Court Opinion

ID: 9400738
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-06-09 07:10:40.029336+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T17:19:47.593301
License: Public Domain

In The

                           Court of Appeals

                 Ninth District of Texas at Beaumont

                           __________________

                          NO. 09-23-00128-CV
                           __________________

                  IN RE CYNTHIA GASKILL, ET AL

__________________________________________________________________

                      Original Proceeding
__________________________________________________________________

                      MEMORANDUM OPINION

     Relators, voters dissatisfied with the results of an election

approving the Magnolia ISD’s authority to issue $228,000,000 in school

bonds, filed a writ of mandamus almost six months after the election

seeking to compel James Charles Adcox (in his official capacity as

Magnolia Independent School District’s Board President) to “take such

actions as necessary to conduct” a recount for the 2022 Magnolia ISD

Bond Order election on Referendum A. 1 The relators say they are not

     1See   Tex. Elec. Code Ann. § 273.061.
                                     1
seeking to contest the election’s results, but that they instead want

information about the machines used in the election so they will know in

upcoming elections how accurate the machines are in counting votes,

including an election that will occur in May 2023.

     Our jurisdiction over elections, however, is limited to issuing writs

of mandamus to compel the performance of an official’s duties in holding

an election. 2 We hold that by waiting until after the November 8 election

became final, the relators deprived this Court of jurisdiction to consider

their petition for mandamus relief. Because we lack jurisdiction over the

petition, we order it dismissed.

                              Background

     On November 8, 2022, voters in the Magnolia Independent School

District passed a proposal approving to sell $228,000,000 in bonds for

among other things “the construction, acquisition, renovation, and

equipment of school buildings in the District[.]” The measure passed, but

by a margin within the ten percent threshold provided by the Election

     2Id.

                                    2
Code that allowed for twenty-five or more eligible voters, acting jointly,

to petition for a recount. 3

      On November 21 Cynthia Gaskill presented Suzie Harvey,

Montgomery County Elections Administrator, with a joint petition for

recount. 4 Gaskill left the petition at the Montgomery County Elections

Office, and a Montgomery County employee gave Gaskill a receipt for the

$2,100 Gaskill paid as deposit for the recount. 5 That same day, Harvey

(a Montgomery County Employee) emailed a copy of the petition to an

      3See id. § 212.024(a)(1), (b)(2).
      4Relators   are Cynthia Gaskill, Gladys Sharon Craig, Elise Eaton,
Jennifer Eckhart, Christopher Gaskill, Debra Gastineau, Paul
Gastineau, Cheryl Gregory, Paul Gregory, Pamela Hester, Mary Jo
Hudnall, Jack Muth, Melinda Jelks Olinde, Robert Howard Olinde,
Robert McDonald Olinde, Cynthia Phillips, Calvin Russell, Rajene
Russell, Susan Scruggs, Peter Smith, Barry Tate, Janice Vancleave,
Wade Vancleave, Jerome Vanderhorst, Julie Vanderhorst, and Kimberly
Weber, as individual voters and residents within the Magnolia
Independent School District. See id. § 212.024(b) (“The following persons
may obtain an initial recount in an election on a measure: . . . (b)(2) any
25 or more persons, acting jointly, who were eligible to vote in the
election.”).
      5See id. § 212.111 (“(a) A deposit to cover the costs of a recount must

accompany the submission of a recount document. (b) The deposit must
be in the form of cash or a cashier’s check or money order made payable
to the recount coordinator.”). See also id. § 212.012 (“The amount of the
recount deposit is: . . . (2) $100 for each election day polling location or
precinct, whichever results in a smaller amount, in which an electronic
voting system was used.”). Gaskill’s recount petition reflects that her
deposit was based on “21 precincts @ $100 each.”
                                       3
employee of the school district and asked that the school district’s

employee forward the petition to Adcox. In a telephone call to Gaskill—

which also occurred on November 21—Harvey explained “that the

petition would need to get forwarded to Magnolia ISD School Board

President, Chuck Adcox.” 6 Gaskill also emailed a redacted copy of the

petition to Adcox that day.

