City of Forest Hill, Texas, and Brigette Mathis v. Michielle Benson, in Her Official Capacity and Individually ( 2017 )


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  •                                                                                         ACCEPTED
    02-17-00346-cv
    SECOND COURT OF APPEALS
    FORT WORTH, TEXAS
    12/21/2017 3:07 PM
    DEBRA SPISAK
    CLERK
    NO.02-17-00346-CV
    In the Court of Appeals                  FILED IN
    Second District of Texas          2nd COURT OF APPEALS
    FORT WORTH, TEXAS
    Fort Worth, Texas
    12/21/2017 3:07:22 PM
    DEBRA SPISAK
    Clerk
    City of Forest Hill, Texas, and Brigette Mathis
    Appellants,
    v.
    Michielle Benson, in her official capacity and individually,
    Appellee.
    On Appeal from the 153rd Judicial District Court of Tarrant County, Texas
    Cause No.153-290222-17; the Honorable Susan Heygood McCoy Presiding
    APPELLEE’S BRIEF
    HAROLD D. HAMMETT
    State Bar No. 08855000
    4330 W. Vickery Blvd., Ste 140
    Fort Worth, Texas 76107
    Telephone: 817-820-3108
    Facsimile: 817-882-6955
    hammettlaw@att.net
    ATTORNEY FOR APPELLEE
    ORAL ARGUMENT NOT REQUESTED                                 1
    TO THE HONORABLE COURT OF APPEALS:
    STATEMENT REGARDING ORAL ARGUMENT
    Oral argument would be of little or no help to the Court because crucial facts
    are undisputed. But Appellee would welcome oral argument if the Court requests it.
    Appellee’s Brief                                                                     2
    TABLE OF CONTENTS
    Statement Regarding Oral Argument………………………………………………2
    Table of Contents…………………………………………………………………...3
    Index of Authorities………………………………………………………………...5
    Statement of the Case……………………………………………………………….6
    Statement of Issues Presented for Review………………………………………….7
    Statement of Facts…………………………………………………………………..8
    Summary of the Argument………………………………………………………...11
    Argument and Authorities…………………………………………………………12
    Appellee’s Issue No. 1:
    THE DISTRICT COURT CORRECTLY GRANTED JUDGMENT IN
    FAVOR OF BENSON……………………………………………………..12
    A.         Section 141.033 is mandatory and governs this case…………………12
    B.         Retroactive incompatibility applies also to the second application
    filing, not just to the oath……………………………………………14
    C.         Section 141.034 does not apply……………………………………..16
    1.    Sect. 141.034(b) expressly excludes candidate’s eligibility from
    its time limits…………………………………………………16
    2.    The focus of Sect. 141.034 is different from this case…………18
    3.    The District Court Judgment avoids an unreasonable and unjust
    result………………………………………………………….19
    4.    The “automatically resigns” cases often involve a longer time
    frame before first occupying the two offices…………………21
    Appellee’s Issue No. 2:
    THE DISTRICT COURT CORRECTLY ISSUED THE PERMANENT
    INJUNCTION……………………………………………………………..22
    Appellee’s Brief                                                                        3
    Appellee’s Issue No. 3:
    THE DISTRICT COURT CORRECTLY AWARDED ATTORNEY’S FEES
    TO BENSON……………………………………………………………….23
    Conclusion and Prayer…………………………………………………………….23
    Certificate of Compliance…………………………………………………………25
    Certificate of Service………………………………………………………………25
    Appendix……………………………………………………………………….....26
    First Amended Final Judgment with Permanent Injunction (C.R.491)…Tab 1
    Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law (Supp. C.R.4)……………….Tab 2
    Tex. Elec. Code Sect. 141.033…………………………………………..Tab 3
    Tex. Elec. Code Sect. 141.034…………………………………………..Tab 4
    Tex. Elec. Code Sect. 162.015…………………………………………..Tab 5
    Appellee’s Brief                                                             4
    INDEX OF AUTHORITIES
    CASE LAW                                                   PAGE
    In re Bell,
    
    91 S.W.3d 784
    (Tex. 2002)…………..…………………………………………...19
    In re Crenshaw,
    
    207 WL 1292013
    (Tex. App—Dallas April 7th, 2017 no pet.)……………………18
    In re Ducato,
    
    66 S.W.3d 558
    (Tex. App.—Fort Worth 2002, no pet)………………………...…19
    Law v. Johnson,
    
    826 S.W.2d 794
    (Tex. App.—Houston [14th Dist.] 1992, no writ)………………18
    Pruitt v. Glenrose Indep. Sch. Dist.,
    
    84 S.W.2d 1004
    (Tex. 1935)……………………………………………………...21
    State v. Hodges,
    
    92 S.W.3d 489
    (Tex. 2002)……………………………………………………….17
    Tovar v. Bd. of Trustees of Somerset Indep. Sch. Dist.,
    
    994 S.W.2d 756
    (Tex. App.—Corpus Christi 1999, pet. denied)………………...20
    Wallace v. Howell,
    
    707 S.W.2d 876
    (Tex. 1986)…………………………………………………13, 14
    STATUTES AND CODES
    Tex. Gov’t Code Sect. 37.009…………………………………………………….23
    Tex. Gov’t Code Sect. 311.021…………………………………………………...19
    Tex. Elec. Code Sect. 1.003(a)……………………………………………………19
    Tex. Elec. Code Sect. 141.032…………………………………………………….17
    Tex. Elec. Code Sect. 141.033………………………………...6, 8, 9-17, 20, 22, 23
    Tex. Elec. Code Sect. 141.034…………………………………….11, 12, 16, 18, 23
    Tex. Elec. Code Sect. 162.015……………………………………………………17
    Tex. Elec. Code Sect. 201.025……………………………………………11, 21, 23
    Appellee’s Brief                                                     5
    STATEMENT OF THE CASE
    This Appeal concerns the effort by the City of Forest Hill to deprive Michielle
    Benson of her position on the City of Forest Hill City Council after she won a
    majority vote on the same date to both the City Council and the City of Forest Hill
    Library Board of Trustees.
    She filed her application to be on the ballot for City Council first, and then
    afterward filed her application to be on the ballot for the Library Board. Later, she
    took the oath of office first for City Council, and then the oath for Library Board.
    The City requested an Opinion from the Attorney General, who opined that
    the two offices were incompatible, and that Mrs. Benson “effectively resigned” from
    the City Council when she later took the oath of office for Library Board on the same
    day. The Attorney General Opinion did not address Election Code Section 141.033,
    which provides that (a) a candidate cannot file an application to be on the same ballot
    for two separate offices unless permitted by law, and (b) if she does, any application
    filed after the first one is invalid.
    Promptly acting on the Attorney General’s Opinion, the City Council declared
    that Dr. Benson had resigned, and appointed as her replacement Brigette Mathis, the
    prior incumbent that Benson defeated for City Council. The District Court held the
    City Council’s actions null and void under Section 141.033 and permanently
    Appellee’s Brief                                                                       6
    enjoined the City from interfering with her position on the City Council during the
    remainder of the term for which she was elected. (Supp. C.R. 9-11).
    Course of proceedings:
    Appellant’s Brief correctly states the Court’s proceedings.
