Commonwealth v. Combs

86 S.W. 697, 120 Ky. 368, 1905 Ky. LEXIS 112
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedApril 25, 1905
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 86 S.W. 697 (Commonwealth v. Combs) 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
Commonwealth v. Combs, 86 S.W. 697, 120 Ky. 368, 1905 Ky. LEXIS 112 (Ky. Ct. App. 1905).

Opinion

Opinion by

Judge O’Rear

Certifying opinion.

The governing committee of the Republican party of Owsley county ordered a primary election to select candidates of that party for the various county offices to be voted at the November election, 1901. The election was held, but, owing to some mishap, the ballots prepared for one precinct were not provided, or were not delivered, so that the voters of that precinct did not get to vote in that primary. The election proceeded in the other precincts. The result showed that A. C. Hyden had received the highest number of the votes cast as the nominee for county judge. He was then the county judge of that county, and was a candidate for re-election. Others were likewise nominated for other offices. \ Upon its being discovered that the missing precinct had not had a chance to vote, the county committee called all the candidates to meet it at Booneville, ihe county seat, when it was agreed that on the following Saturday the election should be continued in the missing precinct, and that the result there should be added to the total of votes east in the other precincts, and that the final result was to be so ascertained as if all the precincts had voted upon the same day. The election was continued accordingly, with the result that Hyden was defeated upon the face of the returns. The committee thereafter met, and canvassed the returns, and certified to the county court clerk, as required by law, the nominations for the various offices, including that of county judge; Hyden’s opponent being certified as the nominee. [372]*372This certificate was filed not more than 60 and not less than 15 days before the ensuing regular election, as required by the statute. Notwithstanding Hyden and the others who' had received apparent majorities without the missing precinct, continued to claim their nominations, and declared that the election held in the missing precinct was void. Appellee, H. C. Combs, was at that time the county court clerk of Owsley county, and was a candidate before the primary for nomination for re-election. In the election as first held he had received an apparent majority* but with the votes of the missing precinct he was defeated. His successful opponent was certified by the chairman and secretary of the county committee as the nominee of the party for county court clerk. The nominee for county judge as certified to by the county committee resigned his nomination in the manner provided for by the statute. The cdunty committee then called a mass convention to nominate a candidate for that office. The convention met, and nominated W. T. McGuire, which fact was duly certified to the county court clerk. A few days before the regular election a suit was filed by all the candidates who had received apparent majorities in the first day’s voting in the primary against their successful opponents in the result of the two days’ voting, seeking an injunction restraining the county court clerk from placing the latter’s names on the ballot as the nominees and under the title and device of the Republican party, and commanding the clerk to place the plaintiffs’ names on the ballot as such nominees. The county court clerk was made a party defendant (as well as a party plaintiff) r to this action. A similar suit was filed by Hyden against McGuire and appellee, the county court clerk, regarding the arrangement of the ballot in the county [373]*373judge’s race. In the first named suit a restraining order was issued by the county judge, Hyden, which was also a mandatory injunction to the clerk to place the names of the plaintiffs on the ballots as sfich nominees, instead of defendants’. In Hyden’s suit against McGuire a similar injunction and restraining order was granted, and issued by the circuit court clerk. These orders were granted without notice to the defendants, and before they had been summoned in the actions. Appellee, though, seems to have had personal knowledge of the fact. Indeed, he was one of the plaintiffs who procured the order to issue as to all the offices except that of county judge. McGuire heard rumors of the proceedings just before the election, and went to the circuit court clerk’s office to verify them. He was there told that no such suit could be found, and nothing was there to show' that any such had been filed. Not satisfied, he went to the sheriff to learn whether he had any process against him, and found that he had.. Returning to the clerk’s office with a copy of the summons and restraining order, the papers of the suit were produced to him. .Notices were immediately given that the defendants in the suits would apply to the Honorable S. B. Dishman, circuit judge of the district at Manchester, on the following day — which was the Saturday before the day of the regular election — to dissolve the injunction- and restraining order. The motion was made accordingly, and the restraining order and injunction were dissolved. By the time the parties could return to Boonville and get into the clerk’s office to file the judge’s order dissolving the injunction it was Monday morning, the day before the election. McGuire and his associates then furnished to appellee pasters upon which their names had been printed, to be attached to tbe ballots in the [374]*374appropriate places, placing them on the ballots as nominees of their party ■ for the various offices to which they had been nominated as certified to by the county committee. Thereupon, the plaintiffs in the suits mentioned got out another injunction, similarly issued, restraining the clerk from using the pasters. The clerk refused to use them, and refused and failed to have McGuire’s name placed on the ballots, as the nominee of the Republican party for county judge, or placed on the ballots at all. He also -refused to have any other parties ’ names as certified by the county committee placed on the ballots at all. It was then too late to do anything else in the way of legal proceedings to correct the ballot. There was not a printing office in the county capable of printing the ballots, so the clerk had them printed elsewhere. Boonville is about 12 miles from . the nearest railroad station. The grand jury of Owsley county indicted appellee for knowingly and wilfully refusing and failing to have the name of W. T. McGuire printed upon the official ballot in the manner provided for -by the election law of '.this State. Upon the trial there was evidence of intentional action of appellee to do what he did do to prevent the election of McGuire and his associate nominees. But appellee justified his act under the order of the circuit court issued by its clerk in the suit of Hyden against McGuire, restraining him from placing the name of McGuire on the ballot as such nominee, and that after the restraining order was dissolved it was physically impossible, under the existing conditions, for him to then have had other .ballots printed. The circuit court seems to have come to the conclusion that this defense was good, and consequently instructed the jury to find the defendant not guilty. The Commonwealth has prose[375]*375cuted this appeal that the law governing similar acts may be declared.

The Australian system of voting by secret ballot has come into use in this State only within the last few years. The Constitution of 1891 for the first time provided that elections should be by secret ballot. The laws enacted from time to time since by the Legislature to carry into effect the constitutional requirement have been found not entirely adequate to prevent frauds. To cure the defects, actual or supposed, the Legislature has adopted numerous amendments, in some instances amounting to almost complete revisions.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
86 S.W. 697, 120 Ky. 368, 1905 Ky. LEXIS 112, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-combs-kyctapp-1905.