     On December 2, Adcox notified Gaskill by email that the recount

petition she submitted to Harvey had been rejected because “it was not

properly or timely filed with the presiding officer of the canvassing

authority.” In the same email, he notified her that he was the presiding

officer of the Board of Trustees, that the “Texas Election Code requires

that a recount petition be filed with the presiding officer of the canvassing

authority[,]” and that Magnolia ISD had “no legal authority to grant a

recount on the basis of a defective application submission or waive such

     6Under     the Election Code, as the president of the Trustees of the
Magnolia Independent School District, Adcox was also the presiding
officer of the canvassing authority for the school board’s November 2022
election. See id. § 212.026(b) (“In an election for which there is only one
canvassing authority and which is canvassed jointly with another
election, a recount petition must be submitted to the presiding officer of
the authority designated by law as the canvassing authority for the
election rather than the presiding officer of the canvassing authority
designated by the joint election agreement.”).
                                     4
defects.” Next, Adcox notified Harvey that he had rejected the recount

petition because the petition wasn’t served on him as the president of the

school board. He asked that Harvey work with Gaskill to return the

money that Gaskill deposited for the recount.

     On December 5, Gaskill then tried to serve Adcox with the recount

petition where he maintained an office in a school building of the

Magnolia ISD. According to Relators’ petition, Gaskill went to a Magnolia

ISD building to serve the petition on Adcox. But after entering the

building, a school district employee told Gaskill Adcox was out of town.

The employee wouldn’t accept the recount petition or the cashier’s check

Gaskill had with her, a check for $2,100 which was drawn on Gaskill’s

personal account. Because Adcox was not in his office when Gaskill

attempted to serve him there, she then sent him a copy of the petition by

email.

                                Analysis

     Relators argue Adcox acted in bad faith and in violation of the

Election Code by rejecting the recount petition they filed with Harvey on

                                    5
November 21. 7 They complain that Adcox failed to advise them of his

decision rejecting their petition within 48 hours “after receipt,” the period

in which they claim Adcox was required to inform them of his decision

rejecting their petition under the Election Code. 8 Relators add that if

Adcox had the legal authority to reject their petition on November 22,

they timely cured any defect in that petition on December 5, either when

Gaskill attempted to deliver the petition and cashier’s check for $2,100

to Adcox at the office where he usually conducts official business or when

she emailed the petition to him that day. 9 Under the Election Code, if a

     7See   id. § 212.028(a) (“[A] petition for an initial recount must be
submitted by 5 p.m. of the second day after the date the canvassing
authority to whose presiding officer the petition must be submitted
completes its canvass of the original election returns.”). See also id. §
1.007(c) (“A delivery, submission, or filing of a document or paper under
this code may be made by personal delivery, mail, telephonic facsimile
machine, e-mail, or any other method of transmission.”); id. § 1.006(a) (“If
the last day for performance of an act is a Saturday, Sunday, or legal
state or national holiday, the act is timely if performed on the next
regular business day, except as otherwise provided by this code.”).
      8See id. § 212.029 (The recount coordinator must review the petition

for complaints within 48 hours “after receipt[,]” but if it doesn’t comply,
“the recount coordinator shall promptly notify the petitioner of each
defect in the petition and shall enter on the petition a description of each
defect and the date of the notice. A deposit in an improper form or amount
is a defect for purposes of this subsection.”) (emphasis added).
      9See id. § 212.030(b) (“An amendment must be submitted to the

recount coordinator not later than the deadline for submitting the
                                      6
recount petition complies with the “applicable requirements, the recount

coordinator shall approve the petition and note on the petition its

approved status and the date of the approval.” 10 And upon the approval

of the “recount coordinator,” the “recount supervisor shall . . . order the

recount to be held.” 11

      The problem for Relators, however, is that within thirty days of the

date the election records became publicly available, they didn’t file a

petition for mandamus to compel Adcox to either allow them to amend

the recount petition that Gaskill served on the wrong public official on

November 21 or to compel Adcox (as the recount coordinator and

supervisor) to approve the petition and order a recount of the votes that

petition or 5 p.m. of the second day after the date notice of the defect
under Section 212.029 is received by the petitioner, whichever is later.”).
      10See id. § 212.031(a). “Recount coordinator” is defined by Election

