Mississippi Advisory Opinions February 20, 1979: 19790220 (February 20, 1979)
Collection: Mississippi Attorney General Opinions
Docket: 19790220
Date: Feb. 20, 1979
Advisory Opinion Text
Honorable Henry Dean Horton
Winston County Circuit Clerk
Post Office Box 371
Louisville, Mississippi 39339
Re: Request for Opinion Qualifications for Justice Court Judge
Dear Mr. Horton:
Attorney General A. F. Summer has received your letter of February 5, 1979, requesting an opinion from this office and has referred it to the undersigned for research and reply.
Please permit me to quote the text of your inquiry to avoid any possible misunderstanding and for future reference. Your questions are as follows:
‘(a) Would a person be qualified to run for Justice Court Judge if the person does not have a highschool education or equivalent, unless he shall have served as a justice of peace prior to January 1, 1976, but did not serve between January 1, 1972 and January 1, 1976?
‘(b) Does a candidate for Justice Court Judge have to live in the District he plans to represent prior to being elected to said office but must move to said District before being sworn into office?’
Under the provisions of Article VI, Section 171, of the Mississippi Constitution (Miss. Code of 1972, 1978 Cumm. Supp.), a justice court judge must be a high school graduate or have a general equivalency diploma unless he shall have served as a justice of the peace or been elected to the office of justice of the peace prior to January 1, 1976. It is the opinion of this office that any person who has served or been elected to the office of justice of the peace at any time prior to January 1, 1976, would satisfy this requirement for qualification for that office.
In answer to your second question, it has been the subject of previous opinions of this office that a candidate for justice court judge must reside in the district at the time of his qualification as a condidate for justice court judge and must continue to reside in the district once elected.
Trusting that this is adequate to answer your inquiry and with kindest personal regards, I remain
Yours very truly,
A. F. Summer, Attorney General.
Oscar P. Mackey, Assistant Attorney General.