Donohue v. Swindler

184 S.W.2d 348, 299 Ky. 119, 1944 Ky. LEXIS 1031
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedDecember 1, 1944
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 184 S.W.2d 348 (Donohue v. Swindler) 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
Donohue v. Swindler, 184 S.W.2d 348, 299 Ky. 119, 1944 Ky. LEXIS 1031 (Ky. 1944).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Judge Tileord

Affirming.

Appellant attacked the validity of the local option election held in Shelby County on Saturday, April 29, 1944, and, from a judgment dismissing his petition, has appealed. The grounds of the attack were, (1) that the County Judge had no right or authority to direct that the election be held on Saturday, April 29th, “when the petition filed by the requisite number of voters had fixed the date of the election on Monday, April 17, 1944”; and that the order calling the election was also Void because April 29th “was earlier than sixty (60) days from the date” of the order calling the election, March 13, 1944; (2) that the County Board of Election Commissioners appointed election officers for each of the thirty-four voting precincts in the County on April 10, 1944, nineteen days prior to the election, instead of “not more than *121 fifteen and not less than ten days before the day appointed for the holding of the election” as required by KBS 242.090; and (3) that in violation of KBS 242.040, the sheriff failed to post written or printed handbills advertising the election in five, or any conspicuous places in each, or any, of the thirty-four voting precincts in the County, and that as a result a large number of voters were not properly notified of the election, and in consequence failed to cast their votes. On final hearing the Court sustained the demurrer of the intervening contestee to the first and second grounds of contest, and found the proof introduced by appellants insufficient to sustain the third ground. We shall discuss these rulings in the order stated.

1. Appellants base their claim that the County Judge had no authority to fix a date for the election other than that named in the petition, and that in any event, the election could not have been legally held within sixty days from March 13, the date the order calling the election was entered, upon the' provisions of the first and second subsections of KBS 242.030 and statements in one or more opinions of this Court which were either inadvertent or inapplicable to the questions under consideration here. These cases are Morgan v. Walker et al. 289 Ky. 92, 158 S. W. 2d 5; Skaggs et al. v. Fyffe, 266 Ky. 337, 98 S. W. 2d 884; Campbell v. Mason, Sheriff, et al., 269 Ky. 128, 106 S. W. 2d 100; Hardigree v. White, Sheriff, et al. 266 Ky. 648, 99 S. W. 2d 785; Hinton et al. v. Stewart, 272 Ky. 162, 113 S. W. 1150; Norton v. Letton, 271 Ky. 353, 111 S. W. 2d 1053.

Morgan v. Walker, supra, involved the validity of a petition for a local option election, made up in part of pages of signatures taken from a former petition which had been abandoned. The abandoned petition had named a day for the election, whereas, the one attacked had left the day blank. Said the Court in holding the petition invalid (289 Ky. 92, 158 S. W. 2d 8): “Here it is charged that approximately 1,000 names were obtained to a petition in the months of January and February, 1941, which set forth that the election was to be held on March 14, 1941. This petition was abandoned, according to the allegations of the contestant, and on March 22nd there was filed a petition leaving blank the date of the election and to which sheets of names taken from the first petition had been attached. On the basis *122 of the second petition the election was set for June 14th. This was more than 90 days after the date named in the first petition (March 14), to say nothing of the fact that the new petition contained the names of approximately 1,000 persons who never signed it and the names of whom were attached thereto without their knowledge or consent. There are obvious reasons why persons might desire to sign a petition calling for an election at a specified time, whereas they would be unwilling to sign one in blank, thereby leaving the setting of the date of the election to the county judge.”

The comfort which appellant draws from the last of the quoted sentences should be completely dissipated, it seems to us, by the admission with which the paragraph containing the quoted sentences opens, that on two previous occasions this Court had decided that the action of the County Court in ordering an election on a day other than that named in a petition for an election did not render the election void.

Skaggs et al. v. Fyffe, supra, involved the question, whether the provisions of subsection 2 of KRS 242.020 that the signers of the petition shall state their post office addresses and the dates on which they signed was mandatory or directory. The writer of the opinion, setting forth the Court’s reasons for its decision that the provision was directory only, also said (266 Ky. 337, 98 S. W. 2d 887): “No election can be held under the act sooner than sixty days after the order calling it has been entered, although only two weeks publication of the election is required.” That the quoted statement was dictum is apparent from the fact that it was in no way necessary to the decision of the question before the Court, but was injected into the opinion to emphasize the intention of the Legislature to provide a period in which the identity of the signers might be investigated and the petition purged of forged names and the names of disqualified persons,- and that the statement was inadvertent is shown by the writer’s quotation preceding it of the following excerpt from the opinion of this Court in Horning et al. v. Fiscal Court of Caldwell County et al., 187 Ky. 87, 218 S. W. 989, 992:

“An essential thing to the validity of an election held under the statute, supra, is that the petition shall be subscribed by 150 legal voters who are freeholders, and that the order be made at a regular term of the *123 county court, and these are mandatory, because they are prerequisites to jurisdiction to order the election. It is likewise essential to the validity of such an election that it be not held earlier than 60 days after the application is made, and that it be advertised for 30 days theretofore in order to give notice to the persons affected by such an election of the time and place of its holding and the time and opportunity to consider their interests in connection with it and their duty in reference to it in the protection and advancement of their rights and interests. These provisions are, without doubt, mandatory, and, unless strictly complied with, would render the election without effect. The provision providing that the .election be ordered to be held ‘on some day named in the petition’ could only be a provision for orderly procedure. * * * Hence we conclude that the direction in the statute with regard to fixing the date for the election, except after the time required by the statute, is not mandatory, but directory, and if the election was otherwise legally held, the fact that the county court ordered the election to be held upon a day other than the one named in the petition, .but on the third day theretofore, did not render the election invalid, and the demurrer was properly overruled.”

Indeed, in setting forth the principles governing the determination of whether statutory provisions relating to local option elections are to be construed as mandatory or directory, Horning et al. v.

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Bluebook (online)
184 S.W.2d 348, 299 Ky. 119, 1944 Ky. LEXIS 1031, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/donohue-v-swindler-kyctapphigh-1944.