Court Opinion

ID: 864855
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2013-04-27 00:22:35.009097+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T09:57:08.665379
License: Public Domain

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF MISSISSIPPI

                                  NO. 2004-EC-00007-SCT

DEBRA WATERS

v.

JAMES “DANNY” GNEMI

DATE OF JUDGMENT:                           11/13/2003
TRIAL JUDGE:                                HON. ALBERT B. SMITH, III
COURT FROM WHICH APPEALED:                  HOLMES COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT
ATTORNEY FOR APPELLANT:                     MARVIN E. WIGGINS, JR.
ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEE:                     LESLIE SCOTT
                                            TOMMIE SULLIVAN CARDIN
NATURE OF THE CASE:                         CIVIL - ELECTION CONTEST
DISPOSITION:                                AFFIRMED - 06/02/2005
MOTION FOR REHEARING FILED:
MANDATE ISSUED:

       EN BANC.

       CARLSON, JUSTICE, FOR THE COURT:

¶1.    Because of the Special Tribunal’s order calling for a new election, thus nullifying her

apparent victory in the first Democratic primary election for the office of District Three

Supervisor in Holmes County, Debra Waters appeals to us seeking relief.        Finding that the

Special Tribunal appropriately set aside the results of the first primary election and ordered

a special second primary between Debra Waters and James “Danny” Gnemi, we affirm.
      FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS BEFORE THE HOLMES COUNTY DEMOCRATIC
             EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE AND THE SPECIAL TRIBUNAL

¶2.     The relevant facts concerning the 2003 Democratic primary election for the office of

District Three Supervisor in Holmes County are for the most part undisputed. Roy Anderson,

James “Danny” Gnemi and Debra Waters qualified to run for the office of District 3

Supervisor.     Gnemi was the incumbent, having served as District 3 Supervisor for almost

sixteen years at the time of the first primary election on August 5, 2003.                   Around 4:00 a.m.,

on August 6, 2003, the Holmes County Democratic Executive Committee (HCDEC)

announced that in the District 3 Democratic primary election, Waters had received 576 votes,

Gnemi had received 496 votes, and Anderson had received 72 votes. There were two write-in

votes and forty residual votes.1 Additionally, this announcement was made prior to the counting

of the affidavit ballots.2       Holmes County uses the Optical Mark Reading Equipment Voting

System (OMR) to scan and count its ballots.3 The OMR is programmed to “kick-out” ballots

        1
           These residual votes consisted of overvotes and undervotes. An overvote occurs when a citizen
votes for more than one candidate in a particular election on the ballot, and an undervote occurs when a
citizen fails to vote in a particular election on the ballot. Obviously, unless expressly noted on the ballot and
otherwise permitted by law, a voter cannot legally vote for more than one candidate in the same election, and
thus, in the case of an overvote, that ballot, while not totally void as to other elections appearing on the ballot,
is not counted for that particular election.

        2
         An affidavit ballot is utilized when the qualification of a citizen to vote in a particular election or
precinct is challenged at the polls. In order to preserve that citizen’s vote, the citizen casts an affidavit ballot
at the precinct, and at the time of the subsequent certification process, the county party executive committee
or the county election commission, as the case may be, will determine whether the affidavit ballot can be
counted.

        3
          Certainly, with the OMR, it ordinarily would not have taken as long as it did to count the ballots and
tally the results, but on that evening, there were persistent problems with the OMR stopping during the
scanning process.

                                                         2
containing overvotes and undervotes for visual examination by the appropriate election

officials.   After the HCDEC convened for the final certification process, it was determined

that Waters had received 579 votes, Gnemi had received 503 votes, and Anderson had received

72 votes. In order to arrive at the denominator to calculate the percentage of votes received

by each candidate in this supervisor’s election, the HCDEC added the total votes of the three

candidates (579 + 503 + 72) as well as the write-in (2) and residual (40) votes. This simple

math resulted in a total number of 1,196. Using the number 1,196 as the denominator, the

HCDEC calculated that Waters had received 48.41% of the vote (579 divided by 1,196),

Gnemi had received 42.05% of the vote (503 divided by 1,196), and Anderson had received

6.02% of the vote (72 divided by 1,196). Based on these percentages, it was obvious that there

would be a second primary election on August 26, 2003, between Waters and Gnemi, since no

candidate received a majority vote.

¶3.      Keeping in mind that the August, 2003 primaries in Mississippi involved elections for

both state-wide and local offices, immediately after the first primary certification, each of the

82 circuit clerks had to commence preparation in that clerk’s respective county for the second

primary elections three weeks later.    This preparation most importantly included the act of

having the ballots printed.   This process was commenced in Holmes County, and the second

primary ballot included the Waters/Gnemi     election.   However, during this time-frame, Waters

telephoned both the Secretary of State’s office and the Mississippi Democratic Party office

and talked with unidentified individuals in those respective offices.   According to Waters, she

was informed in these phone conversations that the residual votes and the write-in votes should

                                                3
not have been included in the vote total to calculate the percentages, and that a recalculation

without these 42 votes revealed that Waters was the outright winner of the first Democratic

primary, and thus, the Democratic nominee for the office of District Three Supervisor in

Holmes County.4

¶4.     On August 21, 2003, the Holmes County Circuit Clerk’s office received a fax

transmission from the Secretary of State’s office addressed to the HCDEC. This fax included

a 1991 Attorney General’s opinion          stating that “residual and other invalid votes” should not

be included in calculating the percentages of votes received by any particular candidate.

Around 9:30 a.m. on August 21, 2003, Gnemi (who had been campaigning since August 6h for
                                                                                   t

a second primary) received a telephone call from a supporter inquiring “what’s going on at the

courthouse?”    Upon placing a phone call to Earline Wright-Hart, the Holmes County Circuit

Clerk, Gnemi learned that he would “probably be getting a call.” Around noon, Gnemi in fact

received a phone call from a member of the HCDEC informing Gnemi to be at the courthouse

at 1:30 p.m. that day. Upon arrival at the courthouse, Gnemi was informed by Elma Maxine

Smith, the HCDEC chair, that there would not be a second primary in the District 3

Supervisor’s election because it had been determined that Waters had won the first primary

        4
         By reducing the original denominator of 1,196 by the number of residual and write-in votes, the new
denominator is 1,154. Accordingly, the re-calculated percentages are Waters – 50.17% of the vote (579
divided by 1,154); Gnemi – 43.59% of the vote (503 divided by 1,154); and, Anderson – 6.24% of the vote
(72 divided by 1,154). Thus, after the re-calculation without the residual and write-in votes included in the
count, Waters received one vote more than necessary to achieve a majority vote.

                                                     4
election.5    Smith showed Gnemi the fax from the Secretary of State’s office addressed to

“Mrs. Maxine Smith, as requested.” This fax transmission consisted of the 1991 Attorney

General’s opinion concerning a school bond issue, with discussion as to how to calculate

percentages in elections involving residual and write-in votes.            Smith then handed Gnemi a

typed document which stated:

        A question was raised regarding the election results of the District 3
        Supervisors (sic) race.6

        The Holmes County Democratic Executive Committee contacted the Secretary
        of State Office (sic) to receive information and a recommended ruling on the
        question raised.

        The Holmes County Executive Committee also solicited information from the
        Attorney General’s Office as well as the State Democratic Executive
        Committee.

        Based upon the information received from the above stated agencies, the
        Holmes County Executive Committee has ruled that Ms. Debra Waters is the
        declared winner in the District 3 Supervisors (sic) race on August 5, 2003.

¶5.     Knowing that the second primary had already been set, and that absentee votes were

already being cast by the voters in the Waters/Gnemi run-off, Gnemi, after being blind-sided

        5
           It must be kept in mind that the HCDEC’s decision to declare Waters the Democratic nominee, thus
nullifying a second, was made sua sponte without a candidate filing a written petition or protest with the
HCDEC, and after the HCDEC had certified the first primary election results to the Secretary of State, which
certification revealed that a second primary election had been declared between Waters and Gnemi for
District 3 Supervisor.

        6
          We now know that this “question” was surreptitiously raised by Waters by telephoning the offices
of the Secretary of State and the Mississippi Democratic Party. This action was taken in lieu of attempting
to avail herself of the statutory remedies to address election grievances so that all affected candidates would
have had fair notice as to her intentions.

                                                      5
with this revelation,7 not surprisingly wanted to pursue the issue and thus inquired of Smith and

the HCDEC members as to what rights he had and whether he could have a “recount.”8 After

this conversation, Gnemi went to the Circuit Clerk’s office and prepared a handwritten note

which stated, “I wish to have a recount in Dist. 3 election.              Only 2 votes difference for a

runoff.” Gnemi signed and dated this note and then Hart stamped the note as filed on August

21, 2003.     Gnemi then went back upstairs in the courthouse where the HCDEC was meeting

and in due course, Hart returned and informed the HCDEC that Gnemi had requested a

“recount.”

¶6.     The next day, Gnemi and Waters were present, and Hart presented them with a document

which Gnemi and Waters both signed as “agreed to form.” The document was dated August 22,

2003, and contained language confirming that Waters, on August 21, 2003, had been declared

by the HCDEC to be the winner of the first primary election, that Gnemi had requested an

examination of the ballot boxes the previous day, that Waters waived the statutory three-day

notice,9 and that the examination commenced at 10:45 a.m. and ended at 4:36 p.m. the same

day.    Since there are six precincts in District 3, Gnemi, during the examination process that

day, expected to be presented with six metal precinct ballot boxes which had been sealed since

        7
          At a later hearing before the Special Tribunal, Gnemi testified he was “floored” when he learned
that, after campaigning for 15 days since the first primary, and with knowledge that absentee ballots were
already being cast in the District 3 Supervisor’s election, the second primary in the Waters/Gnemi election
had been abruptly canceled by unilateral action of the HCDEC.

        8
         As will be discussed in due course, there is no such statutory creature as a “recount” in our election
laws.

        9
         See Miss. Code Ann. § 23-15-911 (Rev. 2001).

                                                      6
the August 5th primary.           However, instead, he was presented with two cardboard boxes

containing commingled ballots and other election materials from the six metal precinct ballot

boxes.10       When Gnemi inquired as to why these election materials were not still sealed in the

metal ballot boxes, Hart stated that the election materials from the first primary election had

to be emptied into the two cardboard boxes so that the metal ballot boxes could be re-used for

the upcoming second primary.            Hart likewise disclosed two documents signed by Wilbur B.

