Unshay Randle v. Tommie Ivy, Sr.

CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 12, 2026
Docket2025-EC-00299-SCT
StatusPublished

This text of Unshay Randle v. Tommie Ivy, Sr. (Unshay Randle v. Tommie Ivy, Sr.) 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
Unshay Randle v. Tommie Ivy, Sr., (Mich. 2026).

Opinion

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF MISSISSIPPI

NO. 2025-EC-00299-SCT

UNSHAY RANDLE

v.

TOMMIE IVY, SR.

DATE OF JUDGMENT: 03/10/2025 TRIAL JUDGE: HON. DAVID ANTHONY CHANDLER TRIAL COURT ATTORNEYS: ROBERT H. FAULKS WALTER HOWARD ZINN, JR. COURT FROM WHICH APPEALED: CHICKASAW COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT ATTORNEY FOR APPELLANT: WALTER HOWARD ZINN, JR. ATTORNEY FOR APPELLEE: ROBERT H. FAULKS NATURE OF THE CASE: CIVIL - ELECTION CONTEST DISPOSITION: AFFIRMED - 03/12/2026 MOTION FOR REHEARING FILED:

EN BANC.

KING, PRESIDING JUSTICE, FOR THE COURT:

¶1. This appeal is about whether a primary-election candidate met the two-year residency

qualifications to appear on the primary ballot. We conclude that substantial evidence

supported the special judge’s decision that the candidate did not meet the residency

requirements. While that answer is simple, the procedural history of this case is not.

¶2. In short, the candidate asks this Court to resolve a preprimary-qualifications dispute.

Meanwhile, both the primary and general elections have already occurred. And the statute

under which the candidate maintains his appeal—a statute only governing challenges to a

candidate’s preprimary qualifications—has no remedy for a candidate after the primary and

general elections. So this Court cannot give the candidate the remedy he seeks. Because election contests are governed by different statutes at different stages of the election process,

maintaining an appeal under a preprimary-qualification statute after the elections cannot

change the outcome of the race.

¶3. All of this aside—and even though the candidate’s preprimary appeal has become

moot after the elections—the special judge made the right call when he disqualified the

candidate before the primary. The candidate clearly did not meet the residency requirements.

So we affirm.

Facts and Procedural History

I. The Primary-Election-Qualification Dispute

¶4. Unshay Randle filed a qualifying statement of intent on January 2, 2025, to run in the

Democratic primary for Okolona city marshal. He listed his address as

112 South Buckingham Street, Okolona, Mississippi—within the city limits.1

¶5. Randle’s primary opponent, Tommy Ivy, Sr., did not believe Randle actually lived on

Buckingham Street. In fact, he claimed Randle did not live in the city at all. So Ivy filed a

petition with the Okolona city clerk to contest Randle’s qualifications in the primary election.

Specifically, Ivy asserted Randle had not lived in the city limits for two years before the

election as required by statute. Ivy served his petition and supporting papers on members of

the Okolona Democratic Executive Committee (DEC) on February 10, 2025. And the DEC

met on February 17, when its members determined Randle met the residency requirements

for city marshal. Ivy then petitioned the Chickasaw County Circuit Court to review the

1 A candidate for municipal office must reside within the municipality for two years immediately preceding the day of election. Miss. Code Ann. § 23-15-300(1) (Supp. 2025).

2 DEC’s decision.

¶6. In his petition, Ivy cited Section 23-15-300’s two-year residency requirement. Ivy

also alleged that Randle had 2024 homestead-property exemptions on land parcels outside

the Okolona city limits. According to Ivy, Randle’s county homestead properties

demonstrated Randle had not resided within the city for two years preceding the 2025

election. So Ivy sought the court’s review of what he saw as the DEC’s erroneous decision

that Randle was a qualified candidate.

¶7. This Court appointed Special Circuit Judge David A. Chandler to preside over Ivy’s

petition. The special judge set a hearing date for March 6, 2025. The morning of the

hearing, Randle filed his answer to Ivy’s petition for judicial review. In his answer, Randle

agreed the two-year residency requirement applied. But he disagreed he had lived outside

the city during that time.

¶8. At the hearing, Randle testified that he had lived in the Okolona city limits for two

years as required of a primary candidate. He told the court that he had rented a house from

his cousin from September 2022 until September 2024 while the 112 South Buckingham

Street home listed on his qualifying statement was under construction. That rental

location—123 McDonnell Street—is within the Okolona city limits. Randle recounted that

he moved from 123 McDonnell Street to 112 South Buckingham Street in September 2024.

To support his claims, Randle presented a short lease agreement for 123 McDonnell Street

and other documents like voter registration.

¶9. Ivy contested Randle’s residency. Ivy presented evidence that Randle held homestead

3 property outside the city limits. And he cast doubt on Randle’s claim that he had lived in the

city since September 2022. Ivy called Okolona building-code-enforcement officer Shane

Davis. Davis testified about his involvement with the home Randle began building at 112

South Buckingham Street in 2023. Davis had conducted periodic inspections of the home

during construction. On January 8, 2025, he noticed two vehicles parked at the home. The

vehicles were notable to Davis because he had not performed a final inspection of the

structure nor issued an occupancy approval certificate. Davis contacted Randle later that day

and reminded him that nobody could lawfully occupy the home before a final inspection. In

response, Randle assured Davis that no one was living at 112 South Buckingham Street—the

vehicles were merely there for security purposes.

¶10. But at the hearing, Randle disputed that he told Davis no one was living at 112 South

Buckingham Street on January 8. He maintained that he had been living there since moving

out of 123 McDonnell Street. He also testified that his homestead properties in the county

were for tax purposes, not for his residence.

¶11. Ivy’s counsel questioned Randle about how had he lived at 112 South Buckingham

Street for several weeks before paying the deposit to turn on municipal water in December.

Randle claimed he had used the water hookup for pressure checks in the home before paying

the municipal-water deposit.

¶12. At no point in the hearing did Randle dispute the two-year residency requirement for

a primary candidate. Nor did he argue that anything other than Section 23-15-300 governed

residency requirements.

4 ¶13. In his March 10, 2025 order, the special judge determined Randle failed to overcome

the homestead-property presumption that he resided outside the Okolona city limits during

the two-year residency period. The judge was suspicious that Randle presented no witness

testimony—other than his own—to establish that he ever lived at the 123 McDonnell Street

rental or 112 South Buckingham Street before the qualifying deadline. The special judge

also found Davis’s inspection-based testimony particularly credible to establish no one lived

at 112 South Buckingham Street as late as January 8, 2025. And he noted that no certificate

of occupancy had been issued as of the March 6 hearing. The judge gave little credence to

Randle’s explanation about water access at 112 South Buckingham Street before paying for

municipal water in December. In sum, the judge found Randle failed to demonstrate he lived

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Unshay Randle v. Tommie Ivy, Sr., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/unshay-randle-v-tommie-ivy-sr-miss-2026.