    District Court’s disposition:
    Following a bench trial held on April 10th, 2017, the District Court issued its
    Final Declaratory Judgment with Permanent Injunction on June 16 th, 2017. On
    September 6th, 2017, the District Court issued its First Amended Final Judgment
    with Permanent Injunction from which Appellants appeal. That Judgment declared
    that the City’s declaration that Benson had effectively resigned was null and void,
    that the appointment of Mathis was null and void, and the City was permanently
    enjoined from interfering in any way with Benson’s City Council position. The
    District Court also awarded Benson attorney’s fees. (Supp. C.R. 9-11).
    STATEMENT OF ISSUES PRESENTED FOR REVIEW
    Issue 1:           The District Court correctly granted judgment in favor of Benson
    because the retroactive effect of the Attorney General’s Opinion on conflicting
    offices must be applied to Benson’s second application for a place on the ballot, not
    Appellee’s Brief                                                                     7
    just to her second oath of office. (C.R. 496; Supp. C.R. 9-11). Tex. Elec. Code Sec.
    141.033 governs this case. Benson first filed for City Council. When, after that, she
    filed for Library Board, her second application was null and void; she was never
    properly elected to the Library Board for a conflict to exist.
    Issue 2:           The District Court correctly issued the Permanent Injunction because
    the City erred in declaring that Benson effectively vacated her City Council position
    when, right after taking the oath of office for City Council, she took the oath of office
    for Library Board, to which she was never legally elected under Sect. 141.033.
    Issue 3:           The District Court correctly awarded attorney’s fees to Benson, the
    amount of which the City does not challenge.
    STATEMENT OF FACTS AND BACKGROUND
    Note: Appellee Benson offers the following statements of facts as more
    complete than those stated by Appellant City. Record references are to the
    Supplemental Clerk’s Record (Supp. C.R.) which Benson requested to be filed.
    Appellants’ record references are to one of their own briefs, not to the District
    Court’s Findings of Fact (although Appellants attached those findings as Tab 4 in
    their Appendix).
    Appellee’s Brief                                                                        8
    1.         On January 22nd, 2016, Benson submitted applications for two different
    positions on the same ballot: first an application for the Forest Hill City Council,
    Place 3 position, and then a second application for Trustee of the City of Forest Hill
    Library Board. (Supp. C.R. 5).
    2.         The City did not attempt to prohibit Benson from running for both
    offices, even though it knew of Sec. 141.033 Tex. Elec. Code. The reason for her
    being allowed to be on the ballot for both offices was because there was no statute,
    court, or Attorney General opinion that determined the two offices were in conflict
    (Supp. C.R. 5).
    3.         Benson won a majority vote for both offices. On May 17th, 2016,
    Benson took the oath of office for City Council. She then took the oath as Trustee
    for the Library Board that same day. (Supp. C.R. 6). Benson served in both offices
    until January 6th, 2017 (Supp. C.R. 6).
    4.         At its June 7th, 2016, meeting the City Council expressed concern
    whether Benson could serve both offices without someone calling into question her
    votes cast in either one. Benson herself wanted to know and made the City Council
    Motion to seek an Attorney General’s opinion (Supp. C.R. 6).
    5.         The Forest Hill City Attorney composed an opinion request letter to the
    Attorney General and provided it to the Tarrant County District Attorney for the
    Appellee’s Brief                                                                        9
    District Attorney to forward to the Attorney General. The City Attorney did not
    mention Tex. Elec. Code Sec. 141.033 in his draft letter to be sent to the Attorney
    General (Supp. C.R. 6, 7), even though he knew about it (Supp. C.R. 5).
    6.         On January 3rd, 2017, the Attorney General’s office issued its Opinion
    in which it concluded that Benson’s dual roles were incompatible and she was
    deemed to have “effectively resigned” her position on the City Council when she
    later took the oath of office for Library Board Trustee after taking the oath of office
    for City Council. The Opinion did not address Sect. 141.033 or inquire which office
    was applied for first (Supp. C.R. 7).
    7.         The City Council immediately acted. It scheduled a special meeting for
    three days later, on January 6th, to consider implementing the Attorney General’s
    Opinion (Supp. C.R. 7).
    8.         Dr. Benson requested that the City Council meeting to discuss her two
    offices be postponed until she could return from New York City to attend the
    meeting after January 6th. The Council ignored that, met on January 6th, 2017, voted
    to accept Benson’s deemed resignation from the Council, and appointed Mathis to
    fill her place until a special election on May 6th, 2017 (which was not held because
    of the District Court’s Temporary Injunction) (Supp. C.R. 7).
    Appellee’s Brief                                                                       10
    9.        In addition to its Final Judgment with Permanent Injunction, the
    District Court granted plaintiff’s reasonable, necessary, and just and equitable
    attorney’s fees (Supp. C.R. 8-9). Appellant does not challenge the amounts, but only
    asks for District Court reconsideration if this Court reverses. (Appellants’ Brief
    p.22).
    SUMMARY OF THE ARGUMENT
    1.        The District Court correctly ruled that the Attorney General’s
    determination of incompatibility in the two offices related back to the timing Benson
    filed her second application, not just to the later time she took her second oath of
    office, both for Library Board. The common law cases of incompatibility, and Tex.
    Elec. Code Sect. 201.025 relied on by the city are irrelevant, because under Sec.
    141.033(b) Benson was never legally elected to the second office for which she
    applied to be on the ballot, upon giving effect to the Attorney General’s Opinion on
    conflicting offices. (All Section citations are to the Tex. Elec. Code unless otherwise
    stated). There was no meaning on Benson’s taking the second oath; it was to an
    office she was prohibited from seeking.
    2.        The City erroneously argues that there should have been “a challenge”
    to Benson’s application before early voting started under Elec. Code Sec. 141.034.
    That is wrong because section 141.034(b) expressly states it does not apply to a
    Appellee’s Brief                                                                      11
    candidate’s eligibility. By applying for City Council, Benson became ineligible to
    apply for Library Board on the same ballot. Sect. 141.034 contemplates one specific
    candidate to challenge the ballot application by another specific candidate to keep a
    prospective opponent off the ballot, or by a candidate opposing an election official’s
    decision to keep her off the ballot. That is a totally different situation from the facts
    in this case. The City does not say who should have challenged Benson’s second
    application. A challenge by another person was unnecessary. Sec. 141.033 (b) was
    an automatic disqualification by statute declaring her second application, for Library
    Board, invalid once the two offices were deemed incompatible.
    ARGUMENT AND AUTHORITIES
    Issue No.1: In reply to Appellants’ Issue No. 1, the District Court did not err, but
    correctly granted Judgment in favor of Benson, applying Election Code Section
    141.033.
    A. Sect. 141.033 is mandatory and governs this case.
    The determining issue in this case is when to apply the Attorney General’s
    Opinion that the offices of City Council and Library Board are incompatible.
    Section 141.033 states (in part):
    Appellee’s Brief                                                                      12
    (a) A candidate may not file applications for a place on the
    ballot for two or more offices that:
    (1) are not permitted by law to be held by the same person;
    and
    (2) are to be voted on at one or more elections held on the
    same day.
    (b) If a person files more than one application for a place
    on a ballot in violation of this section, each application
    filed subsequent to the first one filed is invalid.
    Benson first filed her application to be on the ballot for City Council (Supp.
    C.R.5). Benson then filed her second application, for Library Board. That second
    application is the proper target of the A.G. Opinion, not her second oath, for Library
    Board.