Redmond, the Holmes County District Three Election Commissioner.                             These documents

revealed that Redmond certified that the two cardboard boxes contained the election materials

from the August 5th Democratic primary for District 3, and that Redmond had removed these

materials from the precinct ballot boxes on August 19, 2003, in preparation for the second

primary.11       Despite his concern about the method of preservation of the election materials,

Gnemi examined the contents of the two cardboard boxes.                     Hart was able to identify the

election materials by precinct, and as Gnemi concluded his examination of the election

materials from a particular precinct, Hart placed these materials, not in one of the two

cardboard boxes, but instead in the appropriate metal precinct box, which was then double-

sealed.

¶7.       After the examination of the election contents, and upon reflection, Gnemi filed an

unsworn handwritten protest with the HCDEC at 10:30 a.m., August 25, 2003, the day before

          10
            The condition of these cardboard boxes will be discussed later in the opinion.

          11
          The involvement of Redmond and other Holmes County Election Commissioners in this Democratic
primary election will be discussed in more detail later in this opinion.

                                                        7
the second primary. Some of the complaints contained in Gnemi’s petition were (1) that after

declaring a second primary in the District 3 Supervisor’s election, the HCDEC abruptly

canceled the second primary, (2) that at the time of the cancellation of the second primary just

4 days prior to the scheduled date,12 ballots for the Gnemi/Waters election had been printed

and absentee voting was already occurring, (3) that Gnemi was not notified of the HCDEC’s

action until the afternoon of August 21, 2003, after he had been campaigning for the second

primary election since August 6, 2003, and (4) that at the time of the examination of the

election materials, it was obvious that these materials had been stored in unsecured cardboard

boxes.        No action was taken by the HCDEC on Gnemi’s petition prior to the August 26th

second primary, and no official notice had been given to the voting public regarding the

HCDEC’s decision to cancel the second primary election in the District 3 Supervisor’s race.

The computer printout from the second primary election revealed that Gnemi received 397

votes (52.16% of the vote) and that Waters received 306 votes (40.21% of the vote).

However, the HCDEC refused to certify these election returns based on its prior action in

canceling the second primary and declaring Waters to be the Democratic nominee to face

general election opposition for the office of District 3 Supervisor.

¶8.      On or about August 29, 2003, Gnemi received from the HCDEC a letter dated August

28, 2003, informing him that his petition was denied and advising him of his right to appeal the

HCDEC’s findings. On September 23, 2003, Gnemi, with counsel, filed his sworn petition for

         12
          The record reveals that the HCDEC actually canceled the second primary for District 3 Supervisor
on August 21, 2003, which was five (not four) days prior to the second primary, which was held on August
26, 2003.

                                                     8
judicial review in the Circuit Court of Holmes County. Upon being notified, the Chief Justice

of this Court, pursuant to statute, promptly entered an order appointing Hon. Albert B. Smith,

III, a circuit judge from the Eleventh Circuit Court District, to preside over all proceedings in

this election contest.       Judge Smith promptly performed his statutory responsibilities and

established an expedited discovery schedule, but due to existing scheduling conflicts of some

of the attorneys, a hearing could not be held until October 27, 2003.

¶9.     Thus, on October 27, 2003, Judge Smith called this case up for a hearing at the Holmes

County Courthouse in Lexington.13           Gnemi and Waters were present and represented by

counsel.     Judge Smith received sworn testimony from five witnesses who were called in

Gnemi’s case-in-chief, and sworn testimony from four witnesses who were called in Waters’s

case-in-chief. The parties exercised their right of cross-examination of the witnesses and

Judge Smith admitted 14 exhibits into evidence. Judge Smith also allowed opening statements

at the commencement of the hearing and closing arguments at the conclusion of the

presentation of the evidence.

¶10.    At the conclusion of the hearing, Judge Smith rendered a bench opinion in open court

which was later memorialized via a final order dated November 13, 2003, and subsequently

entered on November 17, 2003. We briefly quote from Judge Smith’s very detailed order:

        [T]hat there was a violation of Miss. Code Ann. § 23-15-911 due to the ballots
        cast for the office of Supervisor, Beat 3, Holmes County, Mississippi, being

        13
           It is clear from the record that, notwithstanding the provisions of Miss. Code Ann.§ 23-15-931 (Rev.
2001), Judge Smith did not convene a special tribunal with the five county election commissioners to hear this
primary election contest. While the record is silent as to the reasons for Judge Smith’s failure to convene the
special tribunal, the impracticality of such action in this case will soon become readily apparent.

                                                      9
         removed from the ballot boxes used in the primary election and being placed in
         cardboard boxes prior to the expiration of the requisite time period set forth in
         Miss. Code Ann. § 23-15-911.

         [T]hat the violation of Miss. Code Ann. § 23-15-911 is a total departure from
         the mandatory provisions of the statute, preventing Plaintiff James “Danny”
         Gnemi from being able to file any type of valid protest and therefore resulting
         in Mr. Gnemi losing his right to have a recount.

¶11.     Having made these findings, Judge Smith, via the same order, directed, inter alia, that

(1) the November 4, 2003, Holmes County general election for District 3 Supervisor be

postponed; (2) a special primary runoff election between Waters and Gnemi be held on

December 16, 2003; and, (3) a special general election for District 3 Supervisor be held on

January 6, 2004, between the emerging Democratic nominee and the Independent candidates

who had qualified prior to the expiration of the qualifying deadline. In the same order, Judge

Smith quite appropriately issued directions to the election officials concerning preparation for

these elections, and Judge Smith likewise quite appropriately declared that since the qualifying

deadline had long since passed, it would not be reopened to allow additional candidates to run

in these special elections.

¶12.     In due course Waters, timely appealed to us seeking relief from the circuit judge’s

order.

                                          DISCUSSION

¶13.     We recite here basically verbatim the five issues which Waters requests that we

consider:   (1) The special tribunal was without jurisdiction to consider the petition for judicial

review filed by James Gnemi, who failed to comply with the requisites mandated by statute;

                                                10
(2) The special tribunal committed error by granting relief under the petition for judicial

review on the grounds of an asserted violation of Miss. Code Ann. § 23-15-911 (1972), as

amended; (3) The special tribunal committed error by granting relief under the petition for

judicial review on the grounds of an asserted denial of Gnemi’s “right to a recount;” (4) The

special tribunal committed error by granting relief under the petition for judicial review since

the decision was not supported by the findings cited in the order of the special tribunal; and,

(5) The special tribunal committed error in subjecting the innocent voters of District Three

of Holmes County to the costs of the technical violation of an election procedure by the

election officials, without any finding of fraud or of an attempt to manipulate the outcome of

the election in favor of, or against, one candidate over another.

¶14.    Before commencing a thorough discussion of the issues, we feel compelled to make

at least a few observations. When this Court judicially enacted the Mississippi Rules of Civil

Procedure effective on and after January 1, 1982, it was made abundantly clear that there were

certain civil actions which quite appropriately should continue to be governed by statute. Miss.

R. Civ. P. 81(a)(4) expressly states that proceedings pertaining to election contests would

continue to be governed by statutory procedures with the rules of civil procedure having

limited applicability.   Our cases are legion where we have relied heavily on legislatively

enacted election laws to determine the appropriate outcome in election contests which were

appealed to us. Today’s case is no exception, and in fact we recently again emphasized the role

of our statutes which appropriately guide both our courts and the election officials who

shoulder the responsibility of assuring fairness in the election process throughout our State.

                                                    11
In Barbour v. Gunn, 890 So. 2d 843, 847 (Miss. 2004), we addressed one of the purposes of

Miss. Code Ann. § 23-15-927 (Rev. 2001), which provides for the filing of a petition for

judicial review in circuit court:

        The statute was crafted in that fashion to preserve the voices of the voters of
        Mississippi. If the trial court could not hear such a complaint, a contested
        primary might very well drag on past the general election, thereby
        disenfranchising the members of a political party. This is not permissible. The
        right to vote is an important badge of citizenship that should be treasured by all
        citizens, and Mississippi courts must safeguard it accordingly. The trial court
        acted in accordance with the will of the Legislature and in the best interests of
        the citizens of Mississippi by taking jurisdiction of the election contest.

Id. at 847.

¶15.    Another point should be made abundantly clear. The statutes which govern primary

election contests and the statutes which govern general election contests are altogether

different creatures.    A person wishing to contest a party primary election must file a petition

for judicial review in circuit court, at which time, upon notice by the circuit clerk, the Chief

Justice of the Supreme Court will appoint a circuit judge or chancellor from a district not

embraced by the county in which the election irregularities allegedly occurred, and the duly

appointed judge will proceed to hear the election contest as the presiding judge of a special

tribunal, composed of the judge and the five county election commissioners. Miss. Code Ann.

§§ 23-15-927, -929, -931 (Rev. 2001). In a primary election contest, an election should be

voided only if there has been such a departure from statutory compliance “as to destroy the

integrity of the election and make the will of the qualified electors impossible to ascertain.”

Riley v. Clayton, 441 So. 2d 1322, 1328 (Miss. 1983)(citing Ulmer v. Currie, 245 Miss. 285,

                                                12
147 So. 2d 286 (1962); Sinclair v. Fortenberry, 213 Miss. 219, 56 So. 2d 697 (1952);

Gregory v. Sanders, 195 Miss. 508, 15 So. 2d 432 (1943)). This Court has stated:

         We have employed a two pronged test which though it has been stated in
         different ways, essentially provides that special elections will be required only
         when (1) enough illegal votes were cast for the contestee to change the result
         of the election, or (2) so many votes are disqualified that the will of the voters
         is impossible to discern.[] Walker v. Smith, 215 Miss. 255, 56 So. 2d 84,
         suggestion of error, 215 Miss. 263, 264, 57 So. 2d 166, 167 (1952); Pyron v.
         Joiner, 381 So. 2d 627 (Miss. 1980).

Noxubee County Democratic Exec. Comm. v. Russell, 443 So. 2d 1191, 1197-98 (Miss.

