Osborne v. Commonwealth

177 S.W.2d 896, 296 Ky. 587, 1944 Ky. LEXIS 585
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedJanuary 14, 1944
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 177 S.W.2d 896 (Osborne v. Commonwealth) 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
Osborne v. Commonwealth, 177 S.W.2d 896, 296 Ky. 587, 1944 Ky. LEXIS 585 (Ky. 1944).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Judge Tilford

Affirming.

The appellant and Green B. Turner, election officers, were jointly indicted for making, pursuant to a conspiracy, a false and fraudulent poll book (one of the offenses denounced as “forgery” by KS see. 1581) by feloniously forging and writing the names of voters on the stubs of the election ballots used in the local option election held on March 28, 1942, in Yerda voting precinct No.' 7b in Harlan County. Tried separately, *589 the appellant was convicted, and sentenced to two years ’ confinement in the penitentiary. On this appeal he urges, among other grounds for reversal, that the verdict of the jury is not sustained by the evidence; and that contention we shall dispose of first, since the facts disclosed by the testimony necessarily have a bearing on the proper disposition to be made of appellant’s additional contentions, which are, that the verdict was contrary to law; that the court admitted incompetent testimony, refused to admit competent testimony, and erred in his instructions to the jury, and in summoning a jury from Whitley County to try the case.

A comprehensive statement of the frauds perpetrated in the local option election held in Harlan County on March 28, 1942, may be found in our opinion in the case of Jackson et al. v. Bolt, 292 Ky. 503, 166 S. W. (2d) 831, 833, holding the election valid but nullifying the result. Therein we quoted with approval the following excerpt from the opinion of the lower court: “The methods employed by the perpetrators of the fraud were as bold as they were clumsy, and do not possess either the charm of novelty nor the virtue of originality.’’

Referring specifically to Yerda Precinct No. 7b, we said: “None of the ballot boxes and none of the election officers representing the forces opposed to the adoption of local option appeared at the designated voting place, and though an extensive search was made throughout the day, no ballot box and no election officer representing the wet forces was found or located and no person in the precinct was able to cast his vote. After the time for closing the polls had passed, the ballot box was returned to the county clerk’s office. 718 ballots had been sent to Yerda Precinct No. 7B. When the ballot box was opened it was found that all of the ballots had been removed from the books. Pour were not found, but the other 714 were in the box, 713 marked ‘No,’ none marked ‘Yes,’ and one spoiled.”

In the case at bar it was shown that appellant was sheriff of the election, and that Turner, who did not testify, was one of the judges. While no one testified that they saw appellant or Turner write the names of the alleged voters on the stubs of the ballots, it was shown that the ballot boxes had been delivered to Turner on the eve of the election and returned to the office of *590 the county court clerk by appellant and his wife after the time set for the closing of the polls on the day of the election. According to numerous witnesses, the school house, at which the voting in the precinct was to have been conducted, was locked when they arrived there in the morning and remained locked through the entire day, and neither appellant nor Turner visited the scene at any time. Moreover, three women, residents of the precinct, testified that between 11 A. M. and noon, they saw appellant accompanied by his wife and a man with a sack, leave his home carrying something resembling a ballot box partially enclosed in a pasteboard box; and that appellant and his companions put the box and the sack in a waiting taxicab and drove off toward Harlan. Appellant, corroborated by his wife, mother-in-law, and the taxicab driver, testified that the pasteboard box contained chickens which his brother desired to take home with him, and denied that he had seen the ballot box on the day of the election, claiming that when he called at Turner’s house on the morning of the election after finding the door of the school house locked, Turner, to whom the box had been delivered, informed him that “somebody had taken the ballot box.” He also denied having seen the ballots or the books in which the stubs were bound, or that he had anything whatsoever to do with writing the names on the stubs, or the return of the ballot box to the County Court Clerk’s office. But the jury had the right to believe from the testimony that the box and ballots were in' his possession during the' day of the election. Moreover, they had before them the book containing the bound stubs of the ballots and samples of appellant’s handwriting. His indifference to the performance of his duties as sheriff of the election,.if his own testimony is to be believed, and the contradiction of the testimony of some of his witnesses that the pasteboard box or boxes contained chickens and not a ballot box, fully warranted the jury in disbelieving his entire story. Accepting as true all of the testimony for the Commonwealth, only the salient features of which we have attempted to recite, the conclusion was warranted that the appellant was cognizant of, and at least participated in, the commission of the fraud charged against him in the indictment. Although much of the evidence on which we have based the foregoing statement was circumstantial, some of it was direct, and since the jury was the *591 sole judge of the credibility of the witnesses, we cannot say that the verdict is not sustained by the evidence.

The contention that the verdict of the jury is contrary to law is predicated on the fact that there was no testimony introduced showing that appellant had been sworn as an election officer, or that he had acted in that capacity. However, he had been appointed sheriff of the election by the election commissioners, and there was testimony indicating that he had accepted pay for his services. According to his own testimony, he attempted to act as an officer of the election, and, as before stated, if the testimony of the county court clerk is credible, returned the ballot box to the office of that official after the time set for the closing of the polls. At least, he was a de facto officer, and, as such, fully subject to the penalties prescribed for offenses committed by de jure officers. Commonwealth v. Pate, 110 Ky. 468, 61 S. W. 1009.

The allegedly incompetent evidence of which appellant complains, consisted in part of statements of numerous residents of the precinct that no ballots had been issued to them, and that they had not voted in the election, which statements were made in response to the question, whether, if the records showed that ballots had been issued to them, they had, in fact, been issued. It is also asserted that the testimony of the county court clerk relative to the return of the ballot box by appellant and his wife was incompetent because she was permitted to refresh her recollection by referring to her testimony in the civil action. No authorities are cited in support of appellant’s objections to the testimony outlined, and our study of the record convinces us that if the court erred in permitting the questions to be answered, it was because of their phraseology, not their substance.

The testimony for appellant, which the court rejected, consisted of the offered statements of deputy sheriffs and others that less than the requisite number of posters advertising the election had actually been posted.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
177 S.W.2d 896, 296 Ky. 587, 1944 Ky. LEXIS 585, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/osborne-v-commonwealth-kyctapphigh-1944.