Townes v. Virginia State Board of Elections

CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedJune 18, 2020
Docket190834
StatusPublished

This text of Townes v. Virginia State Board of Elections (Townes v. Virginia State Board of Elections) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Townes v. Virginia State Board of Elections, (Va. 2020).

Opinion

Present: All the Justices

HERBERT F. TOWNES, JR., ET AL. OPINION BY v. Record No. 190834 CHIEF JUSTICE DONALD W. LEMONS JUNE 18, 2020 VIRGINIA STATE BOARD OF ELECTIONS

FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE CITY OF HOPEWELL William E. Tomko, III, Judge

In this appeal challenging the removal of two members of the City of Hopewell Electoral

Board (“Board”), we consider whether the Circuit Court of the City of Hopewell (“circuit court”)

erred when it instructed the jury regarding the proper burden of proof, whether the circuit court

improperly allowed the Commonwealth to expand its grounds for removal beyond the grounds

pled in its sworn petition for removal (“Petition”), and whether the circuit court abused its

discretion when it excluded certain defense evidence at trial.

I. Facts and Proceedings

A. The City of Hopewell Electoral Board

Herbert F. Townes, Jr. (“Townes”) and David W. Silvestro (“Silvestro”) were appointed

to the Board in 2014 and 2018, respectively, for three-year terms. Townes was reappointed for a

three-year term in 2017 following his initial term on the Board. The Board consisted of Townes,

Silvestro, and one additional member who was not subject to this removal action. Prior to taking

their seats on the Board, Appellants both signed the following oath pursuant to Code § 24.2-120

and Article II, Section 7 of the Constitution of Virginia:

I [] do solemnly swear (or affirm) that I will support the Constitution of the United States and the Constitution of the State of Virginia, and that I will faithfully and impartially discharge and perform all the duties incumbent upon me as a member of the City of Hopewell Electoral Board [] according to the best of my ability, so help me God. As members of the Board, Appellants were responsible for ensuring the fair, uniform, and

efficient administration of elections in the City of Hopewell (“Hopewell”) and timely

appointment of a General Registrar. Among other duties, Appellants were to “[e]nsure the

creation, production and proper custody of ballots,” to “[a]ssist in absentee voting when

requested by the Director of Elections,” and to determine the “validity and counting of

provisional ballots.” The “Electoral Board Job Description” further required Appellants to

conduct “meetings in accordance with the Freedom of Information Act” (“VFOIA”).

B. The Petition

In April 2018, the Virginia State Board of Elections (“VSBE”) 1 received information that

Townes and Silvestro had neglected their duties in ways that had a material adverse effect on the

administration of elections in Hopewell. On October 9, 2018, the VSBE filed a Petition in the

circuit court to remove Townes and Silvestro from the Board. The Petition alleged that, since at

least April 2018, Appellants had “failed to fulfill their statutory obligation to timely and

transparently hire and supervise the General Registrar,” “actively and repeatedly disregarded the

[VFOIA] by holding meetings without proper notice to the community, and, in some cases, the

third member” of the Board, and “refused to adhere to recognized standards of fairness and

uniformity in preparation of ballots for the November 2018 mid-term election.”

In the Petition, the VSBE specifically alleged the following based on its investigation

after the initial complaints from “Hopewell residents and elected officials.” First, as the prior

General Registrar’s announced retirement date of April 30, 2018, approached, the Board had not

1 The VSBE is the three-member body which oversees the Virginia Department of Elections. Code § 24.2-103 provides that “The State Board, through the Department of Elections, shall supervise and coordinate the work of the county and city electoral boards and of the registrars to obtain uniformity in their practices and proceedings and legality and purity in all elections.”

2 appointed a replacement. As a result, as of May 1, the VSBE alleged that “there would [have

been] no staff in the Hopewell General Registrar’s office qualified to offer absentee ballots or

process voter registration materials” in violation of state and federal law. To remedy this, the

outgoing General Registrar named his deputy to serve temporarily as General Registrar until the

Board named a replacement, which it did on May 8.

Second, the VSBE alleged that the Board “met on at least three occasions—April 2, 12,

and 23—without providing proper notice of the meeting to the public” as required by VFOIA.

Particularly, after “researching notice” for a specific meeting, the Vice Mayor noted in a

complaint from a constituent that the “City Clerk has not received meeting notifications from the

[General] Registrar’s Office (or the Board itself)” for approximately four months. As a result of

this, and other allegations, the VSBE concluded that Silvestro and Townes “repeatedly failed to

follow [VFOIA] open meeting requirements.”

Third, the VSBE alleged that in August 2018, it learned that “Hopewell’s ballot proofs

did not display candidate names in a uniform manner; some candidate’s names were presented in

all capital letters while other candidate’s names appeared in a mix of capital and lower-case

letters.” The Virginia Ballot Standards, updated by the VSBE in March 2018, explain that

consistent case is essential to ensure uniformity and fairness to all candidates on the ballot.

Specifically, the Ballot Standards direct localities “to not list any names in all capital letters.”

Code § 24.2-613 states that ballots “shall comply with the requirements of this title and the

standards prescribed by the [VSBE].” Consequently, the VSBE informed the Hopewell General

Registrar on two occasions that the ballot proofs did not comply with the VSBE case standards.

Nevertheless, the Board met and voted 2-to-1 to maintain the inconsistent capitalization of

3 certain candidates’ names on the ballot. Townes and Silvestro cast the two votes to “re-submit

the non-uniform ballot” to VSBE for approval.

The VSBE attached 138 pages of exhibits to the Petition to provide more detail about the

alleged VFOIA violations. In a meeting on September 20, 2018, the Chairman of the VSBE

stated that “he had never received such a volume of complaints for any locality.” The exhibits

included evidence of the following: When selecting a new General Registrar, there was “no vote

in open session . . . which is required under [VFOIA].” According to a General Registrar

candidate, when Silvestro arrived 45-minutes late to her interview, he stated that he “was in a

meeting with another Electoral Board member.” This “set off a red flag as there was no

scheduled [Board] meeting for that morning,” the third member of the Board “was not aware of

the meeting, and there are no minutes from that meeting, so [the candidate] knew these two

members were already in violation of [V]FOIA rules.” The VSBE Commissioner received

“complaints includ[ing] missing meeting minutes, meeting changes or cancellation without

notification in compliance with [V]FOIA laws, and more.” In a VSBE meeting considering the

ongoing issues in Hopewell, the third member of the Board “said the other two [Board] members

often deliberated on situations outside of public meetings,” including on the ballot issue. Finally,

the Vice Mayor wrote the following in an email related to VFOIA:

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