Raul (Roy) Morales v. Rudy Segura ( 2015 )


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  •                                                                                     ACCEPTED
    04-15-00365-CV
    FOURTH COURT OF APPEALS
    SAN ANTONIO, TEXAS
    7/27/2015 3:13:46 PM
    KEITH HOTTLE
    CLERK
    NO. 14-15-00365-CV
    FILED IN
    IN THE COURT OF APPEALS      4th COURT OF APPEALS
    FOURTH COURT OF APPEALS DISTRICT SAN ANTONIO, TEXAS
    SAN ANTONIO, TEXAS        07/27/2015 3:13:46 PM
    KEITH E. HOTTLE
    Clerk
    ******
    RAUL (ROY) MORALES
    Appellant
    V.
    RUDY SEGURA
    Appellee
    On Appeal from Cause No. 14-12-1070-CVA
    In the 81st Judicial District Court, Atascosa County, Texas
    Honorable David Peeples, Presiding
    BRIEF OF APPELLANT
    Keith A. Kendall
    State Bar No. 11263250
    Frank J. Garza
    State Bar No. 07731590
    DAVIDSON TROILO REAM & GARZA, P.C.
    7550 West I.H. 10, Suite 800
    San Antonio, Texas 78229
    Telephone: (210) 349-6484
    Facsimile: (210) 349-0041
    Email: kkendall@dtrglaw.com
    ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLANT
    Oral Argument Requested
    STATEMENT OF THE CASE
    This is an election contest based upon the results of the election for City Council
    in the City of Jourdanton, Texas, in November, 2014. The case was heard by the
    Honorable David Peeples, Judge Presiding. The case proceeded to trial before Judge
    Peeples on June 8, 2015. The court noted its oral ruling on that same date (Tr. 139-
    140) and Judgment was entered by the court on June 12, 2015, for Contestant.
    (CR 142-143.) Contestee gave notice of appeal. (CR 139-141.)
    STATEMENT REGARDING ORAL ARGUMENT
    Oral argument would aid this Court in understanding the process that was
    employed by the Atascosa County Elections Administrator’s office in rejecting the votes
    cast by Sheldon Day.
    STATEMENT OF JURISDICTION
    This Court has jurisdiction over this appeal pursuant to TEX. ELEC. CODE ANN.
    § 221.002(f) (West 2014).
    ISSUES PRESENTED
    1.     Did the trial court err in finding that Contestant had proven that § 63.006
    was applicable to voter, Sheldon Day?
    2.     Did the trial court err in finding that Contestant had proven, by clear and
    convincing evidence, that voter Sheldon Day met the requirements of
    § 63.006?
    3.     Did the trial court err in determining that § 63.006 applied to the voter,
    Sheldon Day, since application of § 63.009 was required under the
    undisputed facts?
    4.     Did the trial court err in finding that the provisions of § 63.009 applied to
    the situation involving voter, Sheldon Day?
    5.     Did the trial court err in failing to find that voter, Sheldon Day, was not a
    properly registered voter, more than 30 days before the election, in a
    iv
    precinct within the City of Jourdanton, Texas, for purposes of voting in the
    City elections in November, 2014, since he had not timely registered to
    vote in the November, 2014 city elections?
    v
    TO THE HONORABLE COURT OF APPEALS:
    Appellant, Raul (Roy) Morales, files his brief requesting that this Court reverse
    the trial court’s Order on Final Judgment ordering that the Contestant was the winning
    candidate for the Jourdanton City Council election held on November 4, 2014.
    STATEMENT OF FACTS
    After conducting the City of Jourdanton general election on November 4, 2014,
    for two-at-large city council positions, Contestee Raul Morales was declared one of the
    winners of the council elections. (Supp. CR 4-8.) Contestant Rudy Segura filed a
    contest to that election alleging, among other things, that irregularities prevented
    several voters from having their votes counted. (CR 5-11.) At the trial of the contest,
    Contestant contended that two voters, Mr. Sheldon Day and Mr. Carlos Pacheco, did
    not have their votes properly counted. (Tr. 9.) The vote of Carlos Pacheco was found
    by the court to have been properly excluded (Tr. 139), and Appellant does not complain
    of this decision on appeal.