1983).        On the other hand, a person wishing to contest a general election must file a petition

in circuit court, and the case is ultimately tried before a duly impaneled jury which by a verdict

“shall find the person having the greatest number of legal votes at the election.” Miss. Code

Ann. § 3-15-951 (Rev. 2001).14           Obviously, in today’s case, we are confronted with a primary

election contest as opposed to a general election contest.

¶16.     Finally, we note that election contests (both primary and general) are by their very

nature required to be put on a “fast-track” by both election officials and the courts. While we

all want to assure fairness and discern the will of the voters, we must move promptly so as to

not disrupt the election process.         Candidates and their families, friends and supporters have

worked too hard.         But admittedly, this whole process is really not about the candidates, but

         14
          Unlike a primary election contest, where the statute requires that the Chief Justice appoint a circuit
judge or a chancellor “of a district other than that which embraces the county or any of the counties, involved
in the contest or complaint,” in a general election contest, the circuit judge in the district where the election
contest is filed may preside over the trial, although sua sponte recusals are not uncommon in general election
contests.

                                                      13
instead it is about preserving the integrity of the election process and assuring that the voices

of innocent voters are heard. To this end, we have stated:

        When deciding whether a special election is warranted, we recognize competing
        interests which must be weighed and balanced. While the voters are not parties
        to this contest, their interests are paramount. Special elections are a great
        expense for the county and its taxpayers. Beyond that, the turnout for a special
        election is never as great as when there are a number of candidates on the slate.
        By contrast, we feel that the rights of the individual candidates cannot be
        allowed to overshadow the public good.

        As far as the public good is concerned, the rights our law gives to losing
        candidates to contest elections form a double edged sword. While they serve
        to prevent the fraudulent manipulation of the public will, they necessarily
        provide a way for the unsuccessful candidate to use innocent human errors to his
        own advantage, thereby winning a second chance.

Hatcher v. Fleeman, 617 So. 2d 634, 640-41 (Miss. 1993) (quoting from Noxubee County,
443 So. 2d at 1197).

¶17.    With this backdrop, we now address the issues in today’s case, and in so doing, we

restate and reorder for clarity the issues as presented to us by Debra Waters.

        I.      WHETHER THE SPECIAL TRIBUNAL HAD
                JURISDICTION TO CONSIDER GNEMI’S PETITION FOR
                JUDICIAL REVIEW.

¶18.    Waters argues that the special tribunal which convened to review this election contest

lacked subject matter jurisdiction due to Gnemi’s failure to meet jurisdictional prerequisites

enumerated in our election statutes. Specifically, Waters alleges five separate procedural

deficiencies.   Waters alleges that Gnemi’s petition filed with the HCDEC was unsworn; that

Gnemi’s petition for judicial review with attached documentation was not properly verified;

that Gnemi failed to meet the express statutory requirement of obtaining proper certification

                                                  14
from two practicing attorneys; that Gnemi did not properly submit the required cost bond,

which must be posted in the amount of $300, and which must also be accompanied by two or

more sufficient sureties conditioned to pay court costs in the event the contestant/petitioner

does not prevail; and, that Gnemi’s pleadings were insufficient to maintain an action with the

special tribunal.

        A.          Was Gnemi’s petition filed with the HCDEC properly sworn?

¶19.    Waters alleges that Gnemi failed to file a sworn petition when contesting the primary

election before the HCDEC.          Waters is correct. However, Gnemi was not required to file a

sworn petition with the HCDEC.           Miss. Code Ann. § 23-15-921 (Rev. 2001) sets out the

procedure to be followed when filing a protest with a county party executive committee. That

statute states in pertinent part:

        [A] person desiring to contest the election of another person returned as the
        nominee of the party to any county or county district office, or as the nominee
        of a legislative district composed of one (1) county or less, may, within twenty
        (20) days after the primary election, file a petition with the secretary, or any
        member of the county executive committee in the county in which the election
        was held, setting forth the grounds upon which the primary election is contested.

This statute does not state or imply a requirement that the written petition filed with the county

executive committee must be sworn.           Waters goes further and alleges that the applicable

statute governing the filing of a circuit court petition for judicial review requires that not only

must the petition for judicial review be sworn, but there must also be attached to this petition

a sworn copy of the petition filed with the county executive committee. Waters is correct;

however, she misinterprets the meaning of the phrase “sworn copy of the petition.”             The

                                                  15
applicable statute governing the filing of a petition for judicial review is Miss. Code Ann. § 23-

15-927, which states in pertinent part:

        [T]he contestant shall have the right forthwith to file in the circuit court of the
        county wherein the irregularities are charged to have occurred.......a sworn copy
        of his said protest or complaint, together with a sworn petition, setting forth
        with particularity wherein the executive committee has wrongfully failed to act
        or to fully and promptly investigate or has wrongfully denied the relief prayed
        by said contest, with a prayer for a judicial review thereof.

This statute specifically governs the circuit court action after a contestant has received no

relief from the county executive committee.              More than a procedural technicality, the

requirement that the circuit court petition for judicial review be sworn insures a subsequent

reviewing special tribunal that the matter before it is meritorious and reviewable, having been

formerly and properly ruled upon by the county party executive committee.

¶20.    In Miller v. Oktibbeha County Democratic Executive Committee, 377 So. 2d 917

(Miss. 1979), we examined the sworn contest requirement at issue in this case. In citing our

earlier decisions in Robinson v. Briscoe, 326 So. 2d 796 (Miss. 1976); and, Darnell v. Myres,

202 Miss. 767, 32 So. 2d 684 (1948), we affirmed the special tribunal’s dismissal of a primary

election contest petition and stated that “[t]he contest must be sworn as originally filed with

the Executive Committee, the purpose of the statute being to guard against frivolous

interruptions of the orderly progression of the primary election process.” Miller, 377 So. 2d

at 918. We further stated in Miller that the contestant’s failure to have the contest “sworn as

originally filed with the Executive Committee” was a jurisdictional defect.

                                                    16
¶21.   We can understand Waters’s reliance on Miller, Robinson, and Darnell. Unfortunately,

this Court, in Miller, relied on Robinson, which had misinterpreted Darnell.

In a three-paragraph opinion, this Court, in Robinson, affirmed the circuit court’s dismissal of

an election contest due to the contestant’s alleged failure to comply with the statute

concerning the protest or complaint which is filed with the county party executive committee.

Our opinion in Robinson states in pertinent part:

       This is an appeal from the Circuit Court of Marshall County which sustained a
       plea in bar of the appellee, Wayne Briscoe, and dismissed the case against him.
       The court found the appellant, Sam T. Robinson, had not complied with the
       requirements of Mississippi Code Annotated section 23-3-45 (1972)15 wherein
       ‘the contestant shall have the right forthwith to file with the circuit court .... a
       sworn copy of his said protest or complaint, together with a sworn petition.....’

       The issue before the Court is whether the contestant in an election contest
       complies with the statute when he files a petition for judicial review and attaches
       to it an unsworn copy of the protest or complaint filed with the party executive
       committee. It is the opinion of the Court that all issues presented are controlled
       by Darnell v. Myres, 202 Miss. 767, 32 So. 2d 684 (1947). The statute requires
       the protest or complaint to be sworn to.
326 So. 2d at 796-97.

¶22.   In Darnell, the winner of the primary election subsequently lost an election contest

before the county party executive committee and sought judicial review.        Upon commencing

an action for judicial review by a special tribunal, the primary election winner failed to attach

as an exhibit to his petition a copy of the answer which he had filed as the contestee before the

party executive committee; therefore, the petition for judicial review was dismissed by the

       15
         This statute is now Miss. Code Ann. § 23-15-927 (Rev. 2001).

                                                    17
special tribunal.     In upholding the dismissal, we discussed the procedural prerequisite

concerning the filing of pleadings with the county executive committee:

        [W]hen the contestee [the original winner] would complain to the special
        judicial tribunal, he must show by exhibit with his complaint what he had placed
        before the executive committee, either by specific denials or by specific cross-
        complaint, and wherein the executive committee had wrongfully acted or failed
        to act on what he had thus placed before the committee for its determination and
        action.

Darnell, 202 Miss. at 775, 32 So. 2d at 686. The statute thus assures that the special judicial

tribunal will not “examine into matters not presented by the original contest or protest before

the executive committee, save as to matters germane which happened during or since the

hearing before the executive committee, and save as to matters merely explanatory or

incidental.” 202 Miss. at 773, 32 So.2d at 685 (citing Harris v. Stewart, 187 Miss. 489, 507,

193 So. 339 (1940)). Stated clearly, we reasoned:

        It is plain enough on a careful analysis of Sec. 15, Chap. 19, Laws, 1935,
        Ex.Sess., Sec. 3182, Code 1942 [now Miss. Code Ann. § 23-15-927], that what
        the special tribunal created under that chapter is to hear and determine is in what
        respect or respects the party 'executive committee has wrongfully *** denied
        the relief prayed by said contest,' meaning of course the contest theretofore
        filed by the contestant with and before the executive committee under Sec.
        3143, Code 1942 [now Miss. Code Ann. § 23-15-921]. So it is then that Sec.
        15, Sec. 3182 [now Miss. Code Ann. § 23-15-927], requires that the petition for
        a judicial review shall exhibit as an essential part of the petition a sworn copy
        of his protest or complaint theretofore made before the executive committee,
        from which it follows that if the contestant made no protest or contest in
        writing before the executive committee, there can be no jurisdiction in the
        special tribunal to review the action of the executive committee, and further that
        unless a sworn copy of his said protest or contest before the executive
        committee is made a part of his petition for a judicial review, the said
        petition will present no cause of action for such a review.
32 So. 2d at 685 (emphasis added).

                                                   18
¶23.    It is thus abundantly clear that the Court in Robinson misinterpreted the above language

from our decision in Darnell. All we said in Darnell was that the original contestee failed to

file any written responsive pleadings before the party executive committee, and that since he

failed to attach to his circuit court petition for judicial review a sworn copy of any pleadings

he filed with the executive committee, the special tribunal had no jurisdiction to judicially

review the action of the party executive committee.       The Court in Robinson erroneously

interpreted Darnell to require that a circuit court petition for judicial review must have

attached a “copy of the sworn petition” filed with the party executive committee, as opposed

to a “sworn copy of the petition.”

