Lewis v. Petrey

288 S.W. 755, 216 Ky. 842, 1926 Ky. LEXIS 1022
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedDecember 3, 1926
StatusPublished

This text of 288 S.W. 755 (Lewis v. Petrey) 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
Lewis v. Petrey, 288 S.W. 755, 216 Ky. 842, 1926 Ky. LEXIS 1022 (Ky. 1926).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Rees

Affirming.

The appellees, J. W. Petrey, John Williams, WillieSlagle, W. H. Gibson and John C. Clem, were candidates, at the November election, 1925, for the offices of trustees of the town of Evarts, a town of the sixth class, on what was known as the Petrey ticket. The appellants, Gil Lewis, W. IT. Fritts, W. L. Capps, John B. Kelly and R. H. Byrd, were candidates for the same offices on what was known as the Gil Lewis ticket. The names of the appellees were printed on the ballots used at the election but those of the appellants were not. The appellants had been candidates for some time before the election, but a few days prior thereto the county clerk was enjoined from printing their names on the ballots. Their supporters then held a meeting and agreed to write their *843 .names in the blank spaces provided for that purpose on the ballots. The officers of the election certified that the ’ .appellants had each received the following number of votes: Gil Lewis 293; W. H. Fritts 284; W. L. Capps 279; -John B. Kelly 287, and B. H. Byrd 285, and that the appellees had each received the following number of votes: .J. "W. Petrey 142; John Williams 140; Willie Slagle 152; W. H. Gibson, 143, and John C. Clem 140, and the election commissioners awarded certificates of election to the appellants.

The appellees in due time filed this contest and in Their petition alleged that the officers of the election in the 'two precincts in Evarts wrote in the names of the appellants on 291 ballots and delivered them to the voters without any of the voters being sworn as to their ability to read the English language or as to their being blind or ■physically unable to mark their ballots. The names of .the voters who voted these ballots were set out in the petition. The petition also named 29 of these voters who voted openly in the presence of the officers for appellants -or whose ballots were stenciled by the officers without the voters being sworn as to being blind or physically unable to mark their ballots, and also named 24 voters who voted for appellants who were not legal voters, being nonresidents of the town of Evarts.

Appellants filed an answer denying the averments •of the petition and a counterclaim in which they named :9 voters who voted openly for appellees without being sworn and 33 voters who were not legal residents of the pre'eincts in which they voted and 15 voters who- voted :in the booth with others and 3 voters who exposed their ballots, all of whom voted for appellees.

There are two precincts in the town of Evarts known .as.No. 8 and No. 9.

Proof was taken and the case submitted and the circuit judge found that in precinct No. 8 the officers of the election wrofe on the ballots the names of the appellants .as follows: By Floyd Middleton, clerk of the election, 2 ballots; by A. L. Turner, judge, 106 ballots, and by C. 0. Ball, judge, 64 ballots, making a total of. 172 ballots on which the names of appellants were written by the eleciion officers in this precinct. He further found that all voters for whom such ballots were prepared and who swore that they could not read' or write were permitted lo vote such ballots openly before the election officers; nnd that the voters who were not sworn at all about being *844 able to read or write were given ballots on which the names of appellants had been written by one of the officers and these ballots were taken by the voters and voted in the booth. He found that all of these ballots were illegally voted and deducted 172 votes from the number' certified for appellants. He further found that in precinct No. 9 the names of appellants were written on 45-ballots by G. W\ Lankford, the clerk, and that of this number 12 of the voters were sworn relative to being able to read or write and the remaining 33 ballots were-illegally prepared and voted, and he deducted that number from the vote certified and counted for appellants,, which left their legal vote as. follows: Gil Lewis 88; W. H. Fritts 79; W. L. Capps 74; John B. Kelly 82, and R. H. Byrd 80. He also found that in precinct No. 8 seven, votes were cast openly for appellees and that in precinct No. 9 eight votes were cast for appellees by nonresidents,, and he deducted these 15 votes from the total number- certified for appellees, which left their vote as follows: J. W. Petrey 127; John Williams 125;.Will Slagle 137; W.. H. Gibson 128, and John 0. Clem 125. He adjudged that the certificates of election issued by the county board of election commissioners to the appellants be canceled and. that each of the appellees was duly elected to the. office of trustee of the town of Evarts.

Before considering the evidence it becomes necessary to dispose of a preliminary question, and that is-whether the court erred in refusing to sustain a motion that the presiding judge should vacate the bench. The affidavit filed by appellants in support of their motion to vacate is entirely too long to be incorporated herein, but in substance it states that Hon. J. G. Forester, judge of the Harlan circuit court, had heard and tried the case, in which the county clerk had been enjoined from printing' appellants’ names on the official ballots; that he was prejudiced against the eontestees in this case and could not and would not give them a fair and impartial trial; and further, that E. S. Forester, nephew of Hon. J. G. Forester, with one Owen Kelly, was involved in litigation with the town of Evarts in which Kelly and E. S. Forester were seeking to recover approximately $40,000.00 for work done by them as contractors. The nature of the work done is not stated. The affidavit further stated that E. S. Forester was vitally interested in this litigation and that the question of who should constitute the *845 members of the board of trustees of Evarts was regarded as highly important by him.

In construing section 968 of Kentucky Statutes, which provides the manner in which the presiding judge may be required to vacate the bench, this court has held in a great number of cases that an affidavit to be sufficient under this section of the statutes must go further than the general language of the statute and must set forth facts which must not be the mere conclusions of the affiant but must be such as, to necessarily show bias or prejudice against affiant by the judge and sufficient to prevent him from fairly and impartially trying the case. Stamp v. Commonwealth, 195 Ky. 404, 243 S. W. 27. The fact that the presiding judge had tried the case in which the county clerk had been enjoined from printing appellants’ names on the ballots was not sufficient to disqualify him from presiding at the trial of this case. In 'Chreste v. Commonwealth, 178 Ky. 311, 198 S. W. 929, the court held that the mere fact that the judge had made some adverse ruling affecting the affiant and entertained a conviction regarding the principle of law involved in his case, furnished no cause 'for his vacating the bench on the affiant’s trial. In German Insurance Co. v. Landram, 88 Ky. 433, 11 S. W. 367, 10 R. 1039, the court said :

“The judge may have instructed the jury in a case similar to the- one the affiant is about to try unfavorably to his side of the controversy. He may have sustained a demurrer to a pleading in the case, or in some other similar case that, if adhered to, must prove fatal to the case of the affiant.

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Related

Kean v. Whittle
275 S.W. 818 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976), 1925)
Marilla v. Ratterman
273 S.W. 69 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976), 1925)
German Insurance v. Landram
11 S.W. 367 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 1889)
Chreste v. Commonwealth
198 S.W. 929 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 1917)
Petrey v. Holliday
199 S.W. 67 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 1917)
Hall v. Sumner
238 S.W. 197 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 1922)
Stamp v. Commonwealth
243 S.W. 27 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 1922)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
288 S.W. 755, 216 Ky. 842, 1926 Ky. LEXIS 1022, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lewis-v-petrey-kyctapphigh-1926.