Conway v. Arnold

109 S.W.2d 399, 270 Ky. 128, 1937 Ky. LEXIS 41
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedOctober 12, 1937
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 109 S.W.2d 399 (Conway v. Arnold) 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
Conway v. Arnold, 109 S.W.2d 399, 270 Ky. 128, 1937 Ky. LEXIS 41 (Ky. 1937).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Stanley, Commissioner

Affirming.

The appellant, Roy Conway, contests the nomination of Mrs. Bessie Riddle Arnold as the Democratic *129 candidate for county court clerk of Pike county at the August, 1937, primary. The contestee received 5,735 votes and contestant 3,259. Two other candidates received fewer votes. Mrs. Arnold had a clear majority over all candidates of 1,491 and a plurality of 2,476 over the contestant. The contest was based exclusively on allegations of the violation of the Corrupt Practice Act (section 1565b-l et seq., Statutes) by the contestee and others in her behalf with her authority, knowledge, and acquiescence. The circuit court dismissed the petition, and the contestant brings the case here for review.

Much of the voluminous record establishes nothing more than an industrious but unsuccessful effort to prove the grounds of the contest. Other parts of it establish the voluntary work of friends of the contestee and also of the hire of automobiles and others by the contestee, her husband and father for the distribution of campaign literature and the getting out of her vote. Whether or not the circumstances proved agency or acquiescence, as the appellant maintains, or absence of authority and ignorance by the candidate, and only voluntary personal expenditure by her husband and father, as she and her father testified, is not material, for the evidence relating to these employments and activities reflect only legitimate expenditures. Prewitt v. Caudill, 250 Ky. 698, 63 S. W. (2d) 954.

Suspicion attaches to the fact that some of the payments made by the contestee’s husband and father were in $1 bills, and in one or two instances perhaps were very liberal for the declared purposes. But there is no proof tending to show an improper use by the recipients in behalf of the contestee. There is other evidence of the activities of election day workers who were not only supporting the contestee but several other candidates in the primary. Some of these men pooled their interests with others and bought votes that day, but there is no evidence of any connection with the contestee or any sort of authority or knowledge on her part of what these men did.

M. J. Jones testified that on the morning of election day the contestee’s husband came to his precinct and gave him $20 or $25; and later in the day her father came there and gave him $10 or $12.00. He used the money in getting out the vote and working for her. He had several others working for contestee there, although he was particularly interested in one of the candidates *130 for jailer. The money was in $1 bills. Another witness testified that J ones furnished the voters with sample. ballots marked for Mrs. Arnold and other candidates, ■and that he saw him pay money to 25 or 30 voters. But the witness could give the name of no voter whom he saw thus paid. Arnold did not testify, but the appellee and her father testified they knew nothing about any purpose of J ones to use money in an improper or illegal manner in her behalf.

Kenneth Adkins, a candidate for magistrate, had a •campaign committee which raised $680 for him. The contestee’s husband gave that committee $200. He is vice president of a bank in Pikeville. The treasurer of this committee testified he had reluctantly accepted- this money because he was supporting Conway, the contestant, in the county clerk’s race. However, he had finally consented to take it in order that it could not be used Tor Mrs. Arnold against her opponent, the contestant, or ■against his candidate for magistrate. The manner in which this money was spent was not developed, except it was used in connection with Adkins’' race.

Bud Wiley received $15 from Mr. Arnold which he used in his precinct. The money was a $5 bill and the balance in twos and ones. All the admissions obtained from Wiley were that he supported other candidates and used the money for Mrs. Arnold “in a way; some ways.” There may be a suspicion but no proof of an illegal or improper use of this money.

Layne Justice testified to having received $100 from ■contestee’s husband and a like amount from Lawrence Branham, a candidate for jailer. He spent $20 of the money in the Island Creek precinct, but did nothing there for Mrs. Arnold except to vote for her. After the election, he returned $100 to Branham. There is testimony that this man, with others, got together on a slate or ticket, pooled their money, and bribed voters. The •election seems to have been held in the open on the side of the highway. On the other hand, some of those mentioned in connection with this pool denied any special activity and all say the only thing they did for the contestee was to vote for her and in a few instances to mark sample ballots in her favor. Sherm Ray, identified ■as treasurer of this group, testified that he believed Justice gave him $30, and that he gave voters from 25 cents do a dollar after they had voted and because they wanted *131 money with which to buy liquor. It was not given to influence them. He specifically denied asking those persons to vote for Mrs. Arnold, although he may have told them to do so. Justice denied giving Bay any money.

J. E. Sanders, a candidate for county attorney, testified that he and the eontestee’s husband had agreed to have a talk before the election. He came in from campaigning one night and saw Mrs. Arnold on the street. He asked if her husband was around and she replied that she did not know but would find out. She later informed him he was in the bank. At this conference, and at others, Sanders and Arnold discussed the use of money in the campaign, and went over the situation in the county. About 5 o’clock on the morning of election day, Sanders went to the Arnold home. Mrs. Arnold’s father answered the door. He went upstairs and found Mr. Arnold in a room alone and asleep. He awakened him and told him what he wanted. Mrs. Arnold was not present. When he came out, she was in the hall. However, as the result of this conversation, Arnold gave him a slip of paper on which he wrote: “Layne, o. k. — K. L. A.” This memorandum was. handed to him in the hall in the presence of Mrs. Arnold, but it is not shown she knew what it was. Before this, Arnold had advised Sanders that “his money was going to be in the hands of Layne Justice of Island Creek.”

Sanders was having trouble getting Justice to make a fight for him in his race and had decided to go up in that precinct on election day. That morning in the Arnold home, after he had obtained the cryptic memorandum, he and Arnold talked about where each was going and Arnold said, ‘ ‘ They had a mix-up at Dorton and he was going up there to see about that. ’ ’ The witness remarked that the mix-up there was caused by his placing money in the wrong person’s hands. This part of their conversation, he testified, was in the presence of the contestee. But is this statement by Sanders proof of her guilt? Layne Justice denied having had any connection or association with Sanders except to warn him several times against looking into the booths while voters were in them.

The suspicious circumstances may indicate there was an agreement to violate the Corrupt Practice Act by these two men. That is all. If assumptions are to be indulged, the more logical one is that Sanders was *132

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Bluebook (online)
109 S.W.2d 399, 270 Ky. 128, 1937 Ky. LEXIS 41, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/conway-v-arnold-kyctapphigh-1937.