Willie Wilson v. Delbert Hosemann

185 So. 3d 370, 2016 WL 805410
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 26, 2016
Docket2016-IA-00148-SCT, 2016-EC-00163-SCT
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 185 So. 3d 370 (Willie Wilson v. Delbert Hosemann) 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
Willie Wilson v. Delbert Hosemann, 185 So. 3d 370, 2016 WL 805410 (Mich. 2016).

Opinions

DICKINSON, Presiding Justice,

for the Court:

¶ 1. The Motion to Recall the Mandate is granted, the Motion to Alter or Amend the Judgment or For Other Necessary Relief is granted in part, this Court’s prior opinion is withdrawn, this opinion is substituted in its place, and the remainder of the Motion to Alter or Amend the Judgment or For Other Necessary Relief is stricken.

¶ 2. Dr. Willie Wilson timely submitted his petition and qualification papers to the Mississippi State Democratic Executive Committee (the “Party”), to run for President in the 2016 Democratic primary. The Party rejected Dr. Wilson’s petition but-later reconsidered and requested the Mississippi Secretary of State to place Dr. Wilson’s name on the primary ballot. But, because absentee and overseas military voting had already begun, the Secretary of State refused. The Circuit Court of Hinds County refused to grant Dr. Wilson an injunction and he. appealed. Under the particular facts and circumstances of this case, we find that Dr. Wilson’s due process rights were, violated, so we reverse and render.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

The Presidential Primary Ballot Process

¶ 3. The names of individuals who wish to participate in a political party’s presidential preference primary election are placed on the ballot in two ways. First, Mississippi law requires the Secretary of State to include all candidates who are “generally recognized throughout" the United States or Mississippi as [candidates] for the nomination of President of the United States.”1 The Secretary must announce those candidates on or before December 15 in the year preceding the presidential election, and he may continue [372]*372to add names thereafter.2

¶ 4. Others who wish their names to appear on the primary ballots may file petitions with that party’s state executive committee between January 1 and January 15 of the presidential election year.3 Their petitions must be

signed by a total of not less than five hundred (500) qualified electors of the state, or ... signed by not less than one hundred (100) qualified electors of each congressional district of the state.4

Then, no more than two working days following the qualifying deadline — this year by January 19 — the party must submit the names of qualified candidates to the Secretary of State to be added to the State’s electronic Statewide Election Management System.5 Rather than notifying Dr. Wilson prior to the January 19 deadline, the Party waited until 1:04 p.m. on January 20 — one day after the deadline had passéd — to notify him that his petition had been rejected. So, strictly applying the statutes without reading into them any grace period, the Party did not inform Dr. Wilson that he had not qualified until after the statutory deadline to submit his name had passed and he had lost the opportunity to timely contest the Party’s decision. .

¶ 5. Three days later, absentee voting began, and the Secretary of State was required by federal law to have mailed ballots to members of the military overseas by that time.6 So, even had the Secretary. of State ignored the January 19 deadline — again, for which Mississippi law provides no exception — Dr. Wilson had only from 1:04 p.m. on Wednesday, January 20, to some time,on Friday, January 22, the day ballots were prepared and printed for distribution and mailing the following day, to have the Party correct its mistake and notify the Secretary of State that his name should be included on the ballot. It is this two-day window of time that is the focus of the case before us today.

Dr. Wilson’s Efforts to Have His Name Appear on the Democrátic Primary Ballot

¶ 6. Dr. Wilson’s name was not among those placed on the ballot by the Secretary of State as a candidate generally recognized throughout the United States or Mississippi. So, on January 14, 2016, he timely filed with the Mississippi Democratic Party a petition to have his name added to the ballot. His petition complied in every respect with Mississippi law. But on January 19 — the statutory deadline for the Party to submit names of qualified candidates to the Secretary of State — the Party informed the Secretary of State that Dr. Wilson had not qualified.7 Rather than informing Dr. Wilson that same day that he had been rejected, the; Party wait[373]*373ed until 1:04 p.m. on the following day— January 20 — to advise him .that his petition had been rejected.

¶ 7. The very next day — Thursday—Dr. Wilson (a resident of Chicago, Illinois) located and retained an attorney who appealed to the Party to reconsider its incorrect decision. The party admitted its mistake to Dr. Wilson’s attorney on Monday, ' January 25 — three days after the deadline to inform the-Secretary of State to-halt the presses and add'Dr. Wilson’s name to the ballot.

¶ 8. Although the Party notified Dr. Wilson of its mistake, it did not notify the Secretary of State, so on Wednesday, January 27 — eight days after the Secretary of State’s deadline, and .five days after the deadline to correct mistakes — Dr. Wilson’s attorney threatened a lawsuit, and the Party responded by hand-delivering -a letter to the Secretary of State, stating that Dr. Wilson had submitted a qualifying petition and asking that his name be included on the ballot. As a result of his successful appeal to the Party to change its decision, Dr. Wilson’s counsel also emailed the Secretary of State’s office that day asking that his name be added to the ballot.

¶ 9. Two days later — January 29 — the Secretary of State’s office informed the Party that it would not add Dr. Wilson’s name to the ballot because the Party had failed to submit his name by the January 19 deadline, as required by law,8 and because sample ballots had been issued and absentee voting had begun. .

The Litigation

¶ 10. That afternoon, Dr. Wilson filed a complaint in the Hinds County Circuit Court, seeking a writ of mandamus, as well as declaratory and injunctive relief, ordering the Secretary of State to add his name to the ballot. Dr. Wilson also filed a motion for preliminary injunction, requesting the same relief and asserting that his name constitutionally could hot be excluded from'the ballot.9 On February 1, Dr. Wilson filed an amended complaint, adding his argument that’ his constitutional rights to due process, freedom of speech, and freedom of association were violated. The Secretary of State responded, arguing that state and federal statutory deadlines precluded the Secretary of State from adding Dr. Wilson’s name to the ballot.

¶ 11. On February 1, the parties appeared for a hearing in the circuit court on Dr. Wilson’s motion for preliminary injunction. At the end of the hearing, the circuit judge stated that he would-email his ruling that afternpon with a-written order to, follow. Later that afternoon he sent the parties an email stating:

The Court, after a review of this matter, finds that.the Motion for Preliminary Injunction is not well taken and will be denied. Voting in the Democratic presi.dential primary began op January 23, 2016. Prior to initializing the voting process, the Secretary of State was advised by the Democratic party that. Dr. Wilson did not qualify.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
185 So. 3d 370, 2016 WL 805410, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/willie-wilson-v-delbert-hosemann-miss-2016.