Hall v. Marshall

80 Ky. 552, 1882 Ky. LEXIS 101
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedDecember 16, 1882
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 80 Ky. 552 (Hall v. Marshall) 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
Hall v. Marshall, 80 Ky. 552, 1882 Ky. LEXIS 101 (Ky. Ct. App. 1882).

Opinion

JUDGE PRYOR

delivered the opinion oe the court.

By an act of the legislature, approved April ist, 1880, the voters of Ballard county were authorized to vote on the-question of removing the county seat of that county from Blandville to Wickliffe. The ist section of the act directed the vote to .be taken on the first Monday in August, 1880, and that the clerk should "prepare two columns in each and every poll-book, for the. purpose of ascertaining the desire of the people of said county in relation to the removing the county seat of said county from Blandville to Wickliffc, in said county. The first column shall be headed ‘for removal;' the second, ‘against removal;”’ and in taking the vote at said election, the question shall be .distinctly put to every qualified voter; ‘Are you for or against the removal of the. county seat from Blandville to Wickliffe?’ and the clerk of the election shall record the vote in accordance with the answer. ”

The third section provided "that if a majority of all the-votes cast be against the removal, then no further steps; shall be taken in the matter; but if a majority of all the. [555]*555legal votes 'cast at said election, and on said question, be for removal,” then the act provides for the removal of the county records, &c,, to Wickliffe.

During the same session of the legislature, this enactment was repealed by a subsequent act passed or approved on the 13th of April, 1880, and by the last named act the sheriff was required to open a poll at each of the voting precincts-of the county on Saturday, the 2d of May, 1880, to take the sense of the qualified voters of the county on the question of removal, and by section, two of this last act, for the-purpose of taking a vote on the question, it was provided that “the clerk shall prepare one column in which to record the votes of those who are in favor of the removal of the-county seat to Wickliffe, and the poll-books shall be delivered by the sheriff to the several clerks of the election. The clerk of the election shall propound to each individual voter voting at said election the question : ‘ Are you for or against the removal of the county seat from Blandville to Wickliffe?’ and if said voter answers affirmatively, then his vote shall be so recorded, and if he answers negatively, then-no entry shall be made of it on the poll-book."

Section four of this act provides that if a majority of .the qualified-voters of the county vote for the removal of the county seat to Wickliffe, then the records, &c., are to be removed, &c.-, “and, in order to ascertain whether a majority of all the qualified voters of the county are in favor of removal, the officers comparing the polls shall refer to the assessor’s books, and count thereon each individual assessed for the purpose of county levy or poll-tax, and from that result determine whether the, majority have voted for the removal." This act was again amended,- and the election directed to be held on the 8th of May instead of the second of the month..

[556]*556The vote was taken under this act on the 8th of May, and those authorized to compare the polls reported that 1.763 voters of the county had cast their votes in favor of removing the county seat from Blandville to Wickliffe, and that the assessor’s book for the year 1880 showed 2,950 polls assessed for the purpose of county levy or poll-tax. The comparing board divided the 2,950 polls, the one half of the number being 1,475, and this last number they subtracted from the number of votes for removal, showing by their report a majority of 288 votes in favor of removal, but in fact the majority was 576 votes. Take from the .2,950 votes, which is the entire vote of the county, the 1.763 votes cast for removal, and it leaves against removal 1,187 votes, and this number from 1,763, leaves a difference •of 576.

The poll-books were returned, and the board for examining and comparing the vote regularly organized, and the result reported. Hall and others, who are opposed to the removal, filed this petition in equity against the county judge and others, enjoining them from removing the records from Blandville to Wjickliffe until the matters' alleged in their petition could be heard and determined. Various grounds are relied on for the injunction, and among the number is certain irregularities in the conduct of the election, and the manner in which the poll-books were returned, the failure of the officers to take the oath required by law, &c., all of which, if ■established, does not affect the question as to the right of removal, and besides, the proof shows that no such irregularities existed as could affect the validity of the election ■even if this court had the right to determine such questions.

It is also insisted that at least 320 of the votes cast for removal were not qualified and legal voters of the county, [557]*557and a list of the names is furnished with the petition; but upon this point there is a failure of proof, if it be conceded that the chancellor had the power to purge the polls of illegal votes. The principal ground of complaint is, that many of the voters were disfranchised by the mode in which the vote was required to be taken, and that the provision of the act in this regard is in violation of the spirit, if not the letter, of the constitution. An amended petition was offered to be filed, in which it is alleged that there is exceeding thirty-six hundred voters in the county, and that these voters were residents and qualified to vote at the time the election took place; that the assessor’s books failed to show the number or names of those entitled to vote, or who were subject to the payment of county levy and poll-tax to the number of 585, and therefore Wickliffe failed to obtain a majority of the qualified voters of the county. To that amendment a demurrer was sustained, and this leads us to the consideration of the constitutional question raised, and the power of the legislature to make the assessor’s books the test for determining the result of the election between Blandville and Wickliffe. If this question is to be determined by the provisions of section 8, article 2, of the constitution, and to be regarded in the light of an election for public officers, then every citizen qualified to vote had the right to have his name entered on the poll-book and his vote recorded; but, as suggested by the chancellor below, there is a marked distinction between elections for public officers and elections held under legislative sanction upon matters affecting local interests, such as votes for and against local option, the removal and location of county seats, and even upon the question of local taxation.

[558]*558This court, in the case of Marshall v. Donovan, 10 Bush, ;in reference to taxation for school purposes, determined that aliens, widows, and all interested, might vole, to the exclusion of the colored race, because the latter had no interest ■in the result. The court held it not to be an election in the sense of the constitution, but the action of an agency selected by the legislature to determine when the conditional law should become operative. (See also Borce v. Smith, 47 Illinois.)

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Bluebook (online)
80 Ky. 552, 1882 Ky. LEXIS 101, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hall-v-marshall-kyctapp-1882.