Code section 211.002(6) as “the authority to whom a petition for initial
recount or an expedited recount is submitted under Section 212.026 or
212.082.” “Recount supervisor” is defined by Election Code section
211.002(7) as “the authority designated by Section 213.001 to manage
and supervise a recount in election precincts in the jurisdiction of a local
canvasing authority.” For the November 2022 election, Adcox would have
been both the “recount coordinator” and the “recount supervisor.” Id. §§
212.026(a), 213.001(a).
      11Id.

                                    7
were cast in the school board election that occurred on November 8.12 To

be sure, the Relators argue that Adcox didn’t file their petition despite

what they claim was his non-discretionary duty under the Election Code

to do so. And given that duty, the relators conclude that this Court must

treat the November 21 or December 5 petitions they filed for a recount of

the vote as if they had been filed within the prescribed thirty-day period

the Election Code allows for filing a recount petition. 13

     Yet as mentioned, Adcox rejected the November 21 petition that

Gaskill submitted to Harvey because Gaskill didn’t submit it to him but

instead, she submitted it to Harvey. 14 The email that Adcox sent Gaskill

that includes his letter to her dated December 2, 2022, states: “That

     12See   id. § 212.031(b) (Action on Petition); id. § 233.006(b) (Filing
Period for Petition).
      13Id.
      14See id. § 212.031(b)–(d) (“(b) If the petition does not comply with

the applicable requirements, the recount coordinator shall determine
whether it is correctable by amendment. If the petition is not correctable,
the coordinator shall reject the petition. If the petition is correctable, the
coordinator shall delay acting on the petition until the deadline for
amending it. If at that time the petition is not corrected, the coordinator
shall reject the petition.
      (c) On rejecting a petition, the recount coordinator shall note on the
petition its rejected status and the reason for and date of the rejection.
      (d) After approving or rejecting a petition, the recount coordinator
shall promptly notify the petitioner of the action taken.”).
                                      8
petition [referring to the November 21 petition] is hereby rejected as it

was not properly or timely filed with the presiding officer of the

canvassing authority.” The word “Rejected” is printed in blue ink on the

November 21 petition, and Adcox signed and dated the petition as

rejected on December 2. Under the Election Code and when rejecting a

petition that a recount coordinator determines is not correctable, “the

recount coordinator shall note on the petition its rejected status and the

reason for and the date of the rejection.” 15

     Even though in his December 2 email Adcox advised Gaskill he had

rejected the recount petition, on December 5 Gaskill attempted to submit

a recount petition to a school district employee who worked in the

building where Adcox officed. But when the employee wouldn’t take the

petition, Gaskill emailed it to Adcox, complaining in her email that he

didn’t “allow [her] to correct any defects in the petition” of November 21

or “to allow us the opportunity to amend the petition in accordance with

the Election Code.”

     To be sure, by filing a writ of mandamus, Relators likely could have

challenged Adcox’s final decision rejecting the November 21 recount

     15Id.   § 212.026(c).
                                     9
petition and have argued that Adcox should have let them know why

their petition was defective and how to correct it instead of rejecting their

petition. 16 Under the Election Code, an official authorized by law to order

a recount only has a thirty-day period following the election results being

made publicly available to order a recount before the official canvass

becomes final. 17 By waiting until April 28, 2023 to challenge Adcox’s

decision on their petition for recount by filing a petition for mandamus—

that is, a delay of 171 days after the election results of the Magnolia ISD

school bond election became publicly available—the relators allowed the

canvass of the votes cast in the Magnolia ISD school bond election to

become final. 18

     Candidly, the relators admit they are not seeking a writ under Title

14 of the Election Code, which are the sections of the Code that apply to

an election contest. 19 So as to this original proceeding, the relators are

not seeking to overturn the results of the official canvass in the Magnolia

ISD’s school bond election, in which the majority of voters approved the

     16Id.  §§ 212.029 (Initial Review of Petition); 212.030 (Amendment
of Petition).
      17See id. § 233.006(b).
      18See id. § 212.031(a).
      19Id.§§ 221.001-247.005.

