Wylie v. Cade

164 So. 579, 174 Miss. 426, 1935 Miss. LEXIS 82
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 9, 1935
DocketNo. 31940.
StatusPublished

This text of 164 So. 579 (Wylie v. Cade) 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
Wylie v. Cade, 164 So. 579, 174 Miss. 426, 1935 Miss. LEXIS 82 (Mich. 1935).

Opinion

*430 Griffith, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

On the second Tuesday in December, 1934, section 2597, Code 1930', an election was held in the town of Duncan for the selection of municipal officers, including five aider-men. No primary election had been held; but the names of nine persons, including each of the parties to this cause, were presented by petitions to the election commissioners as candidates for aldermen, the said petitions conforming in all respect to the requirements of law. The election commissioners declined to' print the name of appellant Wylie on the official ballot, because, in the opinion of the election commissioners, Wylie was not a qualified elector.

Forty-four voters participated in the election. A majority of them desired to vote for Mr. Wylie, and they wrote his name in ink on the blank line left on the ballot and put their cross-mark opposite his name as written, so that he received twenty-three such votes. The election commissioners refused to recognize the votes thus cast for Mr. Wylie and declined to return him as one among the persons elected and for two reasons: First,' because he was not a qualified elector; and, second, because it was illegal, as they contended, to write the name of a candidate on the ticket and thus vote ‘for him, there having been no death of any candidate within fifteen days next before the date of the election. It is not neces *431 sary to decide the second point, and we take up the first issue as to whether Mr. Wylie was a qualified elector.

On January 31, 1934, Mr. Wylie made out his hank check for the correct amount of his taxes, payable to the county tax collector, and inclosed the same in a letter addressed to the tax collector, the letter reading as follows:

“If it is possible for you to do so I will certainly appreciate it if you will hold the inclosed check for me until about the first of March. I have been in Cleveland a time or two lately and wanted to ask you about this but did not see you and Mr. Dickson told me that you alone could handle for me, so I am addressing you personally for that reason.
“Assuring you that it will be a great favor and with kindest regards, I am,” etc.

To this letter the tax collector replied at once that he could not hold the check, but without any other statement or comment. He did not return the check, nor did he state what he intended to do with it. Apparently, Mr. Wylie assumed that the tax collector intended to deposit the check for collection in due course and without any delay other than the delay incident to checks handled in due course; but when he received his next statement from his bank, with the canceled or paid checks, he observed that the check for the taxes was not among them. It is not definitely shown when this bank statement was received, but the witnesses are in accord that Mr. Wylie did not take up the matter further with the tax collector’s office until on or about April 30, 1934. Upon his doing so on that date, it was discovered, upon a search in the tax collector’s office, that nothing had been done with the check, that it still remained among some of the papers in the tax collector’s office, and that no> tax receipt had ever been issued on it. However, on that day, to-wit, on April 30, 1934, a tax receipt was issued to Mr. Wylie back dated as of date February 1, 1934, *432 and the cheek was deposited for collection and was paid on May 7, 1934.

Appellant Wylie contends that under the above facts and under the holding of this court in Tonnar v. Wade, 153 Miss. 722, 121 So. 156, 158, he was not disqualified as an elector. But that case must be read in the light of the facts there present. The facts there present were that Wade delivered his check unconditionally to the tax collector on February 1st and then and there received his tax receipt on that day and so dated. It was not a tax receipt issued on a far subsequent day and back dated, as is the case now before us. And the facts further show that Mr. Wade’s check was deposited in the due course of business and was paid in due course on an early date, to-wit, on February 9th. The court held that under such a delivery and acceptance of the check on February 1st and the issuance of a tax receipt on the day the check was received and the deposit and clearance to payment of the check in due course without delay was the substantial equivalent of a payment on February 1st, and that there was no delinquency. But there is a material difference in that case and the one now before us, as the statement of facts of the present case has disclosed.

The dominant purpose of the people of this state in the adoption of the Constitution of 1890' was to secure and to preserve to those “superior in spirit, in governmental instinct, and in intelligence” (Ratliff v. Beale, 74 Miss. 247, 263, 20 So. 865, 867, 34 L. R. A. 472; Williams v. State of Mississippi, 170 U. S. 213, 222, 18 S. Ct. 583, 42 L. Ed. 1012) a permanent supremacy in the control and administration of our governmental affairs; and inasmuch as those who' possess the superior qualities mentioned are, and always will be, by far the more fore-thoughtful, and therefore the more apt, to truly fulfill in advance those' reasonable requirements prescribed as necessary to be so fulfilled in order to be a qualified elector, it was established as one of the principal pillars in that constitutional structure, in furtherance of the domi *433 nant purpos© aforesaid, that to be qualified to vote, the voter shall have paid, on or before the 1st day of February, of the year in which he or she shall offer to vote, all taxes due by the voter for the two preceding years — now by a recent amendment, all poll taxes for said years. We do not intend to permit, so far as within our rightful power to prevent, any relaxation of that constitutional requirement so far as its spirit and purpose is concerned, nor in any substantial respect. Nor shall we permit any administrative course of practice to prevail which may become the vehicle by which the requirement may be substantially circumvented.

Nevertheless, we have been constrained to recognize, as we did in Tonnar v.

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Related

Williams v. Mississippi
170 U.S. 213 (Supreme Court, 1898)
Tonnar v. Wade
121 So. 156 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1929)
Hennessy v. Porch
93 N.E. 290 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1910)
Andrews v. State ex rel. Covington
69 Miss. 740 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1892)
Ratliff v. Beale
74 Miss. 247 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1896)

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Bluebook (online)
164 So. 579, 174 Miss. 426, 1935 Miss. LEXIS 82, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wylie-v-cade-miss-1935.