC-01109-SCT
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 48 So. 3d 507 (Town of Terry v. Smith) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Town of Terry v. Smith, 48 So. 3d 507, 2010 Miss. LEXIS 567, 2010 WL 4242568 (Mich. 2010).

Opinion

PIERCE, Justice,

for the Court:

¶ 1. Nominally an election contest, this is a civil-procedure case of substantive and procedural bars. The plaintiffs-appellants initially sought circuit-court review of the decision of a municipal election commission under the wrong statute. They were time-barred under the statute pleaded in the amended complaint. And they are now procedurally barred from advancing a new theory, not argued before the court below. Accordingly, we affirm.

STATEMENT OF THE FACTS

¶ 2. Cedric Abston, approved by a body calling themselves the “Town of Terry Mississippi Municipal Democratic Executive Committee” (hereinafter “the Democratic Committee”), filed his papers to run for mayor of Terry, Mississippi, on March 7, 2009. On March 23, the municipal election commission met with Abston’s attorney in their presence and found that the Democratic Committee had been improperly formed. Because there was “no committee in place to qualify him” and he had not qualified as an at-large candidate, Ab-ston was, by extension, disqualified.

¶ 3. On May 8, 2009, the Democratic Committee and Abston filed a complaint against Mary Smith, the Town Clerk, and the Town Election Commission. Abston and the Democratic Committee alleged that Smith and the Election Commission had wrongly disqualified the Democratic Committee. They sought judicial review of that decision under Mississippi Code Section 23-15-961, which provides exclusive relief for contesting the qualifications of a candidate in a primary election.1 On May 21, the trial court found that the statute pleaded by the plaintiffs was inapplicable, noting statutory procedural differences between municipal elections and primary elections. The trial court advised that Abston and the Democratic Committee might proceed under Mississippi Code Section 11-51-75, providing for appeal of decisions of boards of supervisors or municipal authorities.2 The procedural requirements of that statute included filing a [509]*509bill of exceptions within ten days of the adjournment of the meeting where the action complained of had occurred. For purposes of clarity, hereinafter, we refer to this statute as “appeal by bill of exceptions.”

¶ 4. The very next day, Abston and the Democratic Committee filed their amended complaint, pleading appeal by bill of exceptions,3 as recommended by the trial court, along with the required bill of exceptions. On May 26, the circuit judge dismissed the action as untimely. On June 2, 2009,4 Ab-ston and the Democratic Committee filed their notice of appeal.

DISCUSSION

I. Whether the lower court erred in failing to apply Mississippi Code Section 11-51-93 to the proceedings below.

¶ 5. The Democratic Committee and Ab-ston argue on appeal for the first time that the trial court should have treated their initial complaint as a writ of certiorari under Mississippi Code Section 11-51-93 (which describes the process for certiorari at the circuit court) and Section 11-51-95 (which allows certiorari petitions from “all tribunals inferior to the circuit court” and not justice court, only).5 For purposes of clarity, we refer to this statute as “appeal by certiorari.” At the center of Abston and the Democratic Committee’s claims is that the petition for certiorari can be filed within six months of the challenged decision,6 instead of within ten days (the limit under appeal by bill of exceptions).

¶ 6. Failure to allege an error at trial acts as a procedural bar.7 Throughout four days of preliminary hearings, neither Abston nor the Democratic Committee invoked jurisdiction under appeal by certiorari.8 Consequently, we are not bound to consider their complaint that the trial court considered their case in light of the jurisdictional statutes on which they relied at trial.9 That notwithstanding, we find that the trial court applied the appropriate procedure for relief and that appeal by certiorari is not applicable.

¶ 7. Writs of certiorari are familiar tools, used by one court to review the decisions of an inferior court. Mississippi Code Section 11-51-95 extends that review to “all tribunals inferior to the circuit court.”10 Appeals by bill of exceptions and certiorari are “general” appellate provisions.11 Both have been applied within the realm of very similar subject matter. Appeal by bill of exceptions has been used where a qualified elector challenged the board of supervisors’ decision to have an election on the sale of liquor.12 And subsequently, we held that appeal by certiorari was the appropriate remedy for the same subject matter.13

[510]*510¶ 8. In their original complaint, Abston and the Democratic Committee pleaded a pre-election remedy for contesting the qualifications of a candidate in a general election,14 from which, the town noted, municipal elections are specifically excluded.15 The town urged the court to apply the post-election remedy of Mississippi Code Section 23-15-951, permitting “a person ... to contest the election of another person ... to any office within any county” by filing a petition with the circuit clerk within twenty days of the election.16 However, both arguments missed the central fact that the Democratic Committee came to circuit court not to challenge an election, but to challenge the decision (made by a municipal authority) that the committee was improperly formed and nonexistent. The trial court, relying on the plain language of Mississippi Code Section 11-51-75, said that appeal by bill exceptions was the appropriate vehicle for remedy.17

¶ 9. Abston and the Democratic Committee cite Crider v. Howard18 for the position that the trial court should have treated their petition for judicial review as an appeal by writ of certiorari. This argument, we reiterate, is made for the first time on appeal. In Crider, the trial judge treated Crider’s “Petition for Judicial Review” as an appeal by bill of exceptions19 over Crider’s ardent but imprecise protest.20 The complainants in Crider could not articulate the statute under which they were seeking jurisdiction, so this Court said that the trial court should have treated the complaint as a petition for certiorari instead of imposing the “bill of exceptions” statute against the protest of the plaintiffs.21 Here, Abston and the Democratic Committee pleaded Mississippi Code Section 11-51-75 in their amended complaint, and they essentially must live with what they pleaded. The trial court was not in error to consider the complaint in the context of the statute under which it was brought. The plain language of the statute and the petitioner’s complaint urge us to agree with the trial court’s application of the law.

¶ 10. On the other hand, in McIntosh v. Sanders,22 we dismissed arguments that appeal by certiorari or appeal by bill of exceptions was available to a disqualified candidate for county election commissioner.23

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Bluebook (online)
48 So. 3d 507, 2010 Miss. LEXIS 567, 2010 WL 4242568, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/town-of-terry-v-smith-miss-2010.