    As to voter Sheldon Day, Mr. Day testified that he had lived in the City of
    Jourdanton since May, 2014. (Tr. 28-29.) Approximately in June, 2014, he went to a
    local Department of Public Safety office and attempted to change his driver’s license
    address. (Tr. 29.) Mr. Day also testified that at the time that he presented to the
    Department of Public Safety office to change the address on his driver’s license, he had
    not considered changing his voter registration address, although he knew that there was
    a procedure to do that on the card. (Tr. 38-39.) When he handed his change of
    address form to the clerk, he had not checked the box to change his voter registration
    status residence. (Tr. 39.) As he handed his change of residence address to the clerk,
    he had not intended at that point in time to change his address for his voter registration.
    (Tr. 39.) After handing the clerk his change of address form, he was asked by the clerk
    if he also wanted to change his voter registration address. Mr. Day replied that he did.
    (Tr. 29.)
    When he went in to early vote on October 20, 2014, he did not present any form
    of voter registration card. (Tr. 30-31.) When Mr. Day voted or attempted to vote on
    October 20, 2014, he listed as being registered to vote on a county road outside the City
    of Jourdanton. (Tr. 75.) He was not on the list of registered voters for any precinct
    within the City of Jourdanton. (Tr. 78, 96-99, 106.) Mr. Day was given a provisional
    ballot. (Tr. 79.) After Mr. Day cast his provisional ballot, the Elections Administrator
    checked with the Department of Public Safety to ascertain whether or not Mr. Day had
    ever changed his voter registration to reflect that he was a resident of a precinct within
    the City of Jourdanton and discovered that he had not. (Tr. 79-80.) Based on the
    information received from the Texas Department of Public Safety, the Elections
    Administrator determined that Mr. Day was not a registered voter 30 days before the
    election in the City of Jourdanton and his ballot was not counted. (Tr. 84-85.) Mr. Day
    was notified that his ballot had been rejected. (Tr. 85.) The Elections Administrator did
    not recall Mr. Day contacting the office to make any inquiry after he received the notice
    of rejection of his ballot for his provisional ballot for the City of Jourdanton. (Tr. 85.)
    At the time Mr. Day attempted to vote on October 20, 2014, he was not a
    registered voter in either Precinct 13 or Precinct 19 within the City of Jourdanton, Texas.
    (Tr. 106, 115-116.)
    2
    SUMMARY OF THE ARGUMENT
    At the time voter, Sheldon Day, attempted to vote in the City of Jourdanton
    municipal elections on October 20, 2014, he was not a properly registered voter in any
    precinct within the city limits of the City of Jourdanton. He was, therefore, ineligible to
    vote that day in the municipal elections for the City of Jourdanton, since he had failed to
    properly transfer his voter registration from his former precinct in Atascosa County to a
    precinct within the City of Jourdanton.
    Furthermore, at the time he presented to the early voting ballot location on
    October 20, 2014, he did not present any type of voter registration card. The provisions
    of TEX. ELEC. CODE ANN. § 63.006 were, therefore, not applicable to his situation.
    Rather, the provisions of TEX. ELEC. CODE ANN. § 63.009 control and were properly
    applied by the Elections Administrator’s office.       Mr. Day’s provisional votes were,
    therefore, properly.
    ARGUMENT AND AUTHORITIES
    In an election contest, the contestant must prove that an elected official
    prevented an eligible voter from voting [emphasis added].           Tiller v. Martinez, 
    974 S.W.2d 769
    (Tex. App.─San Antonio 1998, pet. dism’d w.o.j.); TEX. ELEC. CODE ANN.