    The self-enacting, automatic invalidating effect of a second application was
    enforced early after Section 141.033 was enacted in Wallace v. Howell, 
    707 S.W.2d 876
    , 877 (Tex. 1986). There, Respondent Howell filed an application as a candidate
    for associate justice, Texas Supreme Court, Place 1. Two days later, January 23 rd,
    1986, Howell attempted to switch his candidacy from Place 1 to Place 3 to run
    against Relator Wallace. Howell did so by accompanying his second filing, for Place
    3, with a letter stating that conditioned on the Republican Party Chairman’s
    accepting his second filing, for Place 3, he conditionally withdrew as a candidate for
    Appellee’s Brief                                                                   13
    Place 1, and based on that same condition, requested “conditionally that my name
    be omitted from the ballot as a candidate for Place 1.” 
    Wallace, 707 S.W.2d at 877
    .
    The Texas Supreme Court held that Howell’s second application, for Place 3,
    was invalid upon filing: “This result is mandated by the plain language of Section
    141.033 and this Court’s previous decisions that statutory requirements concerning
    candidacy for political office are mandatory and are to be strictly enforced.”
    
    Wallace, 707 S.W.2d at 877
    . The timing of the Supreme Court’s holding does not
    affect the mandatory effect it gives to Sect. 141.033.
    B. Retroactive incompatibility applies also to the second application filing,
    not just to the oath.
    Appellants’ Brief (p. 20) misleadingly states: “Taking into consideration all
    of the facts in this case, the Attorney General Opinion held that since both positions
    held by Benson created conflicting loyalties, Benson could not hold both positions.”
    Appellants’ statement is both misleading and wrong because the Attorney General
    did not take into consideration all of the facts in this case. His Opinion says nothing
    about Sec. 141.033. His Opinion says nothing about the necessity to inquire into
    whether Benson filed first or second to be on the ballot for Library Board.
    The City’s position is apparently that the Attorney General’s post-election and
    post-oath incompatibility Opinion floated backwards, retroactively only to the time
    Appellee’s Brief                                                                    14
    when Benson took the second oath of office. But that retroactive effect did not stop
    there. It kept going and impacted what happened earlier: her second application,
    which by the express terms of Sec. 141.033(b) was invalid.
    The Attorney General’s Opinion held that the Library Board Trustee was not
    an office “permitted by law” under Sec. 141.033(a) to be held by a City Council
    member. Unavoidably, that meant that her second filed application, for Library
    Board, was invalid 141.033(b). Benson was never elected to the Library Board
    legally; her oath of office for Library Board was irrelevant. The Attorney General,
    having not been informed of the crucial facts in this case, and ignoring Sect. 141.033,
    effectively ruled that Benson’s second oath meant she was holding an office to which
    Sect. 141.033(b) mandates she was not eligible to be elected.
    That Opinion is correct as to incompatibility but faulty because the Attorney
    General did not address Sect. 141.033. Appellants’ acknowledge retroactive
    application of the Attorney General’s Opinion, but to the wrong event. Retroactivity
    hit Benson’s second filing squarely; invalidating it, and rendering irrelevant her
    subsequent oath for Library Board.
    Appellee’s Brief                                                                    15
    C. Sect. 141.034 does not apply.
    Appellants choose to ignore Sect. 141.033, and instead rely on Sect. 141.034.
    That section states what the City says it does (Appellants’ Brief p. 15), but also states
    something else important that the City chose to ignore and did not cite ((b) below):
    (a) an application for a place on the ballot may not be
    challenged for compliance with the applicable
    requirements as to form, content and procedure after the
    day before any ballot to be voted on by early mail is mailed
    to an address in the authorities’ jurisdiction for the election
    for which the application is made.
    (b) This section does not apply to a determination of a
    candidate’s eligibility. [Emph. added.]
    Section 141.034 does not apply to this case, for two reasons.
    1. Sect. 141.034(b) expressly excludes candidate’s eligibility from its time
    limits.
    Subparagraph (b), expressly states the entire Sect. 141.034 does not apply to
    a determination of a candidate’s eligibility. The first inquiry in this case is: Was
    Benson eligible to be on the ballot for election to the second office for which she
    applied to be placed on the same ballot? The answer is no.
    A valid application is required to be on the ballot. The applicable authority
    (City Secretary in this case; C.R.R., Vol. 2, p.15) “with whom the application is filed
    Appellee’s Brief                                                                      16
    shall review the application to determine whether it complies to the requirements as
    to form, content, and procedure that it must satisfy for the candidate’s name to be
    placed on the ballot.” Elec. Code Sect. 141.032. (Emph. added).
    For Benson to be eligible to be elected to the office of Trustee of the
    Library Board, she must have timely filed a valid application for a place on the ballot.
    Filing the second application was not valid because it was second; only the first one
    was valid under Sect. 141.033 (b).
    Ineligibility is created in the Election Code to make ineligible a candidate
    because of prior conduct. For example, Sect. 162.015 precludes a primary candidate
    from running in the general election from the same office that she lost or as an
    independent, or write-in candidate or candidate for any other political party. State v.
    Hodges, 
    92 S.W.3d 489
    , 494-495 (Tex. 2002).
    Upon retroactive determination of incompatibility of the two offices, Sect.
    141.033 (b) automatically nullified Benson’s application to be on the ballot for
    Library Board Trustee when it was filed after she filed first for City Council. Benson
    became ineligible for the Library Board.
    Appellee’s Brief                                                                     17
    2. The focus of Sect. 141.034 is different from this case.
    The second reason that relying on Sect. 141.034 is erroneous is that its
    ballot access challenge inherently presupposes two people in opposition seeking the
    same office, or contesting access to it, not present in this case.
    Two people, with opposing positions, are needed to challenge an
    application to be on the ballot under the concepts in the Elec. Code Sec. 141.034.
    One candidate can timely challenge an opponent’s application to avoid competition.
    Appellants’ cited case, Law v. Johnson, 
    826 S.W.2d 794
    (Tex. App.—Houston
    [14th Dist.] 1992, no writ) is typical. (Appellants’ Brief p.15).
    Also, often a candidate sues an election official to add his or her name to
    the ballot, not to remove somebody else’s, but to compete against that someone. In
    re Crenshaw, 
    2007 WL 1292013
    (Tex. App.—Dallas April 7th, 2017 no pet.)
    (mem. op.) is typical of that. (Appellants’ Brief p.16).
    Those types of cases are irrelevant to Dr. Benson’s case. Appellants
    desperately argue, in effect, that someone should have challenged the City Secretary
    to keep Benson off the ballot for Library Board, and that someone is herself. No
    authority exist supporting Appellants’ bizarre theory. The Texas Election Code
    challenge procedures certainly do not. Appellants’ theory seeks a prohibited
    unreasonable or unjust result.
    Appellee’s Brief                                                                     18
    3. The District Court Judgment avoids unreasonable or unjust result.
    This Court has noted that “We are mindful that statutory requirements
    concerning candidacy for public office are mandatory and must be strictly construed
    to ensure compliance….Nevertheless, we cannot construe the statutory
    requirements so strictly as to lead to unreasonable or unjust results.” In re Ducato,
    
    66 S.W.3d 558
    , 561 (Tex. App.—Fort Worth 2002, no pet). See In re Bell, 
    91 S.W.3d 784
    (Tex. 2002). “Ducato also stresses the Code Construction Act’s
    instruction that the legislature is presumed to have intended a ‘just and reasonable’
    result in enacting statutes.” 
    Ducato, 66 S.W.3d at 560
    , citing Elec. Code Sect.
