Murrey v. Kirkman

21 S.W.2d 240, 231 Ky. 191, 1929 Ky. LEXIS 237
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedOctober 22, 1929
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 21 S.W.2d 240 (Murrey v. Kirkman) 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
Murrey v. Kirkman, 21 S.W.2d 240, 231 Ky. 191, 1929 Ky. LEXIS 237 (Ky. 1929).

Opinion

Opinion op ti-ie Court by

Commissioner Hobson—

Affirming.

Appellant and appellee were candidates for sheriff of Todd county. According to the official count, appellee received 1,366 votes; appellant, 1,351. Appellant contested the election, charging that the votes had not been correctly counted, alleging that many illegal votes had been cast for appellant and also charging a violation by him of the Corrupt Practice Act (Ky. Stats., sec. 1565bl et seq.). The issues were made up; the circuit court recounted the vote. The recount slightly increased appellee’s majority. The circuit court then took up the question of illegal voting on both sides and his decision here also slightly increased appellee’s majority. He held that no violation of the Corrupt Practice Act by appellee was shown, and dismissed the contest and that is the only ground relied upon for reversal.

1. The first transaction complained of is that the appellee, Robert T. Kirkman, gave Roy Lamb a secondhand automobile, worth about $75, for his support and influence in the primary, in consideration.of which Lamb and his family did support Kirkman and delivered to him at least 15 votes. The only testimony in the record bearing on this transaction is the evidence given by Roy Lamb himself. In narrative form, it is that, about three or four weeks before the election Lamb approached Kirk- *193 man, who was in the automobile business, having an agency for the Chevrolet machine, and asked Kirkman to give him an old secondhand Ford touring car then in the storage room of Kirkman’s garage. This automobile would not run, and is described by Lamb as being ‘ ‘ junk. ’ ’ Lamb is not definite as to just when he spoke to Kirk-man for the first time about his Ford. He says that it was before Kirkman had announced for sheriff, and that it was before he had heard any rumor of Kirkman being a candidate. He says that, some time after that, he heard of Kirkman going to run, and he asked Kirkman about it down at the depot, and Kirkman said that he did not believe that he would announce, as he was too busy. At all events, when Lamb asked Kirkman for the car, Kirk-man told him that he would look at the junk cars when he got time, and Lamb told him that he could fix one up himself. Shortly after this, Kirkman told Lamb that he could have the Ford he had asked for. Lamb then went to work on the car and got it in condition to run. To do so, he worked on the car eight days and used secondhand parts from Kirkman’s'garage. After Lamb got through working on the car, he had to get a truck to pull the car up and down the street, in order to get it started. Lamb says that after he got the car so that it would run, it was worth about $75. Lamb is positive in his statement that at the time he asked Kirkman for the car, and when Kirk-man gave it to him, nothing at all was said about the election, about Lamb’s vote, or about Lamb working for him, but admits that, when he got the car so that it would run, Kirkman did ask him to work for him on election day, Lamb says he told Kirkman he would gladly do so, as Kirkman had been so kind to him. When asked whether he would have supported Kirkman, but for the fact that Kirkman had given him the car, Lamb said that he did not know; that he would have to study about that.

On the day before the primary, Lamb, after repeated requests, procured a bill of sale from the Kirkman garage, and had the car transferred to his name in the county clerk’s office, and procured a license for it. On election day, he used the car in driving voters to the polls for Kirkman. He also voted for Kirkman. There were in Lamb’s immediate family 14 other voters, and he admits that he asked them to vote for Kirkman. Appellant says that they did, but we can find no evidence in the record as to how they voted. ■ It cannot be even said that ■it can be inferred from the record as to how they voted, *194 for, when questioned about his father and mother, he said that he asked them to vote for Mr. Kirkman, and they said that “they would study about it.” As Lamb’s father-in-law drove a car for Mr. Kirkman on election day, it is maybe fair to assume that he voted for Mr. Kirkman. On August 16th, and after this contest was filed, Mr. Cartright, who worked for Mr. Kirkman in the automobile business, got Mr. Lamb to sign a paper, the contents or purport of which Lamb says he did not know, but which turned out to be a mortgage on this Ford car, running to Kirkman, in the sum of $50. Kirkman put this mortgage to record.

There is nothing in the transaction as thus related by Lamb to fasten upon Kirkman any violation of the Corrupt Practice Act. At the time the negotiations for the car were initiated, nothing was said about the election or Lamb’s support. That the Ford was then junk and worthless is obvious. Aside from the testimony of Lamb as to the small value of the car after eight days of labor and used parts had been put upon and in it, the lack of any market for or of any value óf an old Ford touring car in the condition this one is described to have been in before its repair is universally known. So there is nothing suspicious in Kirkman giving away an old piece of junk such as this was. It may be that Kirkman was secretely actuated by the hope that maybe Lamb would be grateful for the gift; but such a hope does not amount to a violation of the Corrupt Practice Act. The car was repaired by Lamb’s labor and old secondhand parts. These parts, when new parts for Ford cars of the old modle T type could and can yet be purchased so cheaply, must have been negligible in value. But, even if the transfer of the car be held not to have taken place until Lamb got the car in running order, at the best all that can be said for the appellant is that Kirkman gave Lamb the car in consideration of Lamb working for him by hauling voters on election day. That would not be a violation of the Corrupt Practice Act either. That Lamb was grateful and electioneered for Kirkman is obvious and is to be expected. He swears positively that he did not vote for Kirkman because of the gift of the car.

There is no showing that any one of Lamb’s relatives voted for Kirkman, although Lamb asked them to do so. The only thing that casts any suspicion upon this transaction was the taking of the mortgage after the election. It may be that Kirkman never regarded the *195 transaction as a gift, though Lamb is positive in his testimony that it was. Probably the true reason is that Kirkman, after the contest was filed, became apprehensive that the transaction might be construed as a transfer of the car in consideration of Lamb working on election day for Kirkman by hauling voters, and that such would be considered a violation of the Corrupt Practice Act, whereupon he did the foolish thing of taking this mortgage, to give it a more innocent, as he thought, appearance. But, though his conduct in such case cannot be commended, his foolish act cannot turn a legal transaction into an illegal one. We find no merit in appellant’s contention as to this transaction.

2. D. R. Powell testified that appellee requested him to go to his voting precinct in Trenton and ascertain the number of floating votes therein and the amount of money that would be required to handle them in Kirk-man’s behalf in the primary. Powell refused to have anything to do with the matter. Kirkman flatly denied making the proposition. It is said that Kirkman is an interested witness, whilst Powell was impartial and should be believed.

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Bluebook (online)
21 S.W.2d 240, 231 Ky. 191, 1929 Ky. LEXIS 237, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/murrey-v-kirkman-kyctapphigh-1929.