¶24.    Thus, while we agree with Waters that Miss. Code Ann. § 23-15-927 requires that a

contestant file in circuit court a sworn petition for judicial review with certain attachments,

including a sworn copy of his/her protest or petition which had been filed with the county

executive committee, we part ways with Waters when she asserts that the protest or petition

filed with the county executive committee must be sworn and that the subsequent filing of the

petition for judicial review must have attached thereto a copy of the previously sworn petition

filed with the county executive committee. Waters, like the Court in Robinson, misinterprets

our decision in Darnell because she interprets Section 23-15-927 to require that there be

attached to the petition for judicial review a “copy of the sworn petition” filed with the county

executive committee. The statute does not require this. What is required to be attached to the

petition for judicial review is “a sworn copy” of the petition filed with the county executive

                                              19
committee, not a “copy of the sworn petition” filed with the county executive committee. If

we accepted Waters’s interpretation of Section 23-15-927 and our case law, we would in

essence judicially abrogate Miss. Code Ann. § 23-15-921, which clearly does not require that

a sworn petition be filed with the county executive committee. Further, Waters’s interpretation

of the statute would have us say that while Section 23-15-921 does not require that the petition

filed with the county executive committee be sworn, that same petition has to be sworn when

it is attached as an exhibit to the petition for judicial review which is subsequently filed in

circuit court. This is an impossibility.

¶25.     Here is what Gnemi quite appropriately did in today’s case.       He filed his petition for

judicial review in the Circuit Court of Holmes County.         There were numerous attachments to

the petition for judicial review, including his handwritten note of August 21, 2003, asking for

a “recount,” the circuit clerk’s handwritten note of August 22, 2003, signed by both Waters and

Gnemi, confirming that Gnemi had requested an examination of the ballot boxes, and Gnemi’s

unsworn handwritten protest which he signed and filed with the HCDEC on August 25, 2003.

Also attached to the circuit court petition for judicial review is a “Verification” which states,

“Personally came and appeared before me, the undersigned authority in and for the aforesaid

jurisdiction, James “Danny” Gnemi, who being by me first duly sworn states on oath that the

matters and things contained in the above and foregoing are true and correct to the best of his

knowledge, information, and belief.”       This verification    was signed by Gnemi before the

Chancery Clerk of Leake County, Mississippi and notarized by a Leake County deputy chancery

clerk.

                                                 20
¶26.    In this case, we can thus state with confidence that Gnemi unquestionably complied with

the provisions of Section 23-15-927, and our applicable case law, in that he attached to his

circuit court petition for judicial review a “sworn copy” of the unsworn petition which he had

filed with the HCDEC.         By so doing, the special tribunal was empowered with jurisdiction to

hear the case and was clearly informed of the issues which Gnemi wanted the special tribunal

to review.

¶27.    Accordingly, we today expressly overrule Robinson, and to the extent that Miller can

be interpreted to have been decided based on Robinson, we likewise overrule Miller to that

limited extent.

¶28.    Thus, this assignment of error is wholly without merit.

        B.        Was Gnemi’s circuit court petition for judicial review properly
                  sworn?

¶29.    Waters asserts that the oath attached to Gnemi’s petition for judicial review was

insufficient as filed.    Specifically, Waters directs our attention to the “Verification” discussed

supra, and argues:

        Gnemi further failed to swear to the petition for judicial review when filed. His
        attorney signed the complaint, as any other civil action, on September 23, 2003.
        A document purporting to be a “Verification” recited that James Gnemi on oath
        stated that the matters and things in the said petition were true and correct, upon
        information and belief – on September 22, 2003, by a separate document
        attached to the said petition, which was dated September 23, 2003.16

        16
           Evidently, one of Waters’s concerns about the verification is the fact that Gnemi signed the
verification a day before his attorney signed the petition for judicial review to which the verification is
attached. While Waters offers authority to generally attack the verification attached to the petition for judicial
review, she offers no authority to show us why Gnemi’s verification is fatally defective because it contains
a date different than the date of the petition. Waters’s failure to cite any authority to support a particular

                                                       21
¶30.      In support of this argument, Waters cites Fillingane v. Breland, 212 Miss. 423, 54
So. 2d 747 (1951), a case where this Court addressed the verification of a primary election

contest petition.       In Fillingane, Breland and Fillingane ran in the Democratic primary for

District Five Supervisor in Perry County.         Breland received 171 votes and Fillingane received

170 votes.          Fillingane promptly wrote the county executive committee requesting that the

committee investigate certain irregularities and declare a new election.                Fillingane then filed

a sworn petition of protest with the                 county    executive     committee,17     again asserting

irregularities, including an incident where a ballot was allegedly marked with an ordinary lead

pencil.        On Breland’s motion, the county executive committee dismissed Fillingane’s petition,

whereupon Fillingane then filed a sworn petition for judicial review, which petition “carried

forward” the assertions contained in his initial petition filed with the county executive

committee.        Likewise, Fillingane attached to his sworn petition for judicial review, a certified

copy of his original protest as well as the proceedings before the county executive committee.

Fillingane’s petition for judicial review contained an oath or verification similar to the

verification in the case sub judice in that Fillingane signed an oath which, inter alia, stated that

proposition precludes this Court from being able to consider and address the issue on appeal. Lauro v.
Lauro, 847 So. 2d 843, 851 (Miss. 2003); Grey v. Grey, 638 So. 2d 488, 491 (Miss. 1994).

          17
          Fillingane did more than the statute required in filing a sworn petition before the county executive
committee. In fact this Court, in Fillingane, stated, inter alia: “The original protest [filed before the county
executive committee] was similarly verified, so that we need not decide whether it was required to be sworn
to, or whether the ‘sworn copy’ of the protest required on appeal relates to the protest as originally filed.”
212 Miss. at 436, 54 So.2d at 749. We are confident that had this Court, in Fillingane, deemed it necessary
to address this issue, we would have determined that the statute clearly does not require that the original
petition or protest filed with the county executive committee be sworn.

                                                      22
“the matters and things set forth in this petition......are true and correct to the best of his

knowledge, belief and information.”       While the special tribunal made certain factual findings

based on Fillingane’s allegations, the tribunal dismissed the petition because it was not “a

sworn petition under Code 1942, Section 3182.”18 212 Miss. at 435, 54 So.2d at 748-49. In

reversing the special tribunal’s dismissal, we quoted from Griffith’s Chancery Practice,

Section 175, and stated:

       “The correct allegation must be not less positive than this: The complainant has
       been informed and believes, and upon such information and belief charges the
       facts to be, stating them as facts, or it may be stated thus. Complainant charges,
       as he is informed and believes, stating the facts charged.” This section is
       documented by cases involving the Code section just referred to, and therefore
       states a rule more stringent than that which is applicable to the sufficiency of the
       oath considered apart from the statute. It will be seen that the affiant states that
       the allegations of the petition are true and correct. Its efficacy is not impaired
       by adding that the assurance of such truth is derived from belief or information
       as indeed are most assertions of fact. Our conclusion could, if necessary, take
       reinforcement from Section 3158 which requires “an ordinary and reasonable
       construction * * * to accomplish its purposes.”

212 Miss. at 436, 54 So. 2d at 749.          Finally in Fillingane, we stated the verification of the

petition for judicial review “could not well have been more definite and we hold that it need

not have been.” Id.

¶31.   Thus, consistent with Fillingane, Gnemi’s verification attached to his petition for

judicial review was more than adequate and in compliance with the applicable provisions of

Miss. Code Ann. § 23-15-927 (Rev. 2001).

¶32.   Accordingly, this issue is without merit.

       18
         This 1942 code section was the predecessor statute to Miss. Code Ann. § 23-15-927.

                                                   23
        C.       Was Gnemi’s circuit court petition for judicial review properly
                 certified by two practicing attorneys?

¶33.    Waters next claims that Gnemi’s petition for judicial review lacked the proper

accompanying certificates from two practicing attorneys.           The applicable statute states in

relevant part:

        [S]uch petition for judicial review shall not be filed unless it bear the certificate
        of two (2) practicing attorneys that they and each of them have fully made an
        independent investigation into the matters of fact and of law upon which the
        protest and petition are based and after such investigation they verily believe that
        the said protest and petition should be sustained and that the relief therein
        prayed should be granted.........

Miss. Code Ann. § 23-15-927.         This statutory requirement furthers the goal contemplated by

the legislature in its promulgation of Section 23-15-927.        Accordingly, it provides yet another

express obstacle to the initiation of frivolous partisan litigation.     In Harris v. Stewart, 187
Miss. 489, 193 So. 339 (1940), this Court discussed this statutory requirement, stating:

        [T]he evident and material purpose of the requirement of the certificate of two
        independent practicing attorneys was to prevent, or at least to minimize, the
        bringing before the courts of captious or unsubstantial political contests of
        primary elections,--that such a certificate would dependably show that there was
        real merit from a substantial legal standpoint in the proposed contest, and would
        tend to forestall, in a large measure, spiteful partisan litigation which would
        needlessly cast doubt upon the future title of the successful candidate to the
        nomination for the public office involved.
193 So. at 343.

¶34.    This two-practicing attorney requirement has been strictly construed and held to be

jurisdictional. In Pearson v. Jordan, 186 Miss. 789, 192 So. 39 (1939) we cited our decision

                                                  24
in Pittman v. Forbes, Miss., 186 Miss. 783, 191 So. 490 (1939) and once again stated, “that

the certificate should be signed by unbiased lawyers; and that ‘Such a purpose eliminates

attorneys who represent a contestant at the time their investigation of the matter is made, or

at the time his petition for a judicial review is filed.’” Pearson, 192 So. at 40.    In dismissing

the petition for judicial review in Pearson, we held the statutory certificate of two

disinterested practicing attorneys to be jurisdictional:

        It follows, therefore, that the special tribunal was without jurisdiction to hear
        and determine the cause; and that this Court is therefore without jurisdiction to
        hear it on appeal. The statute is mandatory, using as emphatic language as could
        be employed, under the circumstances
                                      ********************
        The right of a contestee to an office to some extent is tainted by the proceeding;
        and it is important that this independent investigation should be made by
        disinterested attorneys, having no connection with the case. The certificate of
        the two disinterested attorneys is just as important as the petition itself, and is
        jurisdictional.
Id.