    1.003(a) concerning Tex. Gov’t Code Sect. 311.021. Equally unjust and
    unreasonable is the City’s argument that the arc of the Attorney General’s Opinion
    reached backwards in time only to the time of taking the second oath of office, not
    to the time of filing the second, invalid, application weeks before.
    Avoiding being unreasonable or unjust is not a big concern of the City in this
    dispute. If the City had been remotely interested in either justice or reasonableness,
    it would not have rushed to oust Benson from office only three days after it received
    the Attorney General’s Opinion, even if she had been in town. The City showed no
    interest in avoiding being unreasonable or unjust when it held its ouster meeting on
    only three days’ notice, knowing Dr. Benson was in New York, and in ignoring her
    request for more time so she could attend the meeting. If the City had been interested
    Appellee’s Brief                                                                    19
    in anything approaching being just and reasonable, it would have given Benson
    reasonable time to hire her own attorney and call the Council’s attention to the fact
    that she filed first for City Council. Her attorney would have also possibly been able
    to insist that the City Attorney incorporate that first-filing fact and the existence of
    Sect. 141.033 in his letter request for an Attorney General’s opinion.
    And, if the City really were interested in a just and reasonable outcome, it at
    least would have done what the school board did in Tovar v. Bd. of Trustees of
    Somerset Indep. Sch. Dist., 
    994 S.W.2d 756
    , 759 (Tex. App.—Corpus Christi 1999,
    pet. denied). There, a question arose whether a School Board member had vacated
    his office by failing to maintain his residence in the district he represented. State law
    provided that a Trustee vacates the office if the Trustee ceases to reside in the district
    in which the Trustee represents. 
    Tovar, 994 S.W.2d at 759
    .
    Instead of immediately acting on that statute and expelling Tovar from his
    office (which the City in this case would have done), the School District sought a
    declaratory judgment that Tovar had vacated his office. The Corpus Christi court
    held that declaratory judgment was proper, (and that quo warranto was not required).
    The District Court properly granted declaratory judgment for Benson in this
    case.
    Appellee’s Brief                                                                       20
    The City did none of these things; its entire theory depends on unjust and
    unreasonable should prevail.
    4. The “automatically resigns” cases often involve a higher second office and
    a longer time frame between first occupying the two offices.
    In connection with Sect. 201.025, Appellants rely on Pruitt v. Glenrose Indep.
    Sch. Dist., 
    84 S.W.2d 1004
    , 1006 (Tex. 1935). That, and other similar cases, rule
    that when a current office holder later takes an oath of office for a different office,
    which are not compatible, the person resigns from the first office. (Appellants’ Brief
    p. 18).
    In Pruitt, on October 23rd 1928, Kugle was appointed by the Trustees of the
    Glenrose Independent School District as collector of taxes for the district. Two
    weeks later, on Nov. 5th, 1928, he was elected sheriff and tax collector for all of
    Sumervello County, which contains Glenrose. On January 1st, 1929, Kugle took the
    oath of office as county sheriff and tax collector, and assumed those duties. The
    Court held he automatically resigned from the appointed office of school district tax
    collector when he later took the oath of office for sheriff and tax collector for the
    entire 
    county. 84 S.W.2d at 49
    . Kugle’s second office, elected, was more important
    than his prior one. He took the oath of office for the second one over two months
    after he was appointed school district tax collector.
    Appellee’s Brief                                                                     21
    Those facts are completely different from Benson’s case. Appellants’ theory
    seeks an unreasonable and unjust result. Benson could not have possibly intended to
    resign from City Council by later in the day taking the oath of office for Library
    Board which she considered a much less important office. Benson wanted to be on
    the City Council in honor of her father because he had served on it, and had been
    mayor pro tem. She did not even put out any yard signs for Library Board (C.R.R.,
    Vol. 2, pp 19, 24; C.R.R., Vol. 3, p. 33).
    Issue No. 2: In reply to Appellants’ issue No. 2, the District Court correctly issued
    the permanent injunction because that afforded Benson appropriate protection from
    the City’s ousting her from office based an Attorney General’s Opinion that did not
    mention Sect. 141.033.
    The City argues that the District Court granting the permanent injunction was
    wrong because the Court erred in its underlying judgment that the City’s actions in
    ousting Benson were null and void. The City is wrong, for the reasons stated above
    in response to Appellants’ Issue No. 1. The District Court’s Judgment, including the
    Permanent Injunction, were correct and should be affirmed.
    Appellee’s Brief                                                                   22
    Issue No. 3: In response to Appellants’ issue No. 3, the District Court correctly
    awarded attorney’s fees to Benson, the amount of which Appellants do not object.
    The District Court awarded Benson attorney’s fees under the Declaratory
    Judgment Act., Tex. Gov’t Code Sect. 37.009. (C.R. 499). Appellant does not
    complain amount the amounts, but merely asks that the Court remand to the District
    Court for reconsideration if this Court reverses on the merits. Appellee would hate
    for that to happen, but if it does, she has no objection to remanding, in fairness to the
    District Court, to reconsider attorney’s fees if she wishes.
    CONCLUSION AND PRAYER
    The District Court correctly applied the Attorney General’s incompatibility
    Opinion to Benson’s second application to be on the ballot, not just to her second
    oath of office. The District Court also correctly ruled that Election Code Sect.
    141.033, which invalidated her second ballot application, governs instead of Sects.
    141.034 and 201.025 (C.R. 496; Supp. C.R.9-11). The District Court interpreted the
    Election Code in a way to avoid an unjust or unreasonable result, kept Benson in her
    City Council position, and should be affirmed.
    Benson respectfully requests the Court to affirm the District Court’s Judgment
    in all respects, and grant her any other relief to which she may be entitled.
    Appellee’s Brief                                                                      23
    Respectfully submitted this December 21st, 2017.
    /s/Harold D. Hammett
    HAROLD D. HAMMETT
    State Bar No. 08855000
    4330 W. Vickery Blvd., Ste 140
    Fort Worth, Texas 76107
    Telephone: 817-820-3108
    Facsimile: 817-882-6955
    hammettlaw@att.net
    ATTORNEY FOR APPELLEE
    Appellee’s Brief                                                              24
    CERTIFICATE OF COMPLIANCE
    I hereby certify, pursuant to Rule 9.4(i) (3) of the Texas Rules of Appellate
    Procedure, that this brief complies with length limitations of Rule 9.4(i) and the
    typeface requirements of Rule 9.4(e).
    Exclusive of the contents excluded by Rule 9.4(i) (1), this brief contains 4,537
    words as counted by the Word Count function (including textboxes, footnotes, and
    endnotes) of Microsoft Word 2013.
    This brief has been prepared in proportionally spaced typeface using:
    Software:    Microsoft 2013
    Typeface:    Times New Roman
    Font Size:   14 point
    /s/Harold D. Hammett
    HAROLD D. HAMMETT
    CERTIFICATE OF SERVICE
    I hereby certify that a true, correct and complete copy of the foregoing
    document was served in accordance with Rule 9.5 of the Texas Rules of Appellate
    Procedure on the 21st day of December, 2017, to:
    Robert F. Maris
    3710 Rawlins Street, Suite 1550
    Dallas, Texas 75219
    /s/Harold D. Hammett
    HAROLD D. HAMMETT
    Appellee’s Brief                                                                  25
    NO.02-17-00346-CV
    In the Court of Appeals
    Second District of Texas
    Fort Worth, Texas
    City of Forest Hill, Texas, and Brigette Mathis
    Appellants,
    v.
