Wallace v. Leggett

158 So. 2d 746, 248 Miss. 121, 1963 Miss. LEXIS 382
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 16, 1963
Docket43067
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 158 So. 2d 746 (Wallace v. Leggett) 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
Wallace v. Leggett, 158 So. 2d 746, 248 Miss. 121, 1963 Miss. LEXIS 382 (Mich. 1963).

Opinion

Kyle, J.

This is a primary election contest case growing out of the Democratic Primary election held on August 6, *123 1963, for the election of a supervisor for District No. 4 of Lincoln County. Lloyd Case, Alton (Bitsey) Hart, Leroy (Dock) Leggett and Esco Wallace were the candidates for the office of supervisor. After the election returns had been canvassed it appeared that Case had received 178 votes, Hart 59 votes, Leggett 863 votes and Wallace 394 votes, the total number of votes cast for supervisor for District No. 4 was 1494. From the canvass of the returns thus made Leggett had received 863 votes, and the other three candidates had received a combined vote of 631. Leggett’s majority over the other three candidates was 232 votes.

On August 7, 1963, the contestants Wallace and Case appeared before the Democratic Executive Committee and requested the privilege of examining the boxes, pointing out that they were advised that certain ballots had not been initialed at the Johnson Grove and Bogue Chitto precincts. The ballots and tally sheets and lists of voters at the two last mentioned precincts were examined, and it was determined that 141 ballots cast at the Johnson Grove precinct and 346 ballots cast at the Bogue Chitto precinct had not been initialed by the initialing manager as required by Section 3164, Miss. Code of 1942, Rec. The contestants then asked the committee to order a new election for supervisor in those two precincts. The committee decided to exclude the 151 uninitialed ballots cast at the Johnson Grove precinct and the 346 uninitialed ballots cast at the Bogue Chitto precinct; and after eliminating the uninitialed ballots referred to above, the Committee found upon a recount of the votes remaining that the number of legal votes received by each of the several candidates was as follows:

Lloyd Case 130 votes

Alton (Bitsey) Hart 30 votes

Leroy (Dock) Leggett 521 votes

Esco Wallace 316 votes

*124 The total number of ballots cast for the office of Supervisor for District No. 4, exclusive of the uninitialed ballots cast at the Johnson Grove precinct and the Bogue Chitto precinct, was 997. It thus appeared that Leggett had received a majority of the valid ballots cast for the office of supervisor of the district. The Committee therefore rejected the protest of Wallace and Case; and advised Wallace and Case and their attorney immediately of the decision of the Committee.

The Committee reconvened on August 8, 1963, pursuant to the order of recess entered on the preceding day, and there was presented to the Committee by Wallace and Case a formal petition contesting the election for supervisor in District No. 4. After consideration of the petition, a motion was duly made, seconded and unanimously carried, that the petition contesting the election on behalf of Wallace and Case be denied; and the Committee adjudicated that Leggett was the party nominee for Supervisor for District No. 4, having received a majority of the valid ballots cast in the election of August 6, 1963, and representing an expression of the will of the electors of District No. 4. The returns for all offices were then certified to the State Democratic Executive Committee.

On August 12, 1963, a special meeting of the County Democratic Executive Committee was held, for the purpose of considering an election contest filed on behalf of Robert E. Case, a candidate for the office of sheriff and tax collector of the county. The Committee went into executive session and determined to follow its prior ruling in the Esco Wallace and Lloyd case election contest, and the Committee rejected the contest of Robert E. Case as a candidate for the office of sheriff and tax collector, and called in all of the parties and advised them of its decision.

On August 14, 1963, the contestants Wallace and Case filed their first petition for judicial review under au *125 thority of Section 3182, Miss. Code of 1942, Rec. The contestants also filed with their petition a cost bond, as required by said Code Section. The petition, however, did not bear the certificate of two practicing attorneys that they and each of them had made an independent investigation into the matters of fact and law upon which the protest and petition were based, and that after such investigation they verily believed that the protest and petition should be sustained and that the relief therein prayed for should be granted.

A special tribunal was duly constituted as provided in Sections 3183 and 3184, Miss. Code of 1942, Rec., for the trial of the election contest. The Chief Justice of this Court appointed Honorable James A. Torrey Circuit Judge of the Sixth Circuit District of Mississippi, as special judge, to hear the election contest. Judge Torrey then set the cause for hearing at the Lincoln County Courthouse in the City of Brookhaven, Mississippi, on August 30, 1963. Proper notice was given to all of the parties, and a summons was duly issued to each of the election commissioners of the county requiring them to attend said hearing. The special tribunal was duly convened on August 30, 1963, for the hearing of the election contest. Leroy Leggett, the contestee, appeared by his attorney and filed a motion to dismiss the petition for judicial review on the ground that the petition was not accompanied by the certificate of two practicing attorneys as required by Code Section 3184, supra, and that the court for that reason was without jurisdiction to proceed in the matter. The motion to dismiss the petition for lack of jurisdiction was sustained; and an order was entered to that effect. The contestants requested and received at the hands of the special judge a bill of exceptions preparatory to an appeal from the judgment of the special tribunal. But no appeal was perfected from the order of dismissal dated August 30, 1963.

*126 The contestants, in lieu of an appeal from the above mentioned order of dismissal of their first petition, on August 30, 1963, filed a second petition for judicial review, to which there was attached a certificate of two practicing attorneys, which conformed to the requirements of Code Section 3184, supra. A second special tribunal was thereupon constituted to hear the new petition, and the cause was set for hearing by the second special tribunal, presided over by Honorable Sebe Dale, Circuit Judge of the Fifteenth Circuit Court District, on September 5, 1963.

On the date set for the hearing, the respondent Leroy Leggett filed a motion to dismiss for want of jurisdiction the second petition for judicial review filed on August 30, 1963.

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Bluebook (online)
158 So. 2d 746, 248 Miss. 121, 1963 Miss. LEXIS 382, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wallace-v-leggett-miss-1963.