¶35.    While Waters has submitted the issue and the appropriate rule for our review, she has

failed to support her contention with any evidence of a failure on the part of Gnemi to meet

the statutory mandate. Attached to Gnemi’s petition are two separate certificates, each signed

by a different attorney.      Other than the name of the attorney, the attorney’s Mississippi Bar

number, and the attorney’s mailing address, both certificates are identical.       Each certificate

states that the attorney is a licensed and practicing attorney in the state of Mississippi and that:

        1.       I have fully made an independent investigation into the matters of
                 fact and of law upon which the foregoing protest and petition are
                 based; and,

                                                     25
        2.      After such investigation, I verily believe that the protest and
                petition should be sustained and that the relief therein prayed
                should be granted.

The language of paragraphs one and two of the attorneys’ certificates is identical to the

language of the statute.     We are at a total loss as to what else Waters believes these two

attorneys and Gnemi could have done, or should have done, to strictly comply with the

pertinent provisions of Miss. Code Ann. § 23-15-927 regarding the attorneys’ certificates.

Moreover, the record evidences not only that two attorney certificates were attached in support

of Gnemi’s petition but that such submissions were made by disinterested attorneys based on

independent investigation.

¶36.    We thus find this issue to be without merit.

        D.      Was Gnemi’s circuit court petition for judicial review properly
                accompanied by the required cost bond?

¶37.    Waters asserts that Gnemi’s cost bonds fail to meet the statutory requirements. Miss.

Code Ann. § 23-15-927 states in pertinent part:

        [T]he petitioner shall give a cost bond in the sum of Three Hundred Dollars
        ($300.00), with two (2) or more sufficient sureties conditioned to pay all costs
        in case his petition be dismissed, and an additional bond may be required, by the
        judge or chancellor, if necessary, at any subsequent stage of the proceedings.

Waters’s specific complaints are that “none of [the cost bonds] bear the approval of the clerk,

and all three bear dates different from the petition, the first being dated September 22, 2003,

the third being dated September 19, 2003, and the second not being signed at all by Gnemi.”

Additionally, Waters asserts that Gnemi filed his cost bond in piecemeal fashion, with some

of the pages being facsimile copies. Collective Exhibit 14 attached to the petition for judicial

                                                   26
review consists of: First page – Cost Bond in the amount of $300.00, with the required

statutory language, signed by Gnemi and Holt Smith as surety.    The other signature line for a

surety contains no signature but does have typed on the line “See Attachment.” This document

is a facsimile copy and is dated September 22, 2003. Second page – Bond for Costs (in the

amount of $300.00) setting out that Gnemi is the principal and Travelers Casualty and Surety

Company of America, Hartford, Connecticut, is the surety, and again there appears the

statutory requirement concerning the conditions of the bond.     There is a signature line for

Gnemi, with a check mark, but no signature. On the signature line for an attorney-in-fact and

Mississippi Resident Agent for Travelers appears the signature of “Anita Johnson.”          The

signature line for approval by a circuit judge is blank. This document is dated September 19,

2003. Third page – This is a facsimile copy of the second page, except that Gnemi’s signature

appears on this page. Again, the signature line for approval by a circuit judge is blank. Fourth

and Fifth pages – Power of Attorney and Certificate of Authority of Attorney(s)-In-Fact. This

document authorizes three individuals, including Anita Johnson, to bind Travelers in an amount

not to exceed $500,000.00 by the execution of various instruments, including bonds.        This

document is signed under oath by George W. Thompson, Senior Vice President for Travelers,

and contains four corporate seals of the Travelers entities, along with the signature,

commission expiration date and seal of a notary public.   This document was also certified as

remaining in full force and not revoked, as indicated by the signature of Kori M. Johnson,

Assistant Bond Secretary for Travelers, and again reflecting Travelers’s four corporate seals.

Johnson’s certificate is dated September 19, 2003.

                                                 27
¶38.     With this documentation before her, Waters asserts that Gnemi failed to comply with

the cost bond requirements of the statute. Waters’s sole citation to authority on this issue is

a quote from Pearson that “[t]he statute is mandatory, using as emphatic language as could be

employed, under the circumstances.” 192 So. at 40.          In Pearson, this Court affirmed the

special tribunal’s dismissal of the petition for judicial review due to the contestant’s failure

to strictly comply with the        statutory requirement   of obtaining certificates from      two

disinterested attorneys.   We agree with the assertion that Miss. Code Ann. § 23-15-927 is

mandatory and must be strictly construed; however, Pearson offers nothing by way of

discussion of the cost bond requirements of the statute, and thus does little to guide us in

considering the issue of whether Gnemi’s cost bond was somehow statutorily deficient.         From

the record before us, we unhesitatingly find that Gnemi complied with the statutory

requirements concerning the cost bond.

¶39.     As an aside, we also note from the record that the circuit clerk accepted and marked as

filed Gnemi’s petition for judicial review, with the attached fourteen exhibits, which included

the cost bond. The record is silent as to any attack of the cost bond by anyone at the trial court

level.    We find nothing in the record which indicates that Judge Smith was ever called upon

to rule on the sufficiency of the cost bond. We have been consistent in holding that we need

not consider matters raised for the first time on the appeal, which practice would have the

practical effect of depriving the trial court of the opportunity to first rule on the issue, so that

we can then review such trial court ruling under the appropriate standard of review. See, e.g.,

Triplett v. Mayor & Aldermen of Vicksburg, 758 So. 2d 399, 401 (Miss. 2000) (citing Shaw

                                                28
v. Shaw, 603 So. 2d 287, 292 (Miss. 1992)).                 If we were to adopt such a practice of

considering for the first time on appeal matters not raised before the trial court, such practice

would have the chilling effect of depriving the trial court of the opportunity to first rule on the

issue, which would then deprive this Court of the opportunity to perform our mandated

appellate review by utilizing the appropriate standard of review of the trial court’s ruling.

¶40.    For all these reasons, we find this issue to be without merit.

        E.       Were Gnemi’s pleadings sufficient to maintain his action with the
                 special tribunal?

¶41.    Waters also challenges the ruling of the special tribunal by asserting that Gnemi’s

petition for judicial review exceeded the scope of the matters alleged in his original petition

to the HCDEC. In Darnell, this Court recognized the scope of the issues authorized by statute

for a special judicial tribunal to review:

        [T]he special judicial tribunal will have no authority to review or examine into
        matters not presented by the original contest or protest before the executive
        committee, save as to matters germane which happened during or since the
        hearing before the executive committee, and save as to matters merely
        explanatory or incidental as mentioned in Harris v. Stewart, 187 Miss. 489,
        507, 193 So. 339. And we have consistently held that the protest before the
        executive committee must show specifically, and not by generalities, what
        wrong or wrongs or illegalities the contestant complains of, and that thereby a
        wrong was done him in declaring his opponent the party nominee. See for
        instance, Hickman v. Switzer, 186 Miss. 720, 191 So. 486.

202 Miss. at 773, 32 So. 2d at 685.

¶42.    This Court has expressly defined the guidelines for a contestant when appealing an

executive committee determination to a special judicial tribunal and in Harris, we opined that

                                                     29
while a petition may not assign additional causes of action, it may be both amendatory, as to

the original causes of action and grounds for relief, and supplementary, as to all those material

facts which happened during and since the hearing before the executive committee. 193 So.

at 343. In Harris, we cited directly from precedent and stated that “[w]hen the main facts are

set out in the original pleading, and an amendment is made which merely elaborates upon those

facts and sets forth additional incidental facts not changing the original picture presented,

although those incidental facts may be necessary, in point of strict law, to the statement of a

good cause of action, the amendment introduces no new cause.” Id. at 344 (citing Illinois

Cent. R. Co. v. Wales, 177 Miss. 875, 889, 171 So. 536, 539 (1937)).

¶43.    In this case, Gnemi originally alleged in his written petition to the HCDEC that there

were fundamental problems with the conduct of the primary election.      Moreover, his original

petition of August 25 not only placed the issue of ballot box security in violation of Miss.

Code Ann. § 23-15-911(1) squarely before the HCDEC, it also contested the election

officials’ failure to count approximately five absentee ballots which Gnemi claimed were valid.

Furthermore, Gnemi complained of Roy Anderson’s third party candidacy in the Holmes

County, District 3 primary, asserting that he did not maintain residency there, and he likewise

alleged that the HCDEC’s cancellation of the second primary election, where Gnemi

apparently prevailed, was invalid.

¶44.    Tracking these initial complaints, Gnemi’s circuit court petition for judicial review

asserts the same fundamental causes of action.     Moreover, Gnemi includes claims for ballot

box irregularity, failure to count valid absentee ballots, improper cancellation of the second

                                              30
primary election held on August 26, 2003, and Roy Anderson’s alleged non-residency in

District 3.   The only additional claims arise out of the same fact issues asserted in his petition

to the HCDEC.        Furthermore, the only additional facts included by Gnemi in his petition for

judicial review were those regarding alleged election-day irregularities at the polls - an issue

discarded by the special tribunal.

¶45.    The dispositive issue in this case concerning control of the ballot boxes and their

contents was asserted in both the HCDEC petition and the circuit court petition for judicial

review, and, as such, was well within the scope of Judge Smith’s review of the actions of the

HCDEC. This issue is thus without merit.

¶46.    In sum, we find that Gnemi’s petition filed with the HCDEC did not have to be sworn

and was otherwise in proper form; that Gnemi’s petition for judicial review filed with the

circuit court was properly sworn; that there were attached to Gnemi’s petition for judicial

review the certificates of two disinterested attorneys, in proper form; that Gnemi’s petition

for judicial review was accompanied with a proper cost bond; and, that Gnemi’s pleadings via

the petition for judicial review were more than sufficient to maintain his action before the

special tribunal.   Thus, for these reasons, we find that the special tribunal had jurisdiction to

consider Gnemi’s properly filed circuit court petition for judicial review; therefore, Issue I is

without merit.

        II.      WHETHER THE SPECIAL TRIBUNAL PROPERLY
                 DETERMINED THAT A SPECIAL PRIMARY ELECTION
                 SHOULD BE CONDUCTED.

                                                31
¶47.    Waters asserts that the special tribunal committed reversible error in finding that there

was such a radical departure from our election laws by the HCDEC so as to require a special

primary runoff election between Waters and Gnemi.

