Broughton v. Pursifull, Clerk

53 S.W.2d 200, 245 Ky. 137, 1932 Ky. LEXIS 542
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedSeptember 30, 1932
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 53 S.W.2d 200 (Broughton v. Pursifull, Clerk) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Broughton v. Pursifull, Clerk, 53 S.W.2d 200, 245 Ky. 137, 1932 Ky. LEXIS 542 (Ky. 1932).

Opinion

Opinion by

Judge Thomas —

Sustaining motion for mandatory injunction.

The husband of plaintiff (M. E. Broughton) was the sheriff of Bell county. He died, and plaintiff, his widow, was appointed to fill the vacancy until it could be filled by election of the people of the county at the regular election in 1932, and which was done in time to permit prospective candidates for the unexpired term to become candidates in the August primary, 1932. Plaintiff became a candidate in that primary election for the Republican nomination, but she was defeated by another. Later a sufficient number of petitioners asked that her name he caused to be printed on the official ballot as an independent candidate for the same office by the defendant, J. M. Pursifull, who was and is the county court clerk of Bell county, and she presented her petition to him with a request that he *138 accept it and file it. Furthermore, that in the preparation of the official ballot for the November, 1932, election he caused to be printed her name as an independent candidate to fill the vacancy of the office of sheriff under her picture as an emblem. He declined to accept the petition and refused to file it, and likewise declined to print her name upon the ballot as requested in her petition. She then filed this equity action in the Bell circuit court against defendant, setting up, in more detail, the facts as we have stated, and prayed that a mandatory injunction issue against defendant “directing and commanding him to cause and have printed on the official ballot to be used by the voters at the November election 1932 her name as an independent candidate under the device * * * as shown in the said petition,” etc.

She moved for a temporary injunctiqn and that it be made permanent upon a final hearing of the cause. The motion for a temporary injunction was overruled by the learned judge of the Bell circuit court, and this motion is made by plaintiff before the writer as a member of the Court of Appeals, pursuant to the provisions of section 297 of the Civil Code of Practice, for a review of the order of the court denying the injunction and directing that it issue in accordance with plaintiff’s prayer.

We-have not been favored with a brief by attorney for defendant, nor did the court state in its order overruling the motion for a temporary injunction the grounds therefor. However, defendant’s answer admitted all the facts alleged in the petition, and then averred that his refusals complained of by plaintiff were because she was a defeated candidate in 'the 1932 primary election for the' same office as a candidate of the Republican Party, and for which reason she was ineligible to run for that office either as the nominee of any party or as an independent candidate. The brief for plaintiff relies upon the principle announced by this court in the cases of Napier v. Roberts, 172 Ky. 227, 189 S. W. 206; Vaughan v. Roberts, 192 Ky. 364, 233 S. W. 733, and pertinent cases cited in those opinions. Those cases, and especially the Napier one, contain facts almost identical with those of this one. -It was therein held that the law as it then existed did not bar a defeated candidate for a nomination in the_ primary from later becoming an independent candidate *139 for the same office against his successful opponent at the regular election by the requisite number of petitioners as prescribed by statute.

There was no question about the regularity and sufficiency of the required petition to have one’s name printed as an independent candidate in either of the cited cases, nor is there any such in this case. On the contrary, it is admitted that the law was complied with in that respect. Unless, therefore, the principles announcéd in the Napier opinion, and which were not modified in the Vaughan one (but on the contrary were approved), have been retracted by this court in some later opinion, or unless they have been nullified by some valid enactment, or unless we are now convinced that they are unsound and will no longer be followed, the ruling of the trial judge was and is erroneous, and the pending motion for the temporary injunction should be sustained, and such writ directed to issue. They have not been modified by any subsequent opinion of this court, nor are we convinced that we should do so in this case. The opinion will not be incumbered by excerpts from such prior ones embodying our reasoning in arriving at the announced conclusions therein, but the reader is referred to them for such information. It is sufficient to say in this opinion that we are still satisfied with the soundness of the reasoning supporting our conclusions in those opinions, and we know no reason to depart therefrom. On the contrary, we still adhere to them as based upon the condition of our law as existing at the time they were rendered.

In the absence of the record containing the reason which induced the trial court to deny the motion for the temporary injunction, we are left to our own resources to discover it, and we can conceive of none, unless it be chapter 156, page 672, of the Session Acts of 1920, and which is now a part of section 155Ó-6 of the 1930 Edition of Carroll’s Kentucky Statutes. That chapter re-enacted the prior section 1550-6 of our Statutes with the insertion of this as one of its amendments.

“No applicant or candidate for any public office in the State of Kentucky who shall have filed his application or declaration under said section and who shall have been defeated for the nomination for any office thereunder, shall be eligible or *140 permitted to run for the same office for which he was a candidate under said section at any general election in this state to be held during the same year in which his said application and declaration was so filed and in which he was a candidate in any primary election under said act. ’ ’

We therefore repeat that, unless the inserted 1920 amendment (if valid) had the effect to set aside and nullify the principles announced in the cases, supra, and to prescribe contrary thereto, then the opinion sought to be reviewed by this motion cannot be sustained. Our task, therefore, is to determine (1) the effect of the inserted portion of the 1920 amendment contained in chapter 156 of the 1920 acts, and (2) whether such determined effect is or is not valid.

It will be observed that the involved amendment does not undertake to say, nor does it in any manner enact, that a defeated candidate in the primary election held in the same year as the succeeding general election shall not be entitled to have his name “printed” on the official ballot either as the nominee of any party, or as an independent candidate; but it says that such defeated candidate shall not “be eligible or permitted to run for the same office for which he was a candidate” at the following general election. There is a vast difference between and a wide gulf separating the two disqualifications; i. e., the right to have one’s name printed on the ballot at public expense as a candidate for the same office for which he was defeated for the nomination in the primary, and the enacted disqualification in the amendment that such defeated candidate thereby became ineligible for the office and prohibited from running therefor.

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Bluebook (online)
53 S.W.2d 200, 245 Ky. 137, 1932 Ky. LEXIS 542, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/broughton-v-pursifull-clerk-kyctapphigh-1932.