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Mississippi Advisory Opinions October 19, 1979: 19791019 (October 19, 1979)

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Collection: Mississippi Attorney General Opinions
Docket: 19791019
Date: Oct. 19, 1979

Advisory Opinion Text

Honorable Wayne Parker

No. 19791019

Mississippi Attorney General Opinions

October 19, 1979

Honorable Wayne Parker

Circuit Clerk of Lamar County

Post Office Box 728

Purvis, Mississippi 39475

Dear Mr. Parker:

Attorney General Summer has received your letter of request dated September 27, 1979, and has assigned it to me for research and reply.

You submit the following, to wit:

“Would you please give me your Official opinion on whether or not the Circuit Clerk or Deputy Circuit Clerk can personally deliver absentee ballots to the sick people at their homes, in hospitals and Nursing Homes and after they vote, notorize their signatures and serve as attesting witness on the back of the envelope containing the voted ballot, then return it to the Circuit Clerk's Office for deposit in the appropriate Ballot Box?”

Section 23-9-407, Mississippi Code, 1972, as amended, provides in part:

“. . .I hereby make application for an official ballot, or ballots, to be voted by me at the election to be held in _ _, on _ _. Send Absent Elector's Ballot' to me (1) at the following address _ _, or (2) deliver same to me in person (Strike (1) or (2), whichever is inapplicable.). .”.

Section 23-9-409, Mississippi Code, 1972, as amended, provides in part:

“(1) The registrar shall enclose with each ballot sent to an absent elector separate printed instructions furnished by him containing the following:

(A) All absentee voters, excepting those physically incapacitated, who mark their ballots in the county of the residence shall use the registrar of that county as the witness. Said absentee voter shall come to the office of the registrar and neither the registrar nor his deputy shall be required to go out of the registrar's office to serve as an attesting witness. . ”.

Section 23-9-605, Mississippi Code, 1972, as amended, provides in part:

“Any elector desiring an absentee ballot as provided in this article may secure same if:

(1) Not more than fifteen (15) days nor later than 5:00 p.m. on the second day immediately prior to such election, he shall appear in person before the registrar of the county in which he resides, or, for municipal elections, he shall appear in person before the city clerk of the municipality in which he resides, and shall execute and file an application as provided in section 23-9-407. .”.

It is the opinion of this office, based on the cited statutory language, that the County Registrar or his Deputy in his official capacity (but no other person) may, but is not required to, upon proper request or application, deliver in person, an absentee ballot to physically incapacitated voters within the county, in which event the voter must use the registrar of the county as the witness, and under such circumstance, the registrar or his deputy acting in their official capacity must comply with all statutory provisions in the same manner and to the same extent as if such person had appeared in person in the office of the registrar and cast his ballot.

This opinion is supplementary to the opinion of this office dated August 2, 1979, to Mrs. Audrey W. Kern, copy of which is hereto attached, which opinion is hereby affirmed, but which opinion is not to be construed as excluding the official authority vested in the County Registrar as hereinabove set forth.

With kindest regards, Very truly yours,

A. F. Summer, Attorney General