Glenn v. Gnau

64 S.W.2d 168, 251 Ky. 3, 90 A.L.R. 1355, 1933 Ky. LEXIS 795
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedOctober 25, 1933
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 64 S.W.2d 168 (Glenn v. Gnau) 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
Glenn v. Gnau, 64 S.W.2d 168, 251 Ky. 3, 90 A.L.R. 1355, 1933 Ky. LEXIS 795 (Ky. 1933).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Thomas

Affirming.

The parties to this contest proceeding filed in the-Jefferson circuit court by appellee and contestant below, Ferd A. G-nau, against appellant and contestee, Charles E. Glenn, were rival candidates for the Democratic: nomination in the recent August primary election for' the office of representative in the lower house of the-General Assembly from the Fifty-Second legislative-district, comprising a part of the city of Louisville, Ky. The board of canvassers found that the contestee,. Glenn, received in that election 951 votes, and that the-contestant, Gnau, received 949 votes, and it so certified and issued a certificate of nomination to contestee. Within the prescribed time contestant filed this contest action against contestee and in his petition he alleged, that in the Third precinct of the First ward of the city,, composing a part of the Fifty-Second legislative district, the officers who held the election through mistake,, or fraud and collusion, permitted a large number of voters to stamp their ballots openly on the table without complying with the law permitting such method of voting, and that at least thirteen of them, who were named, were cast for contestee, and, being illegal for the reasons stated, they should be deducted from his total certification of 951 votes, thus reducing his total to 939 legal votes as having been cast for him, and. thereby nominating contestant by a majority of ten votes.

The answer denied the material averments of the: petition, and in a separate paragraph counter grounds of contest were averred, and which challenged one illegal vote cast for contestant in the same precinct, and. further alleged that in the Fifth precinct of the same ward there were cast 8, votes for contestant (naming them), each of which was illegal because the voter was-not a member of the Democratic Party, and that he-received in the same precinct 33 other illegal votes, because those who cast them were not registered as. *5 Democrats at the last preceding general election in 1932, and which section 1550-19 disqualified them from voting. Following pleadings made the issues and upon submission, after proof taken, the court adjudged that contestant had received a majority of the legal votes cast in the primary election and was entitled to his certificate of nomination which was directed to be issued to him. Complaining of that judgment, contestee prosecutes this appeal.

Before addressing ourselves to the merits of the case we deem it proper to indulge in some observations on the conduct of the election officers in precinct 3 of the First ward throughout the day for holding the election, and which was^ That, as expressly shown and admitted in the record, they agreed among themselves upon the opening of the polls that all voters who so ■desired might openly mark their ballots on the table without the administration of an oath, or compliance with any other statutory provision, whereby such method of voting was permitted. Such conduct of election officers cannot be too strongly condemned. It involves, not only an agreement and consent to set aside and annul wholesome and healthy, as well as mandatory, provisions of our election laws, but likewise involves a violation of the oath of the officers, which they are required to take before entering upon the discharge of their duties, the substance of which is, that they will conduct the election fairly and in accordance with the provisions of law, and which necessarily embraces the prescribed method by which a voter may so openly stamp his ballot. Therefore, an agreement and consent that such requirements shall not be observed is an open violation of the oath that the election officer takes. If the officers of election could legally so dispense with a mandatory requirement relating to the conduct of elections, they could with equal propriety dispense with all of them, including the one that the vote shall be by secret ballot, or even by ballot at all, and thus conduct the election after the vive voce plan. Boards of county election commissioners who appoint election officers should see to it that they are of such a type of citizenship as will not thus so lightly regard their oaths, but those whose only desire is to perform their official duties in accordance with the mandates of the law, and it is to be hoped that these observations will be here *6 after recognized and scrupulously observed throughout the state. '

Preliminary to a determination of the merits of the case, we deem it proper to state that this court at present is crowded with primary election contest cases, each of which must be determined in time to allow the official ballots for the general election to be printed and distributed, and for that reason, as well as for the additional one, that to do otherwise would be of no material service to the public, we have concluded to state our conclusion of fact, as arrived at from the evidence, without going into detail, and without discussing the testimony of each witness upon the issue, and to dispose of the case by giving our ultimate conclusions from all the testimony bearing thereon.

The court found that nine of the thirteen questioned votes by contestant in the Third precinct of the First ward were cast for contestee, and that each of them was marked on the table without the voters taking the prescribed oath showing the necessity for his doing so in that manner, and for which reason they were correctly found to be illegal and they were deducted from contestee’s total vote, which reduced it to 942. For the same reason the court deducted from the total certification of contestant the single attacked illegal vote cast at that precinct by contestee in his counter pleading, and which reduced the contestant’s total to 948. Under the court’s interpretation of the law and his finding of fact relating to the votes contested by appellant in the Fifth precinct of the First ward, the majority so found for contestant was not eliminated, and for which reason the judgment was rendered in his favor. We thoroughly coincide with the conclusions of the court in his finding as a fact that 9 of the attacked votes in the third precinct of the First ward were illegal and were cast for contestee, and we also coincide with the finding that 1 vote in that precinct was for the same reason improperly cast for contestant; but we are also of the conclusion that at least 2 other votes of the attacked 13 in that precinct by contestant were each illegal for the same reason and were cast for contestee, the names of the voters casting them being A1 Smith and Joe Christ, and which makes a net gain of the total number certified for contestant of 10 votes in the involved precinct, instead of 8 as adjudged by the court.

*7 Before determining the matters involved in the counter contest, relating to the alleged 43 illegal votes cast in precinct 5 of the First ward of the city for contestant, it becomes necessary to settle a disputed legal question relating to the' qualification of primary election voters in Louisville, wherein chapter 48, page 114, of the Session Acts of 1930 (now sections 1486b-28 to and including section 1486b-61 of the current Baldwin’s Supplement to our present Statutes), applies. It is a registration statute applicable only to cities of the first class and is designated in its first section as “The Model Registration.

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Bluebook (online)
64 S.W.2d 168, 251 Ky. 3, 90 A.L.R. 1355, 1933 Ky. LEXIS 795, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/glenn-v-gnau-kyctapphigh-1933.