        A. Whether there were violations of Mississippi Election Laws?

¶48.    The crux of this case involves Gnemi’s allegations concerning the HCDEC’s method

of handling the District 3 precinct ballot boxes after the first primary election.

¶49.    Gnemi testified at the special tribunal hearing that when he and Waters appeared at the

courthouse for the examination of the ballot boxes on August 22, 2003, instead of being

presented with the six metal precinct boxes, safely secured with metal locks, they were

presented with two cardboard boxes with the election materials from all six precincts

commingled in those two boxes. When Gnemi made inquiry as to why the election materials

were not in the metal precinct boxes, Hart informed him that the Election Commission

members had emptied the contents of the six precinct metal boxes from District Three into

the cardboard boxes because the metal boxes were needed for the second primary election to

be held on August 26, 2003.            Evidently the election materials were at least identifiable by

precinct because Gnemi testified that during the course of the ballot box examination, as the

examination of the materials from each precinct was concluded, Hart placed these materials

in the appropriate metal precinct box and secured the box with double locks.

¶50.    Wilbur Redmond, the District Three Election Commissioner for Holmes County,

testified that he assisted in the conduct of the August, 2003 primary elections.           This fact

becomes significant since, absent an express agreement to the contrary, it is the county party

                                                      32
executive committee, not the county election commission, which is charged by law with the

responsibility of conducting the primary elections. On this point, Redmond testified:

        Q.   Tell us just a little bit about your duties briefly as an Election
        Commissioner?

        A. My duties are to get the boxes ready for and conduct election – general
        election and special election. Pulling the voter rolls. Uh, that’s about it.
                                            ***************
        Q.      What department or organization runs primary elections?              Who is
        responsible for that?

        A. The Holmes County Democratic Executive Committee.

        Q. To your knowledge, does the Democratic Executive Committee have any
        kind of written agreement with the Elections Commission regarding the ballot
        boxes for the primary election?19

        A. Not to my knowledge. I don’t know whether they have a written agreement
        or anything. It’s just common knowledge that the Election Commissioners are
        the ones in charge of the voting boxes.

¶51.    Redmond testified that on August 17, 2003, he received a telephone call from fellow

Election Commissioner Chairman Sam Jesse Horton to come to the courthouse the next day

to prepare for the second primary elections.              The next day Redmond and other election

commissioners indeed met at the courthouse to clean out the ballot boxes.                        The county

election commissioners brought the metal precinct ballot boxes from a storage room20 to

another room in the courthouse, at which time each election commissioner proceeded to clean

out the ballot boxes from his/her respective supervisor’s district. Thus, Redmond handled                  the

        19
          See Miss. Code Ann. § 23-15-266 (Rev. 2001).

        20
          The record reveals that at least several election commissioners had keys to this storage room.

                                                     33
six metal ballot boxes from District Three, which included two boxes from Pickens, two boxes

from Goodman, and one box each from Ebenezer and Coxburgh. No members of the HCDEC

were present during this process. Redmond explained what he did:

       Q. All right. Tell me what you had to do to go about taking the ballots out of
       their original boxes?

       A. We have to break the seal on them and then open them and take out the
       material that’s in them.

       Q. And what kind of seal is this?

       A. That’s a metal seal.

       Q. What’s the purpose of that metal seal?

       A. Well, to keep the boxes secure.

       Q. What happened after you broke the seal on the boxes?

       A. Well, I was taking the material out, the ballots that had been cast on August
       the 5th, and other stuff that they need to conduct an election.

       Q. What would some of that other stuff be?

       A. Well, pencils, uh, tape, uh, election materials, poll books, and all of that.
                                          ***************
       Q. What did you do after – where did you take that material – where did you put
       it?

       A. Well, I had picked up – since I knew we was going to been (sic) cleaning out
       the boxes, I had picked up some cardboard boxes from over there at the farmer’s
       market......

¶52.   Redmond further testified that he cleaned out the metal precinct boxes and placed all

the election materials into the two cardboard boxes he had picked up at the farmer’s market.

At the special tribunal hearing, he identified these two cardboard boxes, but stated they had

                                               34
more tape on them than what he had placed on them in order to “secure” the contents.

Redmond also testified that he secured the cardboard boxes by pulling the flaps down and

securing them with “one or two pieces” of gray masking tape across the top.     Some of the

election commissioners then placed their signatures, as witnesses, on the cardboard boxes.

Redmond in fact signed written certificates, one for each cardboard box, confirming that the

cardboard boxes contained materials which he had removed from the precinct boxes in

preparation for the second primary elections. Each certificate was then placed on the

respective cardboard box, and Redmond then placed the cardboard boxes back in the storage

room at the courthouse. Redmond stated that this storage room remained locked “most of the

time.”    Redmond confirmed that this method of cleaning out the metal boxes on August 18,

2003, was one which the election commissioners had utilized many times in preparation for

a second primary election.     Redmond stated that upon returning to the courthouse on August

21, 2003, he learned that Gnemi had requested a “recount.” Redmond also testified as to what

he observed concerning the actions of the circuit clerk and some of the election

commissioners:

         Q. Why were they putting additional tape on the boxes?

         A. Because when they moved them out of the storage room, those boxes had to
         be brought out here wherever they were going to have the recount. They had to
         be turned back over to the Democratic Executive Committee.

         Q. So what was –

         A. Well, we had – we couldn’t turn them back to the Democratic Executive
         Committee with the boxes – in the boxes that they had been put in at the

                                                 35
         beginning. So, they – since they had been moved and put in another box, they
         had to get them out and put them in this box and put more tape on them.

         Q. Why did they have to put more tape on them? Is that because –

         A. Well, my understanding, it was a hazard. It wasn’t secured enough in order
         to be moved around. That’s my thoughts about it.

Redmond also stated that if the storage room they normally used got “filled up,” then a

basement storage room would be used to store election materials.

¶53.     Of equally significant import is the testimony of Earline Wright-Hart, the Holmes

County Circuit Clerk.     Hart testified that she learned the overvote and undervote had indeed

been factored into calculating the percentages in the District Three first primary election about

a week and a half before the second primary, when she received a call from the Secretary of

State’s office.   A fax transmission later arrived at her office from the Secretary of State’s

office, addressed to Elma Maxine Smith, the HCDEC chair.           This fax transmission contained

information as to how to correctly calculate the vote percentages, excluding the over and under

votes.    Hart passed this information on to Smith who in turn convened a meeting of the

HCDEC, which certified Waters as the Democratic nominee for District Three Supervisor.

¶54.     Hart testified that Gnemi then requested a box examination, and Hart told Gnemi she

would arrange for the box examination the next morning by contacting the election

commissioners; however, she also stated that “since I do not handle the boxes, I didn’t know

where the boxes were” because “[t]hat’s not in my post.” Hart stated that she did not keep the

boxes in the clerk’s office. In fact, in the late afternoon before the election, according to Hart,

                                                 36
the cardboard boxes were moved “by a trustee” from one room at the courthouse to another

room in anticipation of the box examination the next morning. Hart further testified:

        Q. Because it’s not – the Circuit Clerk’s office does not run these primary
        elections. The Democratic Executive Committee runs these elections, correct?

        A. That’s correct.

        Q. And you don’t have a written agreement with the Democratic Election – I
        mean, Executive Committee to run these elections?

        A. I’ve been here 20 years. I’ve never had to have a written agreement for an
        election.

        Q. But you don’t have a written agreement with the Democratic Executive
        Committee to run the election – primary election?

        A. No, there’s no – nothing in the law that says I have to have that.

        Q. In fact, you mentioned the law, and that’s a good point. Regarding the law,
        it is the Democratic Executive Committee’s job to run the primary election and
        not yours?

        A. That’s right.

¶55.    Finally, Hart admitted that after the first primary election for District Three supervisor,

the HCDEC certified the results and declared a second primary between Waters and Gnemi.

Hart also admitted that notwithstanding this HCDEC certification, Waters was later declared

to be the Democratic nominee on August 21, just five days before the scheduled second

primary, without Waters ever requesting an examination of the ballot boxes and without her

ever filing an election contest. In essence, such action by the HCDEC was unilateral.

¶56.    In fact, Waters candidly admitted that she called both the Mississippi Democratic Party

state office and the Secretary of State’s office.          From these phone conversations, certain

                                                   37
information was eventually communicated to both Hart and Smith, the HCDEC chair. Waters

testified that there was never any reason for her to request an examination of the ballot boxes

or to file an election contest because she was declared to be the Democratic nominee after she

initiated the phone calls to the state Democratic Party headquarters and the Secretary of State’s

office.

¶57.      There are several statutes which specifically address ballot box security.   As such, each

statute is premised on eliminating fraudulent or corrupt practices and insuring a just and

trustworthy result.      Ballot box security is essential to producing an election result in which

not only the voters, but the candidates themselves, can be confident. Miss. Code Ann. § 23-15-

591 governs the immediate post-election handling of ballot boxes by precinct poll managers.

Specifically, section 23-15-591 requires that,“[w]hen the count of the votes and the tally

thereof have been completed, the managers shall lock and seal the ballot box, having first

placed therein all ballots voted, all spoiled ballots and all unused ballots.” Miss. Code Ann. §

23-15-911(1) outlines the procedure for maintaining ballot box security both before and after

a candidate exercises the right to examine the ballot boxes. Section 23-15-911(1) specifically

provides:

          When the returns for a box and the contents of the ballot box and the conduct of
          the election thereat have been canvassed and reviewed by the county election
          commission in the case of general elections or the county executive committee
          in the case of primary elections, all the contents of the box required to be placed
          and sealed in the ballot box by the managers shall be replaced therein by the
          election commission or executive committee, as the case may be, and the box
          shall be forthwith resealed and delivered to the circuit clerk, who shall safely
          keep and secure the same against any tampering therewith. At any time within
          twelve (12) days after the canvass and examination of the box and its contents

                                                 38
       by the election commission or executive committee, as the case may be, any
       candidate or his representative authorized in writing by him shall have the right
       of full examination of said box and its contents upon three (3) days' notice of
       his application therefor served upon the opposing candidate or candidates, or
       upon any member of their family over the age of eighteen (18) years, which
       examination shall be conducted in the presence of the circuit clerk or his deputy
       who shall be charged with the duty to see that none of the contents of the box are
       removed from the presence of the clerk or in any way tampered with. Upon the
       completion of said examination the box shall be resealed with all its contents
       as theretofore. And if any contest or complaint before the court shall arise over
       said box, it shall be kept intact and sealed until the court hearing and another
       ballot box, if necessary, shall be furnished for the precinct involved.

