Daniel v. Blankenship

198 S.W. 48, 177 Ky. 726, 1917 Ky. LEXIS 657
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedNovember 14, 1917
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 198 S.W. 48 (Daniel v. Blankenship) 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
Daniel v. Blankenship, 198 S.W. 48, 177 Ky. 726, 1917 Ky. LEXIS 657 (Ky. Ct. App. 1917).

Opinions

[727]*727Opinion by

Judge Hurt

— Dissolving injunction.

The plaintiffs, H. G. Daniel and Guy E. Robertson, S. E. Bennett, Ozna Schults, D. Melvin Stewart, J. S. Glenn, T. B. Tichenor, Newton R. Baize, J. R. Miller, Joseph Smith, R. C. Tichenor, R. T. Hagerman, B. W. Taylor, and Isaac Keown, filed their declarations as candidates for the nomination of the Democratic party, at the regular primary election, held in the year 1917, for the various county offices, and district offices of the county of Ohio, to be voted for as candidates for the respective offces, for which they sought the nominations, at the following regular November election. The six first named were the only candidates for the respective offices, for which they sought the nominations of their party, before the primary, and when thirty days next before the day of the primary election had passed, certificates of nomination were issued to each of them by the clerk of the county court, as directed by subsection 9, of section 1550, Kentucky Statutes, governing the holding of party elections and making party nominations. As appears from the record, the clerk delivered to each of them the certificate of nomination to which he was entitled, directly after same was" issued. Neither of them ever filed his certificate in the office of the county court clerk, or made any disposition of it.

The remaining eight, above named, parties had opposition for the nomination, which they, respectively, sought, but, each of them having received a majority of votes, the board of commissioners, in due season, prepared and signed for each of them a certificate, showing his nomination as candidate, for .the office, which he sought, in accordance with subsection 26, of section 1550, Kentucky Statutes. Neither of these parties, so far as the record shows, however, ever requested the board of election commissioners to deliver to him his certificate, and never filed or caused it to be filed with the county court clerk, and, in fact, it does not appear, that either of them was ever in possession of his certificate. The board of election commissioners, in place of delivering the certificates to the parties, who were entitled to them, placed them within the leaves of a book, wherein the record of the proceedings of the board of election commissioners was kept, and lodged the book in the office of the county court clerk, and the clerk deposes,, that he did not have any knowledge of the whereabouts of the [728]*728certificates, until within fifteen days, preceding the election, and this statement is not contradicted.

The certificates of nomination, not having been filed with the clerk of the county court, fifteen days preceding the regular November election, the clerk refused to cause the names of the nominees to be printed upon the official ballot, to be used at the November election, as candidates for the offices for which they had been nominated, under the emblem of the Democratic party, or otherwise.

On the 2nd day of November, the plaintiffs, H. Gr. Daniel, W. E. Ellis, and J. S. Casebier, instituted this action in the Ohio circuit court, against the defendant, W. C. Blankenship, who was the clerk of the county court, and sought a mandatory injunction to require the defendant to cause the names of all the nominees, above mentioned, to be printed upon the official ballots, under the emblem of the Democratic party, as candidates for the offices for which they had been nominated, respectively. It will be . observed that the plaintiff, H. Gr. Daniel, was one of the nominees for an office of a district of the county, but the plaintiffs, Ellis and Casebier, were not nominees, but were citizens of Ohio county, and entitled to vote at the November election, and claimed, that the right to have the parties’ names printed upon the ballots, as candidates, was a matter of public and common interest to all citizens of the county, and for that reason they were entitled to sue for that purpose.

The regular judge of the judicial district in which Ohio county is situated, being absent from the district, the plaintiffs, after having given notice of their intention, made a motion before another circuit judge, in vacation, who was in an adjoining county, to grant a mandatory injunction against the defendant, requiring him to cause the names of all the above mentioned nominees to be printed upon the ballots to be used at the regular November election, as prayed for in the petition. Upon the hearing of the motion, it was sustained and the injunction granted. Thereupon, the defendant, on the following day, which was November 2nd, having given notice, made a motion before me, as a judge of the Court of Appeals, to dissolve the injunction.

Upon the hearing of the motion to dissolve the injunction, the rigjht of the plaintiff, H. Gr. Daniels, to maintain the action to require the clerk to cause to be printed upon the ballots, the names of any of the parties, other than himself, and the right of the plaintiffs, Ellis and Casebier, as citizens and voters of the county, [729]*729to maintain the snit for any purpose, was questioned, but it is not considered necessary to • determine that question, as the decision of another issue, which applies to the rights of all the nominees, alike, fully disposes of the entire controversy.

For the plaintiffs, it was insisted, that, it was the duty of the county court clerk to cause the names of the nominees, above mentioned, to be printed upon the official ballots for the use of the regular November election, although the certificates of nomination had never been filed with him; while for the clerk, it was insisted, that, he was without authority of law to place the names upon the ballots, when the certificates of their nomination had not been filed, with him, fifteen days preceding the day of the regular November election.

Previous to the enactment of the primary election law of March 5, 1912, and which, with its amendments of March 23, 1914, is now section 1550, Kentucky Statutes, the general election law governing the holding of the .regular November election, controlled and prescribed the manner in which candidates’ names could be placed upon the ballots.

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Bluebook (online)
198 S.W. 48, 177 Ky. 726, 1917 Ky. LEXIS 657, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/daniel-v-blankenship-kyctapp-1917.