Chappell v. Colson

224 S.W. 666, 189 Ky. 102, 1920 Ky. LEXIS 384
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedSeptember 28, 1920
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 224 S.W. 666 (Chappell v. Colson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Chappell v. Colson, 224 S.W. 666, 189 Ky. 102, 1920 Ky. LEXIS 384 (Ky. Ct. App. 1920).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Judge Settle

Affirming.

By this action in equity brought in the Bell circuit court the appellee, M. Gr. Colson, contested the right of the appellant, J. S. Chappell, to qualify and act as a member of the city council of Pineville, Bell county, this state; to which office the latter claimed to have been elected from the fifth ward of that city at the November election 1919.

According to the canvass of the ballots and certification of the result made by the board of election commissioners, appellant was found to have received twenty-five and appellee twenty-four votes for the office in question and the former declared elected thereto. But, following an inspection and recount of the ballots by the circuit court on the trial of the contest raised in this action, it was held by the court that twenty of the twenty-five votes certified by the election board to háve been received by appellant were illegal, and that the ballots containing them were illegally cast and counted; and further that as their exclusion left, as shown by legal ballots cast, a majority of nineteen legal votes for appellee, he was entitled to the office and should be permitted to qualify and enter upon the performance of its duties. From the judgment of the circuit court thus depriving appellant of the office of councilman and giving it to appellee the former prosecutes this appeal.

The exclusion by the circuit court of twenty of the votes received by appellant was, as stated in its judgment, because of' the use on the excluded ballots of “pasters” containing his printed name. These pasters, or slips of paper, with appellant’s name printed thereon, were handed by certain of his friends at the polling place, while the election was going on, to voters expressing an intention to vote for applelant with instructions that upon entering the voting booth they vote for him by pasting the slip or pasters containing his printed name on the ballot and making a cross mark in the square on the ballot opposite or at the end of the paster. The [104]*104pasters thus given voters were used by the latter according to instructions in voting for appellant, at least, to 'the extent of twenty of the ballots.cast for him; leaving but five received by him on which his name was written, by the voters casting them, with a black lead pencil, as required by the statute respecting a person voted for by ballot whose name is not printed on the ballots as the nominee of a political party or by petition, before the election, by order of the county clerk. As already stated, the votes shown by the. five ballots last mentioned were the only votes allowed appellant by the judgment of the circuit court, So the question to be decided by this court is, was the failure of the circuit court to count for and allow .appellant the twenty ballots on which his printed name as the candidate voted for was placed by pasters, authorized by the law governing the election?

The number of pasters used at the election, manner of using them and the fact that no pasters were used on the ballots cast for appellee, is shown by the ballots themselves; all cast in the election, both for appellant and appellee, being before us as a part of the record on this appeal. It appears from the evidence, and is conceded by appellant, that at the November election 1919 two members- of the city council were required to be and were elected from each of the five wards óf the city of Pine-ville, and that the names of appellee and Robert Elliott were the only names printed on the ballot issued for use in the election as candidates for councilmen from the fifth ward. ' Such printing of their names thereon having been done by order of the clerk of the Bell county court in obedience to petitions, each signed by the requisite number of voters, filed in his office as provided by Kentucky Statutes, section 1453, which designated a device for both candidates, other than that used by any political party, to appear above their namesand the device thus designated was printed on the ballots above the names of the two candidates, as was a circle immediately under the device and a square opposite the printed name of each candidate as places for making the cross mark to indicate the votes of users of the ballots. The ballots also contained the required vacant lines or spaces and squares opposite for use by those desiring to vote for a person or persons other than the candidate or candidates whose names were printed on the ballots, and whcih could be so used by writing therein, with a black lead pencil, the name of the candidate desired to be voted for and making with a stencil a cross mark in the square opposite. The [105]*105vacant lines or spaces on twenty of the ballots cast for appellant were used by pasting in them the slips or pasters containing his printed name and adding the cross mark in the squares opposite. Appellant made no attempt to have his name printed on the ballots, nor does he claim to have possessed such right, either as the nominee of a political party or by the filing with the county clerk the required petition. In fact he does not seem to have been a candidate for councilman prior to the elec- - tion, or, at any rate, was never announced as such until the day it was held, down to which time appellee believed himself, as was his running mate, Elliott, without opposition. Appellant or his friends undoubtedly had a right to conceal his candidacy or withhold announcement of it until the day of the election, but in so doing he was deprived of the privilege of having his name appear on the ballot in printed form or under a device. In such case those desiring to secure his election by voting for him could do so only in the manner prescribed by Kentucky Statutes, section 1471, which, regarding the manner of voting, duties of election officers and “voting for a person not on the ballot,” among other things, provides: “Nothing in this law contained shall be so construed as to prevent a voter from voting for any qualified person other than those whose names are printed on the ballots for any office to be filled, by writing with a black lead pencil, under the designation of the office, the name of such person and placing to the right of such namie a (a?) mark. All marking upon the ballots shall be made, with black ink stencil. There shall be kept in each booth the necessary stencils and pencils, to be securely fastened by a string or cord of sufficient length to enable voters to use the same.”

As the foregoing provisions of the statute, supra, prescribe a particular method of voting by secret ballot for a person whose name is not printed on the ballot, such method must be observed by the voter; and any other manner of voting that may be resorted to by the latter in the use of the ballot, whether directed by others or adopted of his own volition, will render it invalid. If, however, by reason of illiteracy, blindness or other physical cause the voter is unable to write on the ballot the name of a person for whom he desires to vote and to make the required mark at the right of such name, it may, at his request and in his presence, be done for him by the clerk of the election in the manner prescribed by the statute regulating elections. An illustration of bnr m'eaning [106]*106is furnished by the opinion in Edwards v. Loy, 113 Ky.

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Bluebook (online)
224 S.W. 666, 189 Ky. 102, 1920 Ky. LEXIS 384, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chappell-v-colson-kyctapp-1920.