    Michielle Benson, in her official capacity and individually,
    Appellee.
    On Appeal from the 153rd Judicial District Court of Tarrant County, Texas
    Cause No.153-290222-17; the Honorable Susan Heygood McCoy Presiding
    APPELLEE’S APPENDIX
    Contents                                                                  Page
    First Amended Final Judgment with Permanent Injunction (C.R.491)………...Tab 1
    Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law (Supp. C.R.4)………………………Tab 2
    Tex. Elec. Code Sect. 141.033…………………………………………………Tab 3
    Tex. Elec. Code Sect. 141.034…………………………………………………Tab 4
    Tex. Elec. Code Sect. 162.015…………………………………………………Tab 5
    Appellee’s Appendix                                                            26
    APPENDIX TAB "1"
    I
    153-290222-17
    . NO. 153-290222-17
    MICHIELLE BENSON,                           §        IN THE DISTRICT COURT
    Plaintiff, in her official capacity         §
    and individually                            §
    §      OF TARRANT COUNTY, TEXAS
    v.                                          §
    §        153rct JUDICIAL DlSTRICT
    City of Forest Hill, Texas                  §
    and Brigette Mathis,                        §
    Defendants                                  §
    FIRST AMENDED FINAL JUDGMENT WITH PERMANENT INJUNCTION
    This Judgment is substituted for this Court's prior Judgment dated June 16,
    2017. On April 10th, 2017, this case was called for Trial. Plaintiff Michielle Benson,
    appeared in person and through her attorney, Harold D. Hammett. Defendants City
    of Forest Hill, Texas, and Brigette Mathis, and their attorney, Robert F. Maris,
    appeared. All parties announced ready for trial.
    The case was tried to the Court on agreed facts. The Court took Judicial Notice
    of Section 3.10 and 3.11 of the Charter of the City of Forest Hill, heard the evidence
    and arguments of Counsel, and took the case under advisement. The Court
    requested and received additional briefs and responses.
    Plaintiff Benson asks the Court under the Texas Declaratory Judgment Act.
    Tex. Civ. Prac. and Rem. Code Sec. 37.003 and 37.004(a) to declare whether the
    Defendant City had the authority to declare her City Council position vacant, and if
    First Amended Final Judgment With Permanent
    Injunction                                                                               1
    491
    not, to clarify her right to be on the City of Forest Hill City Council, Place 3, and
    declare the acts of the City Council in replacing her null and void, and for permanent
    injunction. Plaintiff also asks for attorney's fees under Sec. 37.009.
    The Court hereby renders judgement for Plaintiff, Michielle Benson.
    The facts are that Dr. Benson filed Applications to be placed on the Ballot for
    two offices in February of 2016-Place 3 of the Forest Hill City Council and a place
    on the Forest Hill Library Board of Trustees. There is no disagreement at this time
    on the facts that the City Council application was filed first, and she was elected to
    both positions. Dr. Benson was sworn in to both positions in May 2016, and the
    record is undisputed that she took the Oath for the position in City Council first,
    before taking the Oath for the position on the Library Board of Trustees.
    Dr. Benson served in both positions, attending meetings of the City Council
    from May of 2016 - July of 2016. In July of 2016, an issue was presented to the City
    Council regarding whether Dr. Benson could serve in both positions without a
    conflict of interest. A vote was taken at the City Hall meeting to request an opinion
    of the Attorney General's Office [hereinafter the "AG"J regarding this issue; even Dr.
    Benson voted in favor of obtaining the AG's ruling on this matter. The City Attorney
    drafted the request letter for the District Attorney to send to the AG. The City
    Attorney's letter did not state anything about the sequence of filing for two offices.
    First Amended Final Judgment With Permanent
    Injunction                                                                               2
    492
    On January 3, 2017, the AG issued an opinion letter finding that Dr. Benson
    could not continue in both positions given the apparent conflict of interest (one
    issue raised was the fact that both entities compete for tax dollars from the City of
    Forest Hill). The AG opined that once Dr. Benson was sworn into the second position
    (the Library Board), she implicitly "resigned" from the first office (City Council).
    On the same day it received the letter, January 3rd, the City Council issued
    notice for a Special meeting on January 6th to "discuss" the AG's letter ruling. Dr.
    Benson was out of town in New York, and upon learning of the meeting, sent an e-
    mail to each of the members of the City Council, and the Mayor, asking that the
    meeting be postponed until she could be present. Despite this request, the meeting
    took place without Dr. Benson, and the City Council voted to replace her with her
    former opponent in the race for Place 3, Brigette Mathis. This suit for declaratory
    and injunctive relief was filed January 31, 2017.
    The Plaintiff and the Defense each rely on separate provisions of the Texas
    Election.Code. Plaintiff relies upon Election Code Section 141.033 titled Filing
    Applications for More than One Office Prohibited. Specifically it states "(a) A
    candidate may not file applications for a place on the ballot for two or more offices
    that are not permitted by law to be held by the same person. (b) If a person files
    more than one application for a place on a ballot in violation of this section, each
    application fi1ed subsequent to the first one filed is invalid." V.T.C.A. Election Code
    Section 141.033 (a) and (b). Thus Dr. Benson's claim that she filed for the Forest Hill
    First Amended Final Judgment With Permanent
    Injunction                                                                                3
    493
    City Council position first, means that her election to any other office that she later
    filed to run for was also invalidated. Further, since she then would have held ONLY
    the City Council position, as her later application to the Library Board was
    invalidated, there is no conflict of interest, and the opinion of the AG does not apply
    to her circumstances.
    Defendants' rely upon a different section of the same Election Code. They cite
    to Election Code Section 210.025 Acceptance of Another Office. That provision states
    "If an officer accepts another office and the two offices may not lawfully be held
    simultaneously, a vacancy in the first office occurs on the date the person qualifies
    for the other office." V.T.C.A. Election Code Section 201.025. Thus, Defendants'
    reasoning (based upon the AG's reasoning) is that once Plaintiff took the oath of
    office for the Library Board position, it created a vacancy for Place 3 on the City
    Council. Thus, under their reasoning, once Plaintiff took the oath of office for the
    Library Board position, the City Council Place 3 position was vacant, and in need of a
    replacement.
    Defendants also argue that the time window to challenge Plaintiffs candidacy
    for either position had expired (following the printing of the ballot), and because no
    one challenged her application during the allowable window, it is too late to
    consider the incompatibility of Plaintiffs dueling applications (thus, the
    incompatibility can only be considered with respect to the swearing in time period,
    not the application period). In support of this argument, Defendant cites Tex. Elec.
    First Amended Final Judgment With Permanent
    Injunction                                                                                4
    494
    Code Sect. 141.034 and cases where the court reasoned that a challenger's challenge
    came too late, because the ballots had already been printed.
    The cases cited by the Defendant involve completely different scenarios,
    where challenges were made (on time or too late) by a challenger for the same
    office. In those cases the courts looked at whether the challenger/opponent made
    their challenge in the allowable window (essential1y, before the ballots were
    printed). Here, there was a different kind of challenge, which was not made until
    after the election, after Plaintiff was sworn-in and served in the City Council
    position, and after the AG issued its opinion letter. Both Plaintiff and the City Council
    asked for the AG's opinion letter, and when it arrived, Plaintiff was replaced by the
    rest of the City Council in a vote that occurred while she was not present. This is not
    the type of "challenge" scenario discussed in Defendants' cases.
