Jarboe v. Smith

350 S.W.2d 490
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedOctober 17, 1961
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 350 S.W.2d 490 (Jarboe v. Smith) 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
Jarboe v. Smith, 350 S.W.2d 490 (Ky. Ct. App. 1961).

Opinions

STEWART, Judge.

Appellant, Joe B. (Smokey Joe) Jarboe, incumbent county judge of Marion County, was the successful candidate for re-election to that position in the May, 1961, Democratic primary election. Appellee, Henry Smith, the opposing candidate, filed this contest suit seeking to have himself declared the nominee, and the trial court entered judgment in his favor.

Appellant’s principal argument on appeal is that the circuit court erred in adjudging all the absentee ballots void and in deducting them from the total votes received by the parties. Appellant won renomination by a total majority of 27 votes; of these his majority was three votes in the precincts and 24 of the absentee ballots counted. The trial court eliminated all absentee ballots from the tabulation and ruled IS precinct votes cast for appellant were illegal for various reasons, thus giving appellee a majority of 12.

In an opinion handed down, the trial judge found the absentee ballots were opened and counted in substantial violation of the law and without regard for the contest[491]*491ant’s rights. Specifically the violations listed were:

1. The board of three county election commissioners, sometimes referred to herein as “the board” and at other times as “the election commissioners”, accompanied by an employee of the county clerk, took the absentee ballot box to a small room inside the office of the circuit court clerk, locked the outer door so as to exclude all other persons therefrom and then proceeded to tabulate the ballots, thus failing to give appel-lee a reasonable opportunity to be present for the purpose of inspecting and counting these ballots. See KRS 118.380 and 119.230(1).
2. The county clerk, Paul Clark, did not attend and act as clerk of the board and was not represented by a lawful deputy.
3. All ballots had the signature of one of the commissioners but none was signed by the county clerk. See KRS 126.270(1).
4. After they were signed the ballots were not redeposited in a separate and regular box to be provided by the clerk and were not thoroughly shaken and redistributed before the tabulation, both of which duties are detailed in KRS 126.270(3).

KRS 118.370(3) states that the board shall meet at 6:00 p. m. on election day to count the ballots and perform certain other acts specified by this subsection. Their meeting place shall be the office of the county clerk or “some other room designated by the board.” In Marion County the counting place had customarily been the county clerk’s office. The selection of another location was made for the tabulation by arrangement between the county clerk, Paul Clark, and the circuit clerk, Jennings Crowdus, who was also one of the election commissioners, to relieve the congestion existing on the occasion in the county clerk’s office. No public announcement of this change was made and neither contestant nor contestee was notified.

Just before 6:00 p. m., on the primary election day, the election commissioners, Jennings Crowdus, Roger Hourigan and Charles Wooley, accompanied by Elizabeth Luckett, a deputy designated by the county clerk to perform the duties required of his office, took the absentee ballot box to the circuit clerk’s office and proceeded to inspect and count these votes. Shortly thereafter appellant,, who was let in by the janitor, entered and walked back to where the ballots were being inspected and counted. Somewhat later appellee came to the circuit clerk’s office, and his testimony is to the effect that it was only after considerable delay that he was allowed inside, because he found the door was locked and had difficulty in getting inside.

Appellee claims he knocked and shouted for IS minutes before he was allowed to enter, but no one inside the room, according to their testimony, heard any such noise. The three election commissioners stated they did not know the door was locked, until they heard a knock from appellee who asked for and was allowed access to the room. Admittedly, there was much noise in the entire courthouse on this election night. Sam Cooper Hill, the county attorney, testified : “I don’t think you could have heard a stick of dynamite go off in there.” It was also brought out that the door locks by a thumb latch, not a key, and could be locked by merely closing it. The evidence creates no fair inference there was any intention to exclude appellee from the place of the vote count. By the time he entered the room, the ballots had been taken out of both envelopes, the secondary stubs had been detached and strung on a string in order of their removal and the tabulation of the absentee ballots was partially completed.

While such a change to the circuit clerk’s office may have caused appellee to lose the opportunity to inspect any of the ballots, it must be remembered that Smith was told, when he made inquiry, where the absentee ballots were being counted. He was allowed inside the room within two minutes of knocking on the door, according to the county attorney and one other witness who were standing outside the door with him, [492]*492or within IS minutes, according to appellee and another witness.

In the light of this evidence the trial court held,, relying upon Pickard v. Jones, Ky., 243 S.W.2d 46, 49, that Smith “was deprived of the opportunity to challenge the qualifications of the absentee voters and to see that the envelopes containing the ballots were in due form and to have the ballots counted in the open.” ,

Appellant maintains there was a substantial compliance with the statute under the facts presented. A case relied upon by him to uphold the validity of the vote count, where the principle of substantial compliance was applied and where an absentee vote tabulation was involved, is Stabile v. Osborne, 309 Ky. 427, 217 S.W.2d 980, 982. This excerpt is quoted therefrom:

“It is the policy of the law to prevent as far as possible the disfranchisement of electors who have cast their ballots in good faith. While the regulations and procedure prescribed in the absentee voting law should be followed by the officers, a substantial compliance is sufficient if the proper ends are reached.” (Citations omitted.)

It is clear to us that Pickard v. Jones, supra, cannot be accepted as controlling since the facts there differ so materially from those in the case under consideration. In that case the election commissioners took the absentee ballot box into a small room in the courthouse and fastened themselves in seclusion after every person, including the county clerk, was ordered from the room. Under such conditions they proceeded to tabulate the absentee ballots.

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Bluebook (online)
350 S.W.2d 490, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jarboe-v-smith-kyctapp-1961.