Young v. Sanders
This text of 870 So. 2d 1126 (Young v. Sanders) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
Willie J. YOUNG, Sr., et al, Plaintiffs-Appellees,
v.
Patricia SANDERS, Defendant-Appellant.
Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Second Circuit.
Charles C. Foti, Jr., Attorney General, Angie R. LaPlace, Frances Pitman, Roy A. Mongrue, Jr., Assistant Attorneys General, for Appellant Louisiana Dept. of Justice.
Larry English, Shreveport, for Appellees Willie J. Young, Sr., Lurry Crew, Maxine Wilson, Leamon Cheatham, Linda K. Robinson and Vanessia A. Thompson.
*1127 Before STEWART, DREW and MOORE, JJ.
STEWART, J.
This appeal arises from an attempt to recall Huey P. Dean, Mayor of the Town of Homer, Louisiana, pursuant to La. R.S. 18:1300.1 et seq. Patricia Sanders, the Registrar of Voters for Claiborne Parish, disqualified certain names from the recall petition on the grounds that they were either written in print or did not look like the names on the voter registration cards. The plaintiffs, signers of the recall petition, sought a writ of mandamus directing Sanders to certify the names that she had disqualified. After a hearing, the trial court rendered a judgment ordering Sanders to return 66 names to the recall petition and to forward the petition of recall to the Governor. This appeal by the Attorney General of Louisiana followed. For the following reasons, we affirm the trial court's judgment.
FACTS
A recall petition aimed at recalling Huey Dean, Mayor of the Town of Homer, was presented to Sanders, the Registrar of Voters, for certification in accordance with La. R.S. 18:1300.1 et seq. Sanders disqualified 42 names from the recall petition because the names had been printed by hand on the signature block of the recall petition rather than signed in cursive. Sanders also disqualified a number of other names upon concluding that the signatures of the electors on the recall petition did not look like the signatures on their voter registration cards.
A group of voters who signed the recall petition, the plaintiffs herein, filed a petition for a writ of mandamus to compel Sanders to certify the names of the voters she had disqualified. We note that one of the plaintiffs was struck from the petition due to not having signed the recall petition. The matter came for a hearing before the trial court on September 11, 2003. The parties agreed that the two essential issues to be determined were whether Sanders was authorized to strike the signatures that were printed on the recall petition and whether she was authorized to strike the signatures which she believed did not match the signatures on the voter registration cards.
With regard to the first issue concerning the validity of printed names on the recall petition, the trial court noted the requirement that all signatures on the recall petition be handwritten as set forth in La. R.S. 1300.2(B) and concluded that this requirement encompassed printed signatures. As such, there were 42 printed names that had been improperly disqualified by Sanders. The trial court noted that in the absence of a statute prescribing the method of affixing one's signature, a signature may be affixed in different ways. The trial court further noted that the person subject to the recall suit could file suit and attempt to prove the printed signatures to be fraudulent or forged.
With regard to the second issue concerning signatures disqualified because Sanders believed they did not look like the signatures on the voter registration cards, the plaintiffs presented the testimony of Roberta Paschal, a notary public for Claiborne Parish. Paschal testified that she notarized 57 affidavits of individuals verifying the validity of their signatures on the recall petition. These affidavits were admitted into evidence, and of these affidavits, the court accepted 49 only. The court determined that 25 of those affidavits were by persons who had printed their signatures on the recall petition. This created an overlap between the number of affidavits accepted by the court and the signatures wrongly disqualified because they *1128 were printed. Therefore, a total of 66 names were found to have been improperly disqualified and were returned to the recall petition. Of the 66 names, 49 were verified by affidavit and 17 were printed names returned to the petition of recall without other verification.
Under La. R.S. 18:1300.2(B), the petition was required to be signed by a number of electors of the voting area "as will in number equal not less than thirty-three and one-third percent of the number of the total electors of the voting area wherein and for which a recall election is petitioned." In the instant case, the plaintiffs needed 61 signatures added back to the petition to have the required 331/3 percent. With 66 names added back to the petition, the required percentage was met, and the trial court ordered Sanders to forward to the governor the names of the qualified electors who signed the recall petition.
DISCUSSION
The Louisiana Attorney General raises four assignments of error on appeal. The first assignment of error challenges the trial court's finding that the registrar of voters had no authority to determine the validity of the signatures on the recall petition. The second and third assignments of error challenge the trial court's finding that the term "handwritten" includes printed signatures and the return of 17 printed names to the recall petition even though there was no other evidence validating the signatures. The fourth assignment of error challenges the grant of mandamus relief when the verification of signatures on the recall petition involves an exercise of the registrar of voter's discretion.
We begin our analysis with the fourth assignment of error. Under La. R.S. 18:1300.3(D), if the registrar of voters refuses to execute the certificate described in R.S. 18:1300.3(A), any signer of the recall petition, or a designated chairman or vice-chairman representing the signers, may utilize summary process to compel the registrar to execute the certificate. Moreover, under the provisions of La. C.C.P. art. 926, the unauthorized use of a summary proceeding is a dilatory exception that is waived unless pleaded. Here, there was no objection to the use of summary proceeding, nor was there any objection to the introduction of the affidavits verifying the signatures on the recall petition. Accordingly, under the facts established in this record, we find no merit in this assignment of error.
The issues raised by the three remaining assignments of error all broadly pertain to whether the registrar has authority to reject a person's handwritten signature because, in the registrar's estimation, it does not "reasonably compare" to the person's signature on the voter registration card. For the reasons which follow, we conclude that a registrar's duty in certifying the number of qualified electors whose handwritten signatures appear on the recall petition is limited to simply comparing the names on the recall petition to the names appearing on the registrar's record of electors. The registrar has neither the duty, nor the discretion, to compare a signature on a recall petition with a signature on a voter registration card and then strike the signature if, in the registrar's opinion, the signatures were not made by the same hand.
Because the recall election is a harsh remedy, the provisions which govern the recall process must be strictly construed. Cloud v. Dyess, 172 So.2d 528 (La.App. 3d Cir.1965). La. R.S. 1300.3(A) provides, in pertinent part, as follows:
A.
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870 So. 2d 1126, 2004 WL 736721, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/young-v-sanders-lactapp-2004.