Owsley v. Hill, Jr.

275 S.W. 797, 210 Ky. 285, 1925 Ky. LEXIS 661
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedOctober 2, 1925
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 275 S.W. 797 (Owsley v. Hill, Jr.) 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
Owsley v. Hill, Jr., 275 S.W. 797, 210 Ky. 285, 1925 Ky. LEXIS 661 (Ky. 1925).

Opinions

Opinion op the Court by

Drury, Commissioner

Affirming.

J. S. Owsley and T. J. Hill, Jr., were candidates for the Democratic nomination for county attorney of Lincoln county in the primary election held August 1, 1925. Hill received a majority of the votes, and was awarded the certificate of nomination. Owsley contested the nomination, and the trial court dismissed his contest. He has appealed. Owsley began his contest in proper time by serving upon Hill a very voluminous notice setting out five grounds of contest, one of which he admits in his brief to be without merit, and another he failed to refer to or discuss in his brief, hence it will be considered as abandoned. See McCorkle, et al. v. Chapman, et al., 181 Ky. 607, 205 S. W. 682. This leaves for our consideration three grounds, which are: •

First, ‘ ‘ The contestant, J. S. Owsley, notifies the contestee, T. J. Hill, Jr., that long prior to the filing *287 of Ms, contestee’s, statement of Ms expenditures and promises, etc., with, the clerk of the Lincoln county court, as required under section 1565M4 of the Kentucky Statutes, and prior to his filing his notification and declaration of his candidacy for the Democratic nomination for county attorney of Lincoln county, to he voted for as a candidate at the primary August I, 1925, in said county and state, