Hart v. Rose

75 S.W.2d 43, 255 Ky. 576, 1934 Ky. LEXIS 297
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedOctober 5, 1934
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 75 S.W.2d 43 (Hart v. Rose) 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
Hart v. Rose, 75 S.W.2d 43, 255 Ky. 576, 1934 Ky. LEXIS 297 (Ky. 1934).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE CoiJBT BY

DrURY, COMMISSIONER

Affirming.

Walter Hart, having' been adjudged not entitled to hold the office of subdistrict trustee in Hart school sub-district No. 71 in Knox county, has appealed.

More than 15 days before July 14, 1934, Walter Hart filed with the superintendent of schools of Knox county a written notice of his intention to become a candidate for this office. The appellee, B. C. Rose, filed a timely and similar notice, and pursuant to section 4399-8, Ky. Stats. Supp. 1934, the names of these two men were printed on the official ballots used at the election held on July 14, 1934, and when the votes were counted on July 16, 1934, it was found Hart had received 108 votes and Rose 93. Whereupon a certificate of election was issued to Hart, and upon July 21, 1934, Hart took the oath of office as such trustee.

On Wednesday August 8, 1934 (within the 30 days *578 provided by section 1596a-12, Ky. Stats. Supp. 1933), Rose filed in the Knox circuit court a petition contesting the election of Hart because and on the ground that Hart had failed on the fifteenth day before July 14,1934, to file with the officer, with whom he filed his declaration of intention to become a candidate for said office, a written statement signed and sworn to by him setting forth and containing in detail all sums of money, etc., contributed, disbursed, expended, or promised by him, etc., as required by section 1565b-4, Ky. Stats.; in other words, that he had failed to file his pre-election expense account as required by that section.

To this Hart on the same day filed his answer and counterclaim, in which he frankly admitted he had not previously filed such pre-election expense account, not because of any purpose to violate or evade the law, but inadvertently, and in ignorance of the necessity therefor, which necessity he raised and questioned by his pleading, and as a counterclaim against Rose he charged him with a like dereliction, because of which he questioned the right of Rose to maintain this contest.

With his answer -and counterclaim, and as a matter of precaution, Hart on August 8, 1934, prepared and filed a copy of his pre-election expense account which ¡he had that day filed with the proper officer, and with which account no one was able to find any fault except it had not been filed in time. As these parties by their pleadings had raised no issue of fact, the questions of law, which were raised by demurrer, were disposed of adversely to Hart, the court adjudged Hart was not entitled to the office because he had violated section 1565b-4, that Rose was not entitled to the office for the same reason and for the additional reason that he had received fewer votes than Hart, and that hence there had been no election and the office was declared vacant. Hart has appealed, and we shall now state and dispose of the questions he has presented.

Rose as a Contestant.

Since Rose admits he himself had failed to file a pre-election expense account, and received fewer votes than Hart, and therefore cannot be awarded the office, Hart questions the right of Rose to maintain this contest, but we have repeatedly decided this question adversely to that contention. Scholl v. Bell, 125 Ky. 750, *579 102 S. W. 248, 31 Ky. Law Rep. 335; McKinney v. Barker, 180 Ky. 526, 203 S. W. 303, L. R. A. 1918E, 581; Hardin v. Horn, 184 Ky. 548, 212 S. W. 573; Combs v. Dixon, 215 Ky. 566, 286 S. W. 797.

Hart cites Morgan v. Adams, 250 Ky. 441, 63 S. W. (2d) 479, and Pratt v. Adams, 251 Ky. 381, 65 S. W. (2d) 91, in support of his contention that Eose cannot maintain this contest.

Those two cases grew ont of an election of three trustees in school district No. 3 of Letcher county, held July 30, 1932, at which election Melvin Adams received 79 votes, Byrd Adams 77 votes, and Arch Adams 76 votes.

C. C. Morgan, who had received but 65 votes, sought to contest the election of Melvin Adams and Byrd Adams, because they had not the statutory qualifications to hold the office of trustee, since they were as he alleged unable to read and write a legible hand.

John C. Adams, who had received but 70 votes, sought to contest the election of Melvin Adams and Byrd Adams upon the same grounds. Both were unsuccessful, and they appealed. Both judgments were affirmed.

There is a well-recognized distinction between a contest of a citizen’s right to an office because of his alleged ineligibility and a contest involving alleged irregularity in his election.

Formerly a contestant could raise both the eligibility of his adversary and the regularity of his election in the same proceeding, for the provision of the statute was:

“Where the person returned is found not to have been legally qualified to receive the office at the time of his election, a new election shall be ordered. ’

See subsection 8, sec. 1, art. 7, c. 32, Rev. St. 1852; subsection 8, sec. 1, art. 7, c. 33, Gen. St. 1883, and subsection 8, sec. 1531, of Ky. St. (1899); the language of section 1531, Ky. St., being somewhat, but not materially,, different from the earlier statutes.

By an act approved October 24, 1900 (see chapter '5, p. 27, of the extraordinary session begun August 28, 1900), the election laws were amended, and in section. *580 12 of that act as amended by Acts 1930, c. 51, section 1596a-12, Ky. Stats. Supp. 1933, it was provided:

“In case it shall appear from an inspection of the whole record that there has been such fraud, intimidation, bribery or violence in the conduct of the election that neither contestant nor eontestee can be adjudged to have been fairly elected, the circuit court, subject to revision by appeal, or the court of appeals finally may adjudge that there has been no election. In such event the office shall be deemed vacant, with the same legal effect as if the person elected had refused to qualify.”

In Wilson v. Tye, 122 Ky. 508, 92 S. W. 295, 297, 29 Ky. Law Rep. 71, that amendment was .before the Court, and we said of it:

“In our opinion when the General Assembly enacted this statute, in lieu of the former statute, with reference to the trial of contested elections, it was intended to relegate the question of eligibility or legal qualifications for the office to a different or other mode of procedure. Consequently the lower court was without power in this action to pass upon the eligibility of the eontestee to the office in contest.”

In Wilson v. Tye, 126 Ky. 34, 102 S. W. 856, 858, 31 Ky. Law Rep. 491, that question was before us again, and we said:

“If appellee was ineligible for the office of county superintendent at the time of her election, or when she qualified, or she is now wrongfully in possession of the office, the commonwealth’s attorney of the judicial district in which Whitley county is situated maintain an action to deprive her of it.”

Thus the court clearly held that, in an election contest, a contestant could not raise the question of the eontestee’s not having the constitutional or statutory qualifications to hold the office, and to that ruling we have since adhered.

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Bluebook (online)
75 S.W.2d 43, 255 Ky. 576, 1934 Ky. LEXIS 297, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hart-v-rose-kyctapphigh-1934.