Caudel v. Prewitt

178 S.W.2d 22, 296 Ky. 848, 1944 Ky. LEXIS 595
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedJanuary 28, 1944
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 178 S.W.2d 22 (Caudel v. Prewitt) 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
Caudel v. Prewitt, 178 S.W.2d 22, 296 Ky. 848, 1944 Ky. LEXIS 595 (Ky. 1944).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Judge Thomas-

Reversing.

At the regular 1939 election, appellant, and plaintiff below, J. Sidney Caudel, was elected to the office of Commonwealth’s Attorney in the 21st Circuit Court Judical District in the Commonwealth, followed by his qualification and taking office in January, 1940. He continued to fill that position until some time in July, 1942, when he responded to a call by the President for active service in the American fighting forces, pursuant to the provisions of section 351 et seq., 10 U. S. C. A., which statute created the Officers’ Reserve Corps, the advantages of which appellant had availed himself - many years prior to his election. Shortly after his induction pursuant to that call, he was made a Captain and sent overseas as a soldier in the American army, fighting the present war. He has remained absent from Continental United States continuously since then, with the exception of a brief *850 return to a hospital in Miami, Florida, for the better treatment, of some ailment with which he became seized, but he has never returned to Kentucky since his original acceptance and induction. The short visit to the Miami hospital appears to have occurred before the matters herein involved arose, he being absent from the United States throughout the period that the controversial issues were maturing.

Following his entrance into the army as a soldier and officer therein, and after he had left the United States, a controversy arose as to whether or not his response to the President’s call, and his acceptance of the position of Captain in the army pursuant thereto, vacated his civil office, which finally culminated in the conclusion of those taking part in the controversy that there was a vacancy in the civil office and that it should be filled by the Governor of the Commonwealth, until the voters of the district could elect an incumbent for the remainder of the term, which extended to January 1, 1947. However, according to the record the Governor .was advised to condition his appointment so as to require his appointee to surrender the office to plaintiff upon his release from army service if that should occur before the expiration of the term for which he was elected. Whether or not that was done in the commission issued by the Governor, who appointed one G. Conner Eying, is not shown, but there was introduced a letter written by the Governor to the Secretary of State announcing the appointment of Ewing in which no such qualification appears. Hon. W. Bridges White, Judge of the judical district, also wrote a letter to the Governor in which he said that plaintiff “has been inducted into the United States army as a Captain and is now overseas.” ' The writer further informed the Governor that the Attorney General’s office had advised that a vacancy in plaintiff’s office had resulted and the letter then said: “I suggest that your appointee should agree, at least during the term for which he is appointed, to resign the office in the event that Mr. Caudel should return and desire to resume the duties of the office. This would be fair under the circumstances.” That letter was dated September 28, 1942, and the letter of the Governor to the Secretary of' State was dated the next day, September 29, 1942.

The appointee, Ewing, thereafter continued to. occupy the office of Commonwealth’s Attorney of his dis *851 trict, and in dne time filed Ms papers with the Secretary of State as a candidate in the primary election to be field in August, 1943, for the filling of the remainder of the term caused by the alleged vacancy. The appellee, Prewitt, also filed with the same officer Ms papers as a candidate in the same primary election and was nominated thereat as the Democratic candidate to be elected at the following regular election of that year. He was later elected in November. After the election this action was filed by appellant in the Franklin circuit court against the members of the State Election Board seeking an injunction against them; preventing their canvassing the returns or issuing a certificate of election to appellee, on the grounds that he (appellant) had not abandoned his civil office nor did any of his acts as above enumerated conflict with any constitutional or statutory provisions of the Commonwealth so as to create a vacancy in his civil office. On the contrary, his insistence is that what had transpired had only the effect to suspend his active duties as such civil officer during the period of his emergency military service, and that if it ceased before the term of Ms civil office expired, he had the right to reclaim it.

The answer of Prewitt was a denial in general terms of the material allegations of the petition, except it was admitted that plaintiff had been elected to the civil office and had served therein until he became a member of the United States army in the manner above outlined. It was then averred in the same answer, (a) that the army service of plaintiff, as above outlined, was incompatible with the.civil office of Commonwealth’s Attorney; (b) that plaintiff, by his conduct and Ms silence in failing to assert his claim before the primary and regular elections in 1943, abandoned his civil office, and also estopped himself- from now contending otherwise, and (c) that section 237 of our Constitution ipso facto created a vacancy in the civil office of Commonwealth’s Attorney upon plaintiff’s response to the call made upon him by the President of the United States.

In the meantime Prewitt by proper pleading made Ewing and the Attorney General of the Commonwealth parties to the action, but neither of them filed any pleading or took any part in any manner in the proceeding, although Ewing testified by deposition (which was taken by the defendant, Prewitt) and which was the only testimony introduced at the hearing. The court on *852 submission adjudged “that a vacancy existed in the office of Commonwealth’s Attorney for the Twenty First Judical District of Kentucky more than sixty (60) days prior to the August 1943 Primary Election held therein and that the defendant, H. Reid Prewitt, is the duly elected and is entitled to be qualified as said Commonwealth’s Attorney, and is entitled to the certificate of election thereto,” and thereby dismissed the petition, to reverse which this appeal is prosecuted.

Ground (a) is not sustained by section 165 of our Constitution, since it applies only to state, county and municipal officers. Therefore, the incompatibility relied on must emanate from the common law, and the cases and authorities hereinafter cited in disposing of ground (c) refute the relied on ground of incompatibility under parallel facts by pointing out that incompatibility at common law is not based merely on the filling of two offices by the same incumbent but upon the fact that the duties of the two places conflict, whereby disloyalty for full performance of both would be created, thereby creating inefficiency of the same incumbent in the discharge of his dual official duties. If, therefore, the duties of appellant, and plaintiff, in his civil office are merely suspended during the military service, during whch period a substitute may be appointed, or designated, no conflict of loyalty to duty arises during the suspended period.

Ground (b), as we have above stated it, embraces both abandonment of his civil office, and estoppel by him to now claim otherwise.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
178 S.W.2d 22, 296 Ky. 848, 1944 Ky. LEXIS 595, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/caudel-v-prewitt-kyctapphigh-1944.