    § 221.003. An election contestant’s burden is a heavy one and the declared results of
    an election will be upheld in all cases except where there is clear and convincing
    evidence of an erroneous result. Willet v. Cole, 
    249 S.W.3d 585
    , 589 (Tex. App.─Waco
    2008, no pet.) Clear and convincing proof requires more proof than a preponderance of
    the evidence and is the degree of proof that will produce in the mind of the trier of fact a
    firm belief or conviction as to the truth of the allegations sought to be proved. 
    Id. at 589.
    3
    Contestant has not proved by any evidence, much less clear and convincing
    evidence, that voter Sheldon Day was an eligible voter in the precinct in which he was
    trying to vote in the City of Jourdanton election conducted in November, 2014.
    According to Janice Ruple, the Atascosa County Elections Administrator, Mr. Day would
    have been eligible to vote in either Precinct 13 had he registered in time. (Tr. 117-119.)
    Sheldon Day’s testimony was that he went to change his driver’s license address in the
    summer of 2014, but did not check the box indicating he wanted to register to vote. (Tr.
    38-39.) Mr. Day further testified that when he went to the Texas Department of Public
    Safety to change his driver’s license address, his only intent was to (1) change the
    address on his driver’s license, (2) that he knew there was a space to change his voter’s
    registration but did not think about that day, (3) did not pay any attention to the box to
    check to change his voter’s registration address, (4) and never marked that box himself.
    (Tr. 38-39.)
    Janice Ruple testified that in order to vote in a precinct, one must be registered to
    vote in that precinct 30 days before the election. (Tr. 75.) See TEX. ELEC. CODE ANN.
    § 13.143(a). No contrary evidence was admitted. Ms. Ruple further testified that Mr.
    Day was rejected as a voter in the City of Jourdanton election because he was not
    registered in a City of Jourdanton precinct 30 days before the election. (Tr. 75-76, 178.)
    Ms. Ruple confirmed that Mr. Day had not effectuated a change at the time he changed
    his driver’s license address with the Texas Department of Public Safety. (Tr. 78-80.)
    Ms. Ruple testified that the election procedures published by the Elections
    Division   of   the   Secretary   of   State’s   office,   admitted   into   evidence    as
    Defendant/Contestee’s Exhibit 1 (CR 68-131), were followed with regards to Mr. Day’s
    4
    attempt to vote in the City of Jourdanton election.       (Tr. 75-76.)    Ms. Ruple further
    testified that the process, as reflected on page 20 of Contestee’s Exhibit 1, was
    applicable to Mr. Day’s situation and was followed.        (Tr. 80-85.)    According to the
    Secretary of State’s office, the registration must be effective 30 days before the election.
    (Tr. 82-83.) There is no evidence that Mr. Day or anyone else checked the box to
    change the voter registration address at any point in time. (Tr. 79-80.)
    The process that was followed by the Atascosa County Election Administrator
    was in conformance with TEX. ELEC. CODE ANN. § 63.009, which applies to a situation
    where the voter does not present a voter registration certification and is not on the list of
    registered voters for the precinct in which the voter is offering to vote.       [Emphasis
    added.] In accordance with this section, Mr. Day was provided with a provisional ballot.
    (Tr. 79.) Mr. Day attempted to vote in a precinct (within the City of Jourdanton) in which
    he was not properly registered, so his ballot was not counted. (Tr. 79.) This is the
    proper procedure to follow according to the Texas Secretary of State Handbook for
    Election Judges and Clerks, admitted without objection as Defendant/Contestant’s
    Exhibit 1. (Tr. 140, 75.)
    The trial court instead found that TEX. ELEC. CODE ANN. § 63.006 applied to the
    facts of this case. (Tr. 139.) Section 63.006, however, does not apply since Mr. Day
    did not present to the polling place with any kind of voter registration card.