    In this case no one knew that Plaintiff could not hold both offices when she
    filed; therefore no one knew that they could challenge her right to appear on the
    ballot for both offices.
    In support of Permanent Injunction, Plaintiff argues that the Defendant never
    asked the AG to issue an opinion regarding how to handle the conflict at the point of
    the Plaintiff filing for both positions, they only asked the AG to consider the conflict
    at the point where Plaintiff was sworn into the second office.
    First Amended Final Judgment With Permanent
    Injunction                                                                                 5
    495
    The issues involved in this case center around the issue of, once she was
    made aware of the incompatibility of holding two positions, which office Plaintiff
    should continue to hold. The question comes down to whether Plaintiff should hold
    the office she first applied for (City Council) or the one she was last sworn into
    (Library Board). The Attorney General issued a letter finding incompatibility, and
    opined that once Plaintiff was sworn into the second office, she gave up the first. The
    Court notes that the AG had not considered whether the incompatibility existed at
    the time she made her applications, and the Court concludes that the incompatibility
    existed at the time she made her applications (as well as when she was later sworn
    in), and given that, she should keep the office she first applied for (City Council)
    because her second application was void due to incompatibility.
    Election Code Section 141.033 cannot be ignored. The Legislature intended
    Sect. 141.033 to be effective with the intent to achieve a just and reasonable result.
    Tex. Govt. Code Sect. 311.021(2,3). The Attorney General's opinion related back to
    the time of filing the ballot place applications, not just to the Oaths of Office. The
    issue of the timing of the Application filings must be considered before the issue of
    Oaths of Office can be considered. The AG opined only that there was a conflict in
    holding both offices. This Court agrees. Once this incompatibility was determined,
    Section 141.033(b) automatically became applicable and controlling. Plaintiff was
    not legally placed on the ballot for both positions, but only for City Council.
    Therefore, the City Council position was the only office for which Plaintiff was
    First Amended Final Judgment With Permanent
    Injunction                                                                                6
    496
    properly filed and elected to serve. With Plaintiff only being properly elected to one
    office, there is no conflict and no incompatibility.
    Accordingly, in this matter of first impression, the Court orders and decrees
    as follows:
    1. The action by the City Council of the Defendant City of Forest Hill, Texas on
    January 6th, 2017, declaring that Plaintiff Benson "effectively resigned" from the City
    was and is null and void, ab initio;
    2. The action by the City Council and Defendant City of Forest Hill on January
    6th, 2017 in appointing Defendant Brigette Mathis as successor to Plaintiff Benson's
    Council Position, Place 3, was and is null and void, ab initio;
    3. Defendant, the City of Forest Hill, Texas, is permanently enjoined and
    prohibited from depriving or interfering in any way with Plaintiff Michie lie Benson
    in exclusively occupying the office of Member of the City Council of Forest Hill, Place
    3, through to expiration of her elected term in May, 2018, including but not limited
    to impairing any privileges and rights of City Council Members, such as receiving
    messages that all City Council members receive from the City Manager, including
    notice of City Council meeting, discussing and voting on matters before the City
    Council, having possession and use of her cell phone, iPad and any other supplies
    provided by the City of Forest Hill to its City Council Member, and receiving funding
    First Amended Final Judgment With Permanent
    Injunction                                                                              7
    497
    for training sessions. This injunction applies to Defendant City, its officers, officials,
    employees and agents, and any person acting in concert with any of them.
    ATTORNEY'S FEES
    Plaintiff has requested the Court order the Defendant City to pay her
    Attorney's fees, which request the Court hereby grants. The parties agreed to submit
    attorney's fees upon affidavits. The Court received an affidavit from Plaintiffs
    counsel and Plaintiff but none from Defendants' counsel on attorney's fees.
    The Court finds from Plaintiff's attorney's affidavit that the following fees are
    and were reasonable and necessary. The Court also finds that such fees are
    equitable and just in light of the following facts: (1) in drafting the proposed letter
    for the District Attorney to send to the AG, Defendant's City Attorney did not
    mention anything about the sequence or filing for the two offices, although he was
    aware of a Texas Election Code 141.033 potential problem, as Defendants' counsel
    acknowledged in his opening statement to the Court; (2) the Defendant City Council
    unfairly acted upon only three days' notice to remove Plaintiff Benson from her
    elected City Council position; and (3) did so while she was out of state and had
    requested more time to address the issue.
    First Amended Final Judgment With Permanent
    Injunction                                                                                   8
    498
    Accordingly, Judgment is also rendered that Plaintiff recover from the City of
    Forest Hill, Texas, the following attorney's fees, which the Court rules are
    reasonable, necessary, equitable and just:
    $ 33. 341.00                            For representation through trial and
    completion of proceedings in the
    District Court.
    $ 2.000.00                               Forpos~trialproceedingsinthe
    District Court.
    $    12.950.00                           For representation through appeal to
    the Court of Appeals, if successful.
    $    5.000.00                            For representation at the petition for
    review stage in the Supreme Court of
    Texas, if successful.
    $   13.000.00                           For representation at the merits
    briefing stage in the Supreme Court of
    Texas, if successful.
    $    6.000.00                            For representation through oral
    argument and the completion of
    proceedings in the Supreme Court of
    Texas, if successful.
    First Amended Final Judgment With Permanent
    Injunction                                                                              9
    499
    4. Next, the Court orders the District Clerk to properly refund the cash
    deposit in lieu of temporary injunction bond of $1,500.00 filed by Plaintiffs
    attorney, Harold D. Hammett.
    5. Cost of Court are assessed against Defendants.
    This judgment disposes of all claims and parties, and is appealable.
    Signed this   {p~ dayo~017.
    Susan Heyg      cCoy,
    Judge Presiding
    Approved as to form and Content:
    /sf Harold D. Hammett
    HAROLD D. HAMMETT
    ATTORNEY FOR PLAINTIFF
    Approved as to form:
    /s/Robert F. Maris
    ROBERT F. MARIS
    ATTORNEY FOR DEFENDANTS
    By Harold D. Hammett, with permission
    First Amended Final Judgment With Permanent
    Injunction                                                                         10
    500
    APPENDIX TAB "2"
    lST SUPPLEMENTAL                                      FILED IN
    CLERK'S RECORD                                 2nd COURT OF APPEALS
    FORT WORTH, TEXAS
    Volume 1          of 1                         12/11/2017 2:50:25 PM
    DEBRA SPISAK
    Clerk
    Trial Court Cause No. 153-290222-17
    Appellate Cause No.02-17-00346-CV
    In the 153rd District Court
    of Tarrant County, Texas
    Hon. Susan McCoy,Presiding Judge
    MICHIELLE BENSON, PLTF, IN HER
    OFFICIAL CAPACITY AND INDV.
    vs.
    CITY OF FOREST HILL, TEXAS,
    ET AL
    Appealed to the Court of Appeals
    for the 2nd   Supreme Judicial District of Texas
    at Fort worth          , Texas
    APPEARING FOR THE APPELLANT
    HAMMETT, HAROLD D
    4330 W VICKERY BLVD STE 140
    FORT WORTH                                                     TX 76107-
    Phone:       (817) 820-3108
    Fax . . :    (817)   882-6955
    Email Address: HAMMETTLAW@ATT.NET
    SBOT.: OB855000TX
    Appearing for CITY OF FOREST HILL, ET AL, Appellant
    Delive red to the court of Appeals for t he 2nd   Supreme              (Court of Appeals)
    Judicial District of Texas at Port Worth             , Texas,      cause No .
    on this date of December   11, 2017,                               Filed in the Court of Appeals for the 2nd   Supreme Judicial
    District of Texas, at Fort Worth            , Texas, this
    Thomas A. Wilder, District Clerk                                   _ _ _ _ day of - - - - - - - - - - - -
    Tarrant County, Fort worth, Texas                                  - - -- - -- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - · Clerk
    C1M@ . .