                                    10
district’s issuing $228,000,000 in school bonds. Instead, Relators argue

that because a recount would provide them with “an accounting on the

use and veracity of newly purchased voting equipment . . . in Montgomery

County,” their petition for mandamus is justiciable under the provisions

of Title 13, the chapter of the Election Code that applies to recounting

votes in an election. 20

      We disagree with Relators, however, that a justiciable issue still

exists in this case. By waiting 171 days to challenge Adcox’s final decision

rejecting their petition for recount, Relators allowed the results of the

November 8 election to become final. Even though Relators argue the

same voting equipment used in the school board election was used in the

May 6, 2023, election to elect two trustees to Magnolia ISD’s School

Board, they have not shown how that would affect the results of the

school board election on November 8 of last year.

      Moreover, the procedures available to Relators in the May 2023

election and in future elections allow for recounts, and the statutory

procedure contemplates that a recount committee in those elections (not

relators) will—in case of a recount—have the statutory rights to access

      20Id.   §§ 211.001-216.005.
                                    11
the information about the machines used in the election. 21 Thus, if the

May 2023 election for trustees on Magnolia ISD’s School Board fell within

the margin required for a recount, and if the president of Magnolia ISD’s

School Board abused his or her discretion in refusing to initiate a recount

after being presented with a proper recount petition by twenty-five or

more voters acting jointly requesting a recount under the Election Code,

twenty-five or more voters in that election may file a petition for

mandamus in this Court challenging the decision rejecting their petition

should that occur before the recount supervisor’s authority to order a

recount expires. 22

     21Id. § 213.007 (a) On presentation by a recount committee chair of
a written order signed by the recount supervisor, the custodian of voted
ballots, voting machines or test materials or programs used in counting
electronic voting system ballots shall make the ballots, machines, or
materials or programs, including the records from which the operation of
the voting system may be audited, available to the committee.
      (b) The custodian of keys to secured materials or equipment shall
make the keys available to the committee in the same manner as
provided by Subsection (a).
      (c) The recount committee chair shall have the materials and
equipment restored to their secured condition and returned to the
appropriate custodian.
      22See In re Hotze, 643 S.W.3d 413 (Tex. 2022) (Blacklock, J.,

concurring) (Complaints concerning a past election “in the books” do not
present grounds for a court to exercise its mandamus jurisdiction.); Tex.
Elec. Code Ann. § 273.061(a) (providing the courts of appeals and Texas
Supreme Court with jurisdiction in election cases to “compel the
                                   12
                                Conclusion

     By waiting 171 days after the election to challenge Adcox’s decision

rejecting the petitions Relators submitted for a recount of the vote on a

school bond measure approved by voters, the relators allowed the results

of the election to become final and Adcox’s duty to order a recount of the

results to expire. We hold that we lack jurisdiction over this original

proceeding. Accordingly, the Relator’s petition for writ of mandamus is

dismissed.

     PETITION DISMISSED.

                                                     PER CURIAM

Submitted on June 7, 2023
Opinion Delivered June 8, 2023

Before Golemon, C.J., Horton and Wright, JJ.

performance of any duty imposed by law”). We note that Relators filed an
amended petition in this Court on May 10, which was after the May 2023
election they rely on to assert they have a justiciable basis for their claim.
However, they failed in their amended petition to advise the Court
whether the margin of error in the May 2023 election triggered a recount.
                                     13