    The difference in the requirements of § 63.006 and § 63.009 are not to be
    ignored or taken lightly. It must be presumed that the legislature had a reason for the
    requirements of both sections and that both requirements needed to be met in the
    different situations presented. Both § 63.006 and § 63.009 deal with a situation where
    5
    the voter presents proper identification at a polling place, but the voter’s name is not on
    the polling list as a registered voter for that precinct. The difference is whether the voter
    does (§ 63.006) or does not (§ 63.009) have a voter registration card. It is clear that Mr.
    Day did not have such a card. As a result, § 63.009 was properly applied.
    When Mr. Day’s registration was checked by the Elections Administrative Office
    for the County of Atascosa, it was found that he had not properly registered more than
    30 days before the election in a City of Jourdanton precinct. Mr. Day’s votes were,
    therefore, properly rejected by the Elections Administrator.
    CONCLUSION
    If the procedures, as enacted by the Texas legislature, are not strictly followed,
    there is the very real possibility, as articulated by the Elections Administrator, that
    people who are not registered within a jurisdiction could temporarily move into that
    jurisdiction less than 30 days before the election, claim that they are residents of that
    jurisdiction, execute an affidavit to that effect, and then vote, without any intention of
    remaining within that jurisdiction or establishing residency there. (Tr. 119-120.) The
    other very real concern is that voters may not have to register within a jurisdiction at all
    prior to 30 days before an election, if this decision is allowed to stand.
    It is clear that the trial court judge failed to consider whether Mr. Day was a
    properly registered voter within the City of Jourdanton, having moved within the City of
    Jourdanton more than 30 days before the election, but not have properly transferred his
    voter registration to a precinct within the City of Jourdanton, more than 30 days before
    the election as required by TEX. ELEC. CODE ANN. § 13.143. The court further found that
    the provisions of § 63.006 were applied, § 63.009.
    6
    PRAYER
    WHEREFORE, PREMISES CONSIDERED, Appellant prays that this Court set
    this case for oral argument and that the Judgment of the trial court be reversed and
    rendered, disallowing the two votes cast by voters Sheldon Day and reinstating Mr. Raul
    Morales, Contestee, as the true winner of the election.
    Respectfully submitted,
    DAVIDSON, TROILO REAM & GARZA, P.C.
    7550 West I.H. 10, Suite 800
    San Antonio, Texas 78229-5815
    Telephone: (210)349-6484
    Facsimile: (210)349-0041
    By: /s/ Keith A. Kendall
    FRANK J. GARZA
    State Bar No. 07731590
    fgarza@dtrglaw.com
    KEITH A. KENDALL
    State Bar No. 11263250
    kkendall@dtrglaw.com
    ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLANT
    CERTIFICATE OF COMPLIANCE
    Pursuant to Texas Rule of Appellate Procedure 9.4(i)(3), the undersigned
    certifies that the above Brief of Appellant has 1,891 words, excluding the sections
    identified in Texas Rule of Appellate Procedure 9.4(i)(1).
    /s/ Keith A. Kendall
    KEITH A. KENDALL
    7
    CERTIFICATE OF SERVICE
    I hereby certify that a true and correct copy of the above and foregoing document
    has been served upon the following on this the 27th day of July, 2015:
    Mr. Jose Garza
    Mr. Martin Golando
    Mr. Michael Moran
    115 E. Travis Street, Suite 1235
    San Antonio, Texas 78205
    /s/ Keith A. Kendall
    KEITH A. KENDALL
    8
    APPENDIX
    Trial Court Judgment ..........................................................................................      TAB 1
    Tr. 139 and 140 ..................................................................................................   TAB 2
    TEX. ELEC. CODE ANN. §13.143 (West 2014) .......................................................                     TAB 3
    TEX. ELEC. CODE ANN. §63.006 (West 2014).......................................................                      TAB 4
    TEX. ELEC. CODE ANN. §63.009 (West 2014).......................................................                      TAB 5
    TEX. ELEC. CODE ANN. §221.003 (West 2014) .....................................................                      TAB 6
    9
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 04-15-00365-CV

Filed Date: 7/27/2015

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 9/29/2016