Quite often, an aggrieved candidate will demand a “recount.” Simply put, our election laws do

not provide for a candidate seeking a recount by a county party executive committee or a

county election commission, as the case may be.              Instead section 23-15-911(1) is the

mechanism by which an aggrieved candidate may gain information to aid the candidate in

determining whether there might be sufficient evidence to file a contest, first with the party

executive committee or the election commission.

¶58.   Finally, Miss. Code Ann. § 23-15-595 states in pertinent part:

       [The circuit] clerk shall, in the presence of the manager making delivery of the
       box, place upon the lock of such box a metal seal similar to the seal commonly
       used in sealing the doors of railroad freight cars. Such seals shall be numbered
       consecutively to the number of ballot boxes used in the election in the county,
       and the clerk shall keep in a place separate from such boxes a record of the
       number of the seal of each separate box in the county.

¶59.   Although most ballots are now centrally counted at the courthouse via a scanning

machine at least similar to the OMR in today’s case, as opposed to counting by the poll

workers at the precincts with subsequent delivery of the ballot boxes and election materials

to the circuit clerk, our election statutes give clear guidance to our elections officials

                                                  39
regarding their respective duties.    We can state with certainty that in the case sub judice,

several violations of election laws occurred concerning the August, 2003 first primary

election in Holmes County for District Three Supervisor. First, the Circuit Clerk testified that

she did not take possession of the ballot boxes the night of the election when the returning poll

managers brought them back from the precincts. In fact, she was adamant that she was not in

receipt of any of the boxes that evening. Furthermore, the circuit clerk maintains that she had

no knowledge of the boxes’ locale up to the time when Gnemi officially served notice on her

and exercised his statutory right to examine the ballot boxes on August 21, 2003. Ultimately,

the Holmes County Circuit Clerk verified her lack of participation in regards to ballot box

security and expressly stated that she lacked any personal knowledge of and was not a witness

to the removal of the contents from the six District Three precinct ballot boxes, or their

collective dumping into two taped cardboard boxes.

¶60.   In accordance with section 23-15-911(1), the ballot boxes should have been pristinely

maintained and monitored by the circuit clerk who had a duty to safely keep and secure the

ballot boxes against any tampering both before and after any box examination.          However, as

evidenced by the record, section 23-15-911(1) was unquestionably violated when, on August

18, 2003, Wilbur Redmond cleaned out the six District 3 ballot boxes and placed the contents

into two cardboard boxes sealing the two boxes with a single piece of tape.

¶61.   Importantly, the cardboard boxes were never sealed.         Statutory mandate prescribes that

the ballot boxes be sealed immediately following an election in order to preserve the election-

day results. In this case, the boxes, which may have been sealed at one time, were not only left

                                                  40
unsealed and accessible, but their contents were commingled with the contents of the other

District 3 boxes.     When the circuit clerk finally took possession of these cardboard boxes on

August 22, she proceeded to add additional tape to their exterior fearing that the security of

the ballots was unsatisfactory.       Unfortunately, the taping did nothing to cure the inappropriate

handling of the ballot boxes prior to that time.

¶62.    In his ruling, Judge Smith, found these actions to be a clear deviation from our election

laws, relying on Allen v. Funchess, 195 Miss. 486, 15 So. 2d 343 (1943). In Allen, the

contestant in an election contest challenged the integrity of the official vote count because two

ballot boxes remained unsealed after the executive committee made its initial box examination.
15 So. 2d at 344. The contestant maintained that after the county executive committee’s post-

primary examination of the ballot boxes, “the boxes and their contents thereupon had lost their

integrity in point of having any evidentiary value at the time the examination and recount was

made on August 31st.” Id.         This Court further stated in Allen that “[h]ad these boxes been

sealed, as required by the statute, it is entirely probable that this unfortunate controversy would

never have proceeded to the course of an expensive litigation with its residue of doubts which

will inevitably linger and rankle.” Id.

¶63.    Similarly, in the case at bar, the evidentiary value of the sealed ballot boxes was lost the

moment the seal was broken on the ballot boxes.            Moreover, like Allen, the contents were

exposed and made available for fraudulent practices.

                                                   41
¶64.   In sum, we are constrained as a matter of law, based on the record before us, to find that

there were numerous violations of our election laws.   First of all, the Holmes County Election

Commission was in complete control of the ballot boxes in the August 5, 2003, Democratic

primary election, even though our law requires such ballot box control to be maintained by the

county executive committee in the case of primary elections. See Miss. Code Ann. § 23-15-

911.    Such relinquishment of statutory responsibility by the Holmes County Democratic

Executive Committee could have only been legally accomplished via a written agreement with

the Holmes County Election Commission.     Miss. Code Ann. § 23-15-266 (Rev. 2001) states:

       A county or municipal executive committee shall be eligible to enter into
       written agreements with a circuit or municipal clerk or a county or municipal
       election commission as provided for in Sections 23-15-239(2), 23-15-265(2),
       23-15-267(4), 23-15-333(4), 23-15-335(2) or 23-15-597(2), only if the
       political party with which such county or municipal executive committee is
       affiliated:
                 (a) Has cast for its candidate for Governor in the last two (2)
                 gubernatorial elections ten percent (10%) of the total vote cast
                 for governor; or
                 (b) Has cast for its candidate for Governor in three (3) of the last
                 five (5) gubernatorial elections twenty-five percent (25%) of the
                 total vote cast for Governor.

The record is devoid of any evidence of a written agreement between the HCDEC and the

election commission wherein the HCDEC has divested itself of its statutory duties in the

conduct of Democratic primary elections.    In fact, both District Three Election Commissioner

Wilbur Redmond and Circuit Clerk Earline Wright-Hart admitted the non-existence of a

written agreement.   Thus, pursuant to Miss. Code Ann. § 23-15-267(3), the HCDEC, not the

county election commission, should have taken control of the ballot boxes and delivered them

                                              42
to the circuit clerk. Because of this active involvement by the Holmes County Election

Commissioners in the August 5, 2003, first Democratic primary, Judge Smith was unable to

convene the special tribunal as required under the provisions of Miss. Code Ann. § 23-15-931.

Pursuant to this statute, upon appointment of a chancellor or circuit judge by the Chief Justice

pursuant to Miss. Code Ann. § 23-15-929, the specially appointed judge or chancellor is to

convene the special tribunal consisting of the judge and the five county election

commissioners, who presumably are unbiased and disinterested persons, having no involvement

in the conduct of the primary election being contested.     Pursuant to section 23-15-931, the

county election commissioners sit with the judge or chancellor “as advisors or assistants in

the trial and determination of the facts.” Further, Miss. Code Ann. § 23-15-933 provides, inter

alia, that if as many as three of the five county election commissioners are in attendance at the

hearing before the special tribunal, and if the findings of fact by the special tribunal are

concurred in by all the county election commissioners in attendance, such findings of fact are

not subject to appellate review.    However, inasmuch as the actions of the county election

commissioners are at the crux of today’s election contest, Judge Smith was unable to utilize

their services as members of the special tribunal.   However, we have held that the absence of

the election commissioners at a primary election contest before the specially appointed judge

is not error under certain circumstances. See Hatcher v. Fleeman, 617 So. 2d 634, 638 (Miss.

1993). In fact, Miss. Code Ann. § 23-15-935 (Rev. 2001) gives the duly appointed judge or

chancellor the express authority to proceed to a hearing without the county election

commissioners, under certain circumstances.      However, what was lost, inter alia, because of

                                               43
the inability of the election commissioners to serve as members of the special tribunal in

today’s case, was expedited review by this Court without a record if all the election

commissioners had agreed with the special tribunal’s findings of fact.

¶65.    Another critical violation is the circuit clerk’s relinquishing her statutorily mandated

duties to take charge of the ballot boxes after the completion of the OMR counting process

which was completed in the early morning hours of August 6, 2003.          See Miss. Code Ann.

§§ 23-15-267(3), -911(1). Instead the ballot boxes were kept in various storage rooms at the

courthouse, and after the county election commissioners improperly dumped the contents of

the six precinct ballot boxes from District Three into two non-secured cardboard boxes from

the farmer’s market, a “trustee” (which we presume to be a jail trusty), among other persons,

moved these cardboxes around from one room to another at the courthouse.

¶66.    Likewise, of significant import in today’s case is that, notwithstanding the fact that the

provisions of Miss. Code Ann. § 23-15-911(1) allow an aggrieved candidate to examine the

ballot boxes within twelve (12) days after the canvass and examination of the boxes and

contents by the county executive committee, the county election commissioners, only six days

after the HCDEC certification of the first primary elections, removed the contents of the six

District Three ballot boxes and placed them into non-secured cardboard boxes. This action by

the county election commissioners destroyed the opportunity for not only Gnemi, but any

candidate for a District Three office, or a county-wide office, in the August 5th primary, to

exercise his or her statutory right to examine the ballot boxes pursuant to Miss. Code Ann.

§ 23-15-911(1).      As so noted by Judge Smith in his bench opinion and his written order,

                                                   44
because of these blatant violations of various statutes, the integrity of any ballot box

examination was compromised because of the manner in which these six precinct ballot boxes

were handled from the time of the first primary election until Gnemi attempted an

examination.

¶67.    Waters understandably cites Riley v. Clayton, 441 So. 2d 1322 (Miss. 1983), in an

effort to convince us that the use of cardboard boxes to store ballots was sufficient to save

today’s case.     However, Riley is unequivocally factually dissimilar to the case sub judice. In

Riley, a primary election contest in the chancery clerk’s race, the Lee County circuit clerk had

for some time followed the practice of storing absentee ballots in large brown precinct

envelopes.21    However, unlike today’s case, in Riley, the ballots which were placed in the

envelopes were kept at all times in a secured location in the circuit clerk’s office, which was

locked overnight.

¶68.    Thus, for these reasons, we find that the Holmes County election officials committed

numerous violations of the election laws.

