Cary v. Simpson, County Judge

39 S.W.2d 668, 239 Ky. 381, 1931 Ky. LEXIS 792
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedJune 2, 1931
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 39 S.W.2d 668 (Cary v. Simpson, County Judge) 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
Cary v. Simpson, County Judge, 39 S.W.2d 668, 239 Ky. 381, 1931 Ky. LEXIS 792 (Ky. 1931).

Opinion

*382 Opinion of the Court by

Chief Justice Thomas

Affirming.

At the regular November election, in 1929, there was a special election held in Cary precinct, in Cumberland county, under the provisions of chapter 122 of Carroll’s Kentucky Statutes, Edition of 1930, relating to stock running at large, and which was duly called pursuant to the provisions of that chapter, being section 4645m-l to and including section 4645m-8. The result of the election as certified by the county board of election commissioners was that 65 votes were cast against the running at large of stock in the precinct and 64 votes were cast in favor of it. After the certificate had been recorded in the county court, as provided in the section 4645m-6 of the Statutes, supra, the appellant, R. G-. Cary, refused to comply with the mandate of the election, and intentionally and purposely permitted his stock to run at large in violation of the voted restriction. The appellee and defendant below, B. L. Simpson, was the county judge of the county, and the other defendant and appellee, George W. Cary, was a citizen of the county and he made affidavit before his codefendant (the county judge) charging appellant with violating the law after it had been put in force by the election. But before the day set for his trial he filed this petition in equity in the Cumberland circuit court against defendants in which he averred that the election was void and of no effect for three reasons, which were and are: (1) That no valid petition as is prescribed in section 4645m-l was ever filed in the county court as a basis for the order calling the election; (2) that the question that was printed on the ballot to be answered by the voters did not conform to the one prescribed and set out in section 4645m-4 of the Statutes, and that the departure therefrom was so substantial as to nullify the election, and (3) that the election officers in Cary precinct wrongfully subscribed their names to the certificate of the result of the election on that question after they had returned the poll books to the county court clerk on the day of the election but without having subscribed their names to the certificate "which they had completely made out, but their failure to sign it was through over sight.

He obtained a temporary restraining order from the clerk of the court enjoining defendants from prosecuting him under the warrant upon which he was *383 arrested, because, as he contended, the election was void for the reasons stated in Ms petition, and he sought upon final trial a permanent injunction to that effect. The answer was a denial of all the material averments of the petition, and the testimony of only two witnesses was heard and the case was submitted to the court, followed by a judgment dismissing the petition, to reverse which plaintiff- prosecutes this appeal. Waiving all questions of proper parties defendant, and conceding (but without deciding) the. propriety of the remedy employed by plaintiff to obtain the relief he sought if the facts authorized it, we will proceed at once to consider the grounds relied on in the order named.

1. Ground (1) was sought to be established by the parol testimony of the only two witnesses introduced at the trial, i. e., the county court clerk and the then county attorney. By them plaintiff attempted to prove that the original petition filed in the county court asking for the election and signed by the requisite number of voters in the precinct was written in longhand,,and when delivered to the county court clerk to be filed he made some objections or criticisms as to its conformity with the statute and submitted the matter to the then county attorney who concluded that, perhaps, the county court clerk was right in his objections and criticisms, and to rectify the supposed irregularities the county attorney prepared a typewritten petition (but inappropriately designated by the witness as “caption”), and then clipped the signatures off of the Original petition and pasted them on the typewritten one prepared by Mm, and which was done, as we gather from the testimony, in the presence of a number of voters in the precinct, and perhaps all of the subscribers to the petition, but whether so or not we are unable to say from the record. As so altered it was filed with the clerk, and in due time the order for the election was made by the county judge, and it was duly spread upon the order books of the court and the election advertised as the law directs.

We have no hesitancy in concluding that, if the typewritten petition, as so substituted for the original one in longhand, was materially and substantially different from the one that the petitioners subscribed, it would render the petition invalid and the same vice would necessarily inhere in the order calling the election, as well as serve to nullify the election itself. In that case the filed petition would speak a different language from that *384 spoken by tbe petitioners when they subscribed their names to the original one, and it might be, as is here contended in brief only, that the petition as so altered would call for an election covering a different territory from that described in the original petition, and which, if true, iwould render invalid the entire proceeding. But before any such fact may be judicially determined to so operate, the proof of the fact must be of the character, and presented at such a time, as that the court called upon to make such a determination would be authorized to accept it for that purpose. In other words, if the subject-matter of investigation had advanced to such a stage and had passed through original judicial investigation, and had therein been determined contrary to the contention made in the 'later collateral application in equity for nullification, then the great majority of courts have declared, upon sound and logical reasoning, that the determination of the court having jurisdiction to find the essential facts as a prerequisite to the calling of an election cannot be so collaterally impeached by extrinsic testimony and which is the character of impeachment sought in this case.

In the text in 20 C. J. 96, sec. 79, it is said inter alia: “After the sufficiency of the petition has been passed upon by the proper authority and the order has been made, the decision is not open to collateral attack, especially where an election has been held under the order and in other respects according to law.” The cases of West v. Whitaker, 37 Iowa, 598; Ryan v. Varga, 37 Iowa 78, and State v. Mackin, 51 Mo. App. 299, are cited in support of that text, and our examination of them discloses that they do so. In 9 R. C. L. page 996, sec. 18, the text accurately and carefully compiles the law upon this subject. After pointing out that in some cases, and under some circumstances, the determination of the sufficiency of the petition asking for the calling of the election by the officer, whose duty it is to pass upon its sufficiency and to call the election may be inquired into in a proceeding of this nature (as was true in the ease of Grill v. Board of Commissioners, a North Carolina case reported in 160 N. C. 176, 76 S. E. 203, and 43 L. R. A. [N. S.] 293), the text then says:

“However, a contrary rule exists and is supported by excellent authority, upon the reasoning that it must be assumed in cases of this kind .as in all others that the officials to whom the petition was

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Bluebook (online)
39 S.W.2d 668, 239 Ky. 381, 1931 Ky. LEXIS 792, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cary-v-simpson-county-judge-kyctapphigh-1931.