State Supreme Court Affirms Powell's Run for PSC

You need more than a high school education to learn the law, Karen Handel. Vote Jim Powell for Public Service Commission. Saw him today at the Varsity.

Woven brightly,
Daniel J. Matthews, Jr.


Date: Thu, 30 Oct 2008 16:03:44 -0400
Subject: State Supreme Court Affirms Powell's Run for PSC
From: jim@jimpowellforgapsc.com
To: friendsandfamily@list.jimpowellforgapsc.com; countychairs@list.jimpowellforgapsc.com
CC:

Atlanta, Oct. 30, 2008 - The Supreme Court of Georgia today upheld James R. Powell's right to run in Tuesday's election for a seat on the Public Service Commission.

Secretary of State Karen Handel had appealed a Fulton County Superior Court ruling that sided with Powell and overturned her decision finding Powell ineligible to run based on where he lived. In June 2008, Handel first challenged Powell's qualifications a month after he filed his intent to run as a Democrat against Republican Lauren McDonald for the PSC District 4 post. She argued that a homestead exemption Powell had on his Cobb County property established an irrefutable presumption of legal residence and proved Powell did not live in the North Georgia district he seeks to represent. In her appeal, Handel argued that under state law, the trial court should have given deference to her interpretation of the law on residency that she is in charge of enforcing.

But in today's unanimous decision, written by Justice Robert Benham, the Supreme Court disagrees. "It is the role of the judicial branch to interpret the statutes enacted by the legislative branch and enforced by the executive branch., and administrative rulings will be adopted only when they conform to the meaning which the court deems should properly be given," 8-page opinion says. The facts of the case are not in dispute, merely the interpretation of the law, the opinion points out.

In 2006, Powell purchased a second home in Towns County, which is in District 4. In 2007, he attempted unsuccessfully to transfer his homestead exemption from Cobb to Towns County, but he missed the filing deadline. Evidence shows Powell spends more than 60 percent of his time in Towns County, where he has voted three times, attends church and pays taxes.

The residency law, which is Section 21-2-217 in the Official Code of Georgia, lists 15 rules for determining a candidate's legal residence. At least seven apply to Powell, the Supreme Court has found, "but the Secretary's decision did not take into account any of the applicable rules other than the homestead exemption rule."

"We agree with the superior court that the Secretary committed an error of law that authorizes reversal of the Secretary's decision," today's opinion says.

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