Hall v. Martin

208 S.W. 417, 183 Ky. 120, 1919 Ky. LEXIS 443
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedJanuary 31, 1919
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 208 S.W. 417 (Hall v. Martin) 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. Martin, 208 S.W. 417, 183 Ky. 120, 1919 Ky. LEXIS 443 (Ky. Ct. App. 1919).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Thomas

Affirming on the appeal and reversing on the cross appeal.

This litigation is a contest over the office of jailer of Floyd county. The appellant, Hall, and appellee, Martin, were rival candidates for the office at the regular November, 1917, election, the -former being the Republican candidate and the latter the Democratic candidate. There were canvassed and certified by the election officers of the various precincts 2,061 votes as having been cast for appellee, and 1,941 votes cast for appellant, giving the appellee a majority -of 120 votes. In due time the canvassing board of the county met and verified the result of the election and found in the jailer’s race as certified by the election officers;

"Within the- time required by law, but before any certificate of election was issued, this suit was filed by appellant as plaintiff contesting the election of appellee and defendant upon various grounds alleging fraud and irregularities which if true resulted in illegal votes being counted and certified for defendant in a greater number than his apparent majority, and that he (appellant) obtained a majority of the legal votes cast in the election and should be declared the duly elected jailer of the county.

Defendant insisted that the contest was prematurely filed, it being claimed that under the provisions of subsection 12 of sec. 1596a of the Kentucky Statutes the suit was not maintainable until after the canvassing board had issued its certificate of election. That section [122]*122provides that the contest shall be instituted within ten days “after the final action of the board of canvassers,” and under the doctrine announced in the case of Ward v. Howard, 177 Ky. 38, such “final action” for the purpose of contest proceeding's is held to mean the time when the board ascertains the result of the election and not when it issues its certificate of election. Under the ruling of that case this contention can not be considered.

The answer denied the allegations of the petition and included paragraphs containing counter grounds of contest. Various motions were made and amendments filed, and after the parties had taken their proof and the cause submitted, the petition was dismissed, and to reverse that judgment this appeal is prosecuted, and defendant has prayed and obtained a cross appeal.

In the petition general charges are made that in the election more legal votes were cast for plaintiff than were cast for defendant; that the officers of election fraudulently counted and certified votes in the jailer’s race for defendant, and that a true and correct count of the ballots would show that plaintiff was duly elected to the office; that bribery had been resorted to by defendant, or by his friends with his knowledge and consent, to such an extent as to render the votes cast for him void, and in addition to such general allegations the plaintiff further charged that in Martin precinct there are not more than three hundred legal voters and that all of the votes which defendant received therein were cast for him openly on the table without the voters being sworn as required by law; that one Tom Lawhorn was permitted without right to go into the polling place at all times during the day while the electi&n was being conducted in that precinct, he as alleged not being a citizen either of the county or the precinct, and that- he bribed persons to vote for the defendant; that at least fifty votes in that precinct were, fraudulently cast for the defendant through fictitious names gotten up. by the election officers, or that number were cast by persons who ■were non-residents of the district, or under twenty-one years of age, or who were for other reasons illegal voters, but which one plaintiff does not know; that there was a conspiracy in the Martin precinct between defendant and the Republican candidates for the offices of sheriff, representative in the legislature and county attorney to wrongfully, illegally and corruptly “steal the [123]*123election” at that precinct, and that the officers at that precinct after the closing of the polls wrongfully, illegally and fraudulently removed the ballot box to another building located some 250 or 300 yards from the polling place, where the ballots were counted. The additional allegations are made that in a number of other named precincts at least fifty votes in each of them were wrongfully cast for defendant by being voted upon the table without the statutory oath being administered to the voter.

By way of counter contest the defendant charged that the election in Clear Creek and Antioch precincts should be set aside and held for naught for various reasons, chief among which was that the law requiring secrecy in the casting of ballots was wholly ignored, since more than one-half of the votes were cast upon the table without the voters being sworn as required by law, and that all the other votes cast in the Clear Creek precinct were subject to the same criticism because as alleged in that precinct there was no booth provided, nor any place wherein the voter might secrete himself for the purpose of marking his ballot. Amended pleadings attempted to name the number of - votes charged by such general allegations to have been illegally cast, and by whom cast, and in arriving at the judgment appealed from the court threw out entirely the Martin and Clear Creek precincts, reduced the vote of each candidate at Antioch precinct forty-five per cent., that being- the court’s finding from the testimony of the number of votes cast upon the table without being sworn, and deducted from appellant some eighty odd votes in all the other precincts as having been cast for him openly without the voter being sworn, resulting in finding defendant elected by a majority of eleven votes. Appellant did not at the trial demand a recount of the ballots or offer to do so.

The chief complaint made by appellant on this appeal is error committed by the court in throwing out Clear Creek precinct, and in deducting from his total vote forty-five per cent, or any number of votes which he received at Antioch precinct, and in not deducting from appellee certain questioned votes in other precincts. By cross appeal appellee calls in question the judgment of tlio court in throwing out Martin precinct.

To undertake to discuss the various issues of fact touching each individual contested voter, and each piece of conduct claimed to constitute fraud, would carry this [124]*124opinion far beyond legitimate bounds, and is a task which we are disinclined to undertake, inasmuch, as we have concluded that the court was in error in throwing out Martin precinct. "With this precinct counted, and deducting from the votes certified in that and other precincts' as having been received by each , candidate all illegal votes properly pleaded and in support of which there is any testimony, defendant will then be found to have received a majority of the legal votes cast. In the Martin precinct defendant received three hundred and eighty-four votes and plaintiff eleven votes. Within the boundary of that precinct there are three mining towns, one or two of which have municipal organizations and a regular set of officers. Some eight or ten coal mines located therein are iii active operation, and within the limits of the district, there is a population of between 2,500 and 3,000 people. These facts contradict th,e charge of an abnormally large vote polled there.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
208 S.W. 417, 183 Ky. 120, 1919 Ky. LEXIS 443, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hall-v-martin-kyctapp-1919.