Irva E. Reed sought to run for a seat on the Montgomery County Commission in 2024. She submitted her qualifying papers to the Montgomery County Democratic Party in November 2023 and confirmed she would submit a "Statement of Economic Interests" (SEI) to the Alabama Ethics Commission within five days, as required by Alabama law. However, she filed her SEI 41 days late. The Director of the Commission informed the Party that Reed was not qualified to appear on the ballot. Reed requested a five-day extension due to illness, but the Commission denied her request.
Reed then sued the Director, the Chairman of the Commission, and the Secretary of State in their official capacities in the Montgomery Circuit Court, seeking a judgment declaring her illness as a valid reason for the delay and an injunction to place her name on the ballot. The trial court granted her request for a preliminary injunction, ordering the Commission and the Party to certify Reed as a candidate. The defendants appealed the trial court's order, and the Supreme Court of Alabama stayed the injunction while addressing the appeal.
The Supreme Court of Alabama reviewed the case de novo and found that Reed's claim was moot because the election had already occurred. The court held that a judgment in Reed's favor would not affect the rights of the parties. The court also determined that none of the exceptions to mootness cited by Reed—capable of repetition but evading review, public interest, and collateral rights—applied in this case. Consequently, the Supreme Court of Alabama dismissed the appeal and instructed the trial court to dissolve the injunction and dismiss Reed's complaint. View "Plunk v. Reed" on Justia Law
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