        B.       Whether the special tribunal’s ordering a special primary run-off
                 was the proper remedy?

¶69.    In his written order, Judge Smith held in relevant part “that the violation of Miss. Code

Ann. § 23-15-911 is a total departure from the mandatory provisions of the statute.” This

finding was likewise consistent with his bench opinion. Judge Smith determined that the only

        21
          Lee County utilized voting machines on election day, thus absentee ballots and affidavit ballots were
the only paper ballots used in Lee County elections.

                                                     45
appropriate remedy was to order a special primary run-off election be to held between Gnemi

and Waters on December 16, 2003, in order to determine the Democratic primary nominee.

Judge Smith also ordered a special general election to be held on January 6, 2004, between the

Democratic nominee emerging from the           special primary run-off and       the   Independent

candidates.

¶70.    In Riley, we stated:

        The key in deciding whether an act not in strict compliance with the statutory
        election procedures renders that election void is whether the act is such a total
        departure from the fundamental provisions of the statute as to destroy the
        integrity of the election and make the will of the qualified electors impossible
        to ascertain. Ulmer v. Currie, 245 Miss. 285, 147 So. 2d 286 (1962); Sinclair
        v. Fortenberry, 213 Miss. 219, 56 So. 2d 697 (1952); Gregory v. Sanders, 195
Miss. 508, 15 So. 2d 432 (1943).
441 So. 2d at 1328.

¶71.    Ordering a special election is indeed an extraordinary remedy and requires a careful

balancing of many competing factors. In Noxubee County Democratic Executive Committee

v. Russell, 443 So. 2d 1191 (Miss. 1983), we addressed this issue, and set forth a two-pronged

test:

        When an election has been successfully contested, this Court has employed
        different tests over the years to aid its determination of what form of relief is
        in order.[] By various routes, we have attempted to discern whether the entire
        election should be thrown out or only the tainted votes. We have employed a two
        pronged test which though it has been stated in different ways, essentially
        provides that special elections will be required only when (1) enough illegal
        votes were cast for the contestee to change the result of the election, or (2) so
        many votes are disqualified that the will of the voters is impossible to discern.[]

                                               46
Russell, 443 So. 2d at 1197 (citing Walker v. Smith, 213 Miss. 255, 56 So. 2d 84, suggestion

of error, 215 Miss. 263, 264, 57 So. 2d 166, 167 (1952); Pyron v. Joiner, 381 So. 2d 627

(1980)). See also, footnotes 1 and 2, 443 So. 2d at 1197-98. Stated differently, this Court has

determined that in an election contest, when a significant number of legal votes have been

rejected, or illegal votes received, an inquiry should be made as to whether the election truly

reflected the voters’ will with the Russell test as the guide. If not, then a special election must

be held.22

¶72.    Since disqualification of illegal votes is not the dispositive issue in this appeal, we turn

our focus squarely on whether the irregularities were substantial enough to warrant a special

election. Russell, 443 So. 2d at 1198.          In Walker, we held that this determination “depends

upon the facts and circumstances in each particular case, including the nature of the procedural

requirements violated, the scope of the violations and the ratio of illegal votes to the total

votes cast.” 213 Miss. at 264, 57 So. 2d at 167. Accordingly, if the irregularities are due to

fraud or willful violations of the election procedure, this Court will not hesitate to order a new

election, even though the percentage of illegal votes is small. Harris,193 So. at 346.

¶73.    In Clark v. Rankin County Democratic Executive Committee, 322 So. 2d 753 (Miss.

1975), we dealt with error wherein election officials substantially deviated from mandatory

election day procedure by opening ballot boxes while the election was still in progress. 322
So. 2d at 756.       In violating section 23-3-13 of the then-applicable Corrupt Practices Law,

        22
          Jackson & Miller, Encyclopedia of Mississippi Law, Election Law, § 51, at p.111.

                                                    47
which was passed specifically to insure the secrecy of a voter’s ballot and to guard against the

opportunity for fraud in the counting of the ballots, officials totally departed from mandatory

procedure. Id. In Clark we stated:

       When, as in this case, there has been a total departure from the mandatory
       provisions of the Corrupt Practices Law with respect to time, manner and
       conditions under which the ballots were counted, the contestee cannot
       successfully claim that the contestant has failed to show the will of the electors
       could not be ascertained or has not shown the existence of fraud in connection
       with such counting. The departure complained of deprives him of the very
       means by which the fraud could be detected if any exists.

Id. at 757 (citing Briggs v. Gautier, 195 Miss. 472, 15 So. 2d 209 (1943)). We likewise

stated in Clark:

       We have held in a number of cases that where there has been a radical departure
       from the mandatory provisions of the Corrupt Practices Law the result of the
       particular precinct or precincts in question is void. Wallace v. Leggett, 248
Miss. 121, 158 So. 2d 746 (1963); Ulmer v. Currie, 245 Miss. 285, 147 So. 2d
286 (1962); May v. Layton, 213 Miss. 129, 56 So. 2d 89 (1962); Briggs v.
       Gautier, supra; Harris v. Stewart, 187 Miss. 489, 193 So. 339 (1940); Hayes
       v. Abney, 186 Miss. 208, 188 So. 533 (1939).

Id.

¶74.   In this case, the special remedy of a new election ordered by Judge Smith was not only

an appropriate remedy, it was the only remedy. The gross deviation and total departure from

mandatory election procedure by the HCDEC (via the county election commission) caused the

result of the August 5, 2003, election for District Three supervisor to be completely

undermined as all indicia of reliability were compromised. Similar to the gross error in Clark,

a radical departure from statutory mandate occurred when the seals of all six election day

                                               48
boxes for District Three were broken and the contents therein were left exposed.             Likewise,

the circuit clerk did not take charge of the ballot boxes on election night as required by statute.

Accordingly, the evidentiary value of the boxes’ contents was completely lost and the ability

of the county executive committee, the candidates, and the voting public to detect the

existence of voter fraud and/or any other type of impropriety or miscalculations was lost.

¶75.    We readily acknowledge that there have been no allegations or proof of fraud by Gnemi

against the voters or election officials.      While Waters thus maintains that Gnemi’s election

contest fails due to his failure to claim fraud, it is Gnemi’s inability to even be able to detect

fraud that mandates today’s extraordinary remedy.         Like secret vote counting, removal of the

ballot boxes and their contents from the secure and prescribed custody of the circuit clerk for

sixteen days, during which time the contents were removed, commingled and placed in insecure

cardboard boxes, not only prevented Gnemi and objective reviewing bodies from properly

ascertaining the accuracy and substance of the result posted on election day, but also prevented

any discovery of ballot irregularities or outright fraud in the election.        Moreover, Gnemi, in

a tightly contested race, has been unable to compare the total number of voted, unvoted and

spoiled ballots in each separate precinct or even be certain that they equal the total number of

ballots the receiving election manager in a particular precinct swore he received and took to

the precinct at the time the polls opened on election day, such being a fundamental check for

fraud readily exercised by a candidate in a post-election examination of sealed ballot boxes.

Miss. Code Ann. § 23-15-591.

                                                   49
¶76.    In discussing the importance of a box examination, we stated in Lopez v. Holleman, 219
Miss. 822, 69 So. 2d 903 (1954), that the right is one “‘by which in its main objective the

candidate is made a mere instrumentality in the better assurance of an honest, impartial and

lawful election.’” 219 Miss. at 836, 69 So.2d at 907 (citing and quoting from Sartin v. Barlow,

196 Miss. 159, 16 So. 2d 372, 375 (1943)). In the case sub judice, Gnemi was wholly deprived

of his opportunity to utilize fundamental safeguards installed in the mechanism created by the

election code.    Accordingly, Judge Smith quite appropriately found that the denial of Gnemi’s

right to an accurate examination of the ballot boxes mandated a special election.

¶77.    Having found, for the reasons stated, that there were numerous violations of our

election laws, we find that the special tribunal properly determined that a special primary

election should be conducted; therefore, Issue II, concerning Waters’s assertion that the

special tribunal committed reversible error in finding such as radical departure from our

election laws so as to require a special primary run-off, is without merit.

                                             CONCLUSION

¶78.    We wish to make abundantly clear that our decision today should in no way be perceived

as even inferring intended wrongdoing by the Holmes County election officials.            There is

nothing in the record to even suggest that one or more Holmes County election officials acted,

or failed to act, with sinister motives or with the intent to hurt or help any particular candidate.

The circuit clerk and at least one election commissioner explained there actions or inactions

by stating in essence “that was simply the way it had always been done in Holmes County.” We

understand this mind-set.      It is quite common that when newly elected officials take office,

                                                    50
they rely on the advice of their predecessors and other informed officials in learning how to

perform their respective duties. If a newly elected official is told that “this is the way we have

always done it”, and “it” seems to be a fair way which has been successful in the past, why rock

the boat? While we rely on our elected officials to educate themselves on the appropriate laws

governing their duties and responsibilities, we acknowledge the fact that our elected officials

quite appropriately rely on information gained at seminars, conferences, and from state

officials who are charged by law with advising our local elected officials as to how to better

perform their duties.

¶79.    However, at the end of the day, in the conduct of local, district and state-wide elections,

all Mississippi voters have to rely on the experience, expertise and integrity of our election

officials to diligently perform their statutorily mandated duties to assure that our elections are

fairly and properly conducted. Perhaps, all of this can best be summed up by our admonition

in Riley:

        Although there is a strong public policy in attempting to preserve the will of the
        electorate as reflected by the tabulation of all of the votes, we take this
        opportunity to remind registrars throughout the state that they invite election
        contests, uncertainty and the opportunity for fraud by failing to pay close heed
        to the election statutes whether they be mandatory or directive. Any expense or
        burden such compliance creates is trivial when compared to the value of the goal
        of maintaining our Republic. Integrity of our government can be no greater than
        the integrity of elections which put our government officials in office. It is
        therefore the duty of every registrar to endeavor to comply with the election
        statutes regardless of the personal inconvenience it may create.
441 So. 2d at 1328. We know of nothing else which could be added to our directive in Riley.

                                                51
¶80.    For the reasons herein stated, the decision of the Special Tribunal, Circuit Judge Albert

B. Smith, III, presiding, is affirmed.

¶81.    AFFIRMED.

    SMITH, C.J., WALLER AND COBB, P.JJ., EASLEY, GRAVES, DICKINSON AND
RANDOLPH, JJ., CONCUR. DIAZ, J., NOT PARTICIPATING.

                                               52