    CONNIE WILLIAMS
    ·vv ill\.cvvwo                             By - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -- - - - ' Deputy
    Deputy District Clerk
    1
    ,'T
    NO. 153-290222-17
    MICHIELLE BENSON,                          §      IN THE DISTRICT COURT
    Plaintiff, in her official capacity        §
    and individually                           §
    §      OF TARRANT COUNTY, TEXAS
    v.                                         §
    §      1S3rd JUDICIAL DISTRlCT
    City of Forest Hill, Texas                 §
    and Brigette Mathis,                       §
    Defendants                                 §
    .,.
    FINDJPNGS OF FACTS AND CONCLUSIONS OF LAW
    The court makes the following Findings of Facts and Conclusions of Law:
    FINDINGS OF FACT
    1. This case was tried on Agreed Facts (Findings nos. 2-21 following).
    2. The City of Forest Hill is a duly organized municipality located in Tarrant
    County, Texas.
    3. The City's Charter requires that its City Council be composed of seven
    persons; a mayor and six council persons. To qualify to serve on the City Council, a
    person must be at least 21 years old, a resident of the City, be registered to vote and
    be current on all financial obligations to the City.
    4. Brigette Mathis served as Council person, place 3 and was elected to that
    position on May 7, 2014. Ms. Mathis' term was due to expire on May 7, 2016. Ms.
    Mathis was running for reelection.
    Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law                                                 1
    E·MAILED    .
    :itM±i-~~~                         4
    •·'
    5. On January 22, 2016, Michielle Benson first applied to run for Forest Hill
    City Council, place 3 against Ms. Mathis.
    6. After that, Dr. Benson also applied to run for the City Library Board of
    Trustees. This is an elective office, her second application.
    7. Both of the City Council and the Library Board elections were to occur on
    May 7, 2016.
    8. The Forest Hill City Council and the Library Board derive their respective
    authorities in the same geographic area; the City limits of Forest Hill. Both entities
    are also entitled to receive sales tax revenues generated within the city limits of
    Forest Hill.
    9. Neither the City Council nor the Board of Trustee jobs are a paid position.
    10. At the tiffle of filiRg the applications but befoi e acceptance of them,   efe
    City Secretary told Di. Benson that her dual apphcattons couJd be a pi oblem:_r--
    11. No one at the city acted to prohibit Dr. Benson from running for the two
    positions and her name appeared as a candidate for both positions at the May 7th,
    2016 municipal election in Forest Hill. The city knew of Sect. 141.033, Texas
    Election Code. The reason Dr. Benson was allowed to apply for two different offices
    was because no statutes, court nor the Attorney General had determined that the
    two offices at issue were in conflict.
    Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law                                                  2
    5
    12. Dr. Benson was elected as a council person and as a trustee of the Library
    Board at the election.
    13. On May 17, 2016, Dr. Benson took the oath of office for both positions; she
    was first sworn in as a council person and, second, as a trustee.
    14. After May 17, 2016, Dr. Benson actively served as both a Council person
    and as a trustee of the Library Board.
    15. At the June 7, 2016 Forest Hill City Council meeting, the Council discussed
    Dr. Benson's dual elective roles. The Council expressed concerns that Dr. Bensons'
    two positions could be illegal and could call into question her votes on either the
    City Council or the Library Board of Trustees. At this Council meeting, Dr. Benson
    moved that the City seek an Attorney General's opinions on the propriety of Dr.
    Benson serving on the council and the board simultaneously. Dr. Benson's motion
    was adopted unanimously.
    16. The Forest Hill City Attorney, Warren Spencer, composed a letter to the
    Attorney General and provided it to the Tarrant County District Attorney's Office
    and the DA's office forwarded the inquiry to the Attorney General. In Texas,
    municipalities cannot make requests for opinions to the Attorney General, but
    district attorneys can request an opinion.
    17. Dr. Benson continued to serve on the City Council and the Board of
    Trustees until January 2017.
    Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law                                               3
    6
    "
    18. On January 3, 2017, the Attorney General's office issued its opinion on the
    legality of Dr. Benson holding two elective offices. In its opinion, the Attorney
    General concluded that Dr. Benson's dual roles were illegal and that she is deemed
    to have resigned her position on the City Council on May 17, 2016 when she took
    her second oath as Library Board Trustee.
    19. The City Council immediately acted. A special City Council meeting was
    scheduled for January 6, 2016 to consider implementing the dictates of the Attorney
    General Opinion.
    20. Dr. Benson was in New York City on January 3, 2017 and she would not be
    able to return to Forest hill for the special council meeting on January 6, 2017. Dr.
    Benson requested that a meeting on the issues presented by her dual roles be
    delegated until she could return from New York City.
    21. The Forest Hill City Council met as scheduled on January 6, 2017 and
    agreed to accept Dr. Benson's deemed resignation from the Council. Bridgette
    Mathis was appointed to temporarily fill the place 3 position until a special election
    could be held on May 6, 2017.
    22. The Forest Hill City attorney did not mention Election Code Sect. 141.033
    in his draft letter request for an Attorney General's opinion sent to the District
    Attorney.
    Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law                                                  4
    7
    ,
    23. Plaintiff is entitled to recover attorney's fees from Defendants as follows,
    which the Court finds are reasonable and necessary:
    $ 33, 341.00                            For representation through trial and
    completion of proceedings in the
    District Court.
    $ 2,000.00                              For post-trial proceedings in the
    District Court.
    $    12.950.00                          For representation through appeal to
    the Court of Appeals, if successful.
    $   5.000.00                            For representation at the petition for
    review stage in the Supreme Court of
    Texas, if successful.
    $    13.000.00                          For representation at the merits
    briefing stage in the Supreme Court of
    Texas, if successful.
    $    6.000.00                           For representation through oral
    argument and the completion of
    proceedings in the Supreme Court of
    Texas, if successful.
    Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law                                                   5
    8
    ,
    24. The above stated fees are also equitable and just.
    25. Any finding of fact above shall also operate and serve as conclusion oflaw
    as appropriate.
    CONCLUSIONS OF LAW
    1. Texas Election Code Section 141.033 titled Filing Applications for More
    than One Office Prohibited. Specifically it states, "(a) A candidate may not file
    applications for a place on the ballot that are not permitted by law to be held by the
    same person. (b) If a person files more than one application for a place on a ballot in
    violation of section, each application filed subsequent to the first one is invalid."
    V.T.C.A. Election Code Section 141.033 (a) and (b).
    2. The undisputed evidence is that Dr. Benson filed the application for City
    Council first. Therefore, the Office of City Council, Place 3, was the only office for
    which Dr. Benson properly filed, elected, and took an oath to serve.
    3. Under that section, her application for election to the Library Board, her
    second filing, was invalid, and she was never properly elected to the Library Board
    4. Dr. Benson never filed a proper application for a place on the ballot for the
    Library Board, so she does not hold, never has properly held, that position.
    · Incompatibility of office does not exist.
    Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law                                                   6
    9
    5. Defendants reliance on Election Code Section 201.025 Acceptance of
    Another Office is unavailing. That provision states: "If an officer accepts another
    office and the two offices cannot be held simultaneously, a vacancy in the first office
    occurs on the date that the officer qualifies for the second office.
    6. Neither the Attorney General's Opinion nor Defendants' argument based on
    Section 201.025 address the validity of Benson's application for the Library Board,
    her second application. Section 141.033 must be considered before the issue of the
    post-election oath of office should be considered.
    7. The action by the City Council of Defendant City of Forest Hill, Texas, on
    January 6th, 2010 declaring that Plaintiff Benson had "effectively resigned" from the
    City Council was and is null and void, ab initio.
    8. The action by the City Council of Defendant City on January 6th, 2017 in
    appointing Defendant Brigette Mathis as successor to Plaintiff Benson's Council
    position, Place 3, was and is null and void, ab initio.
    9. Permanent injunction relief against Defendant City is warranted.
    10. Plaintiff is entitled to, and the Court awards her attorney's fees, as are
    reasonable, necessary, equitable and just, as found in this Court's Sept. 6th First
    Amended Final Judgment with Permanent Injunction.
    11. Section 3.11 of Defendant's City Charter states, in part: "A Council Member
    charged with conduct constituting grounds for forfeiture or suspension of his office
    shall be entitled to a public hearing on demand, and notice of such hearing shall be
    Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law                                                 7
    10
    published in one or more newspapers of general circulation in the city at least one
    week in advance of the hearing." The Court can take this charter provision into
    account in determining the equitable and just amount of attorney's fees for Plaintiff.
    12. Defendants reliance on Election Code Sect. 141.034 and related cases is
    unavailing. The facts of this case are completely different from the scenario where
    one candidate challenges the valid application for an opposing candidate relied on
    by Defendants.
    13. This Court has jurisdiction over this case.
    14. Any conclusion of law above shall also operate and serve as a finding of
    fact as appropriate.
    t-!oy(fto~tv l~
    Signed this~tubef              ,.. 2017.
    Susan Heygood McCoy
    Judge Presiding
    Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law                                               8
    11
    APPENDIX TAB "3"
    § 141.033. Filing Applications for More Than One Office ..., TX ELECTION§ 141.033
    Vernon's Texas Statutes and Codes Annotated
    Election Code (Refs & Annos)
    Title 9. Candidates (Refs & Annos)
    Chapter 141. Candidacy for Public Office Generally (Refs & Annos)
    Subchapter B. Application for Place on Ballot
    V.T.C.A., Election Code§ 14i.033
    § 14i.033. Filing Applications for More Than One Office Prohibited
    Currentness
    (a) A candidate may not file applications fo r a place on the ballot for two or more offices that:
    (1) a re not permitted by law to be held by the same person; and
    (2) are to be voted on at one or more elections held on the same day.
    (b) If a person files more than one application for a place on a ballot in violation of this section, each application filed
    subsequent to the first one filed is invalid.
    (c) This section does not apply to candidacy for the office of president or vice-president of the United States and another
    office.
    Credits
    Acts 1985, 69th Leg., ch. 2 11 , § I, eff. Jan. I, I986.
    N otes of Decisions (3)
    V. T . C. A., Election Code § 141.033, TX ELECTION§ 141.033
    Current through the end of the 2017 Regular and First Called Sessions of the 85th Legislature
    E nt! or Document                                               © '.!O17 Thom.on Reuters. No daim   lo   original U.S. Governm ent Works.
    WESTLAW © 2017 Thomson Reuters. No claim to original U.S. Government Works.
    APPENDIX TAB "4"
    § 141.034. Limitation on Challenge of Application, TX ELECTION§ 141.034
    KeyCite Yellow Flag - Negative Treatment
    Proposed Legislation
    Vernon's Texas Statutes and Codes Annotated
    Election Code (Refs & Annos)
    Title 9. Candidates (Refs & Annos)
    Chapter 141. Candidacy for Public Office Generally (Refs &Annos}
    Subchapter B. Application for Place on Ballot
    V.T.C.A., Election Code § 141.034
    § 14i.034 . Limitation on Challenge of Application
    Effective: May 23,   2017
    Currentness
    (a) An application for a place on the ballot may not be challenged fo r compli a nce with the applicable requirements as
    to form , content, and procedure after the day before any ballot to be voted early by mail is mailed to a n address in the
    authority's jurisdiction for the election for which the application is made.
    (b) This section does not a pply to a determination of a candidate's eligibility.
    (c) A challenge must state with specificity how the a pplication does no t comply with the applicable req uirements as to
    form, content, and procedure. The auth ority's review of the challenge is limited to the specific items challenged and a ny
    response filed with the autho rity by t he challenged candida te.
    Credits
    Acts 1985, 69th Leg., ch. 211, § 1, eff. Jan. I, 1986. Amended by Acts 1989, 7 l st Leg., ch. 2. § 7.07, eff. Aug. 28, 1989;
    Acts 199 1, 72nd Leg., ch. 203, § 2.57; Acts 199 1, 72nd Leg., ch. 554, § 28, cff. Sept. I. 1991; Acts 1993, 73rd Leg. , ch. 728,
    § 55, eff. Sept. l , 1993; Acts 20 17, 85th Leg .. ch. 95 (S.B. 44), § 2, eff. May 23 , 20 17.
    Noles of Decisions (6)
    V. T . C. A ., Election Code§ 141.034, TX ELECTION § 141.034
    Current through the end of the 2017 R egular and First Called Sessions of the 85th Legislature
    End of Document                                               r0 '.!017 Thomson Reu1ers. No d:um to original U.S. Government Worb.
    WESTl..AW © 2017 Thomson Reuters. No claim to original U.S. Government Works.
    APPENDIX TAB "5"
    § 162.015. Restrictions on Candidacy in General Election ... , TX ELECTION§ 162.015
    KeyCite Yellow Flag- Negative Treatment
    Proposed Legislation
    Vernon's Texas Statutes and Codes Annotated
    Election Code (Refs & Annas)
    Title 10. Political Parties
    Subtitle A. Introductory Provisions
    Chapter 162. Regulating Participation in Party Affairs
    V.T.C.A., Election Code § 162.015
    § 162.015. Restrictions on Candidacy in General Election by Candidate or Voter in Primary
    Currentness
    (a) A person who voted at a primary election or who was a candidate for nomination in a primary is ineligible for a place
    on the ballot for the succeeding general election for state and county officers as:
    (1) an independent candidate for an office for which a candidate was nominated in the primary; or
    (2) the nominee of a political party other than the party holding the primary in which the person voted or was a
    candidate.
    (b) A person who was a candidate for nomination in a primary election is ineligible for a place on the list of write-in
    candidates for the succeeding general election for state and county officers as a write-in candidate for the office sought
    by that candidate in the primary.
    Credits
    Acts 1985, 69th Leg., ch. 211 , § I, eff. Jan. I, 1986. Amended by Acts 1991, 72nd Leg., ch. 363, § 2, eff. Sept. 1, 1991 .
    Notes of Decisions (20)
    V. T . C. A., Election Code§ 162.015, TX ELECTION§ 162.015
    Current through the end of the 2017 Regular and First Called Sessions of the 85th Legislature
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    End of Document                           e 2017 T homson Renter,. N o claim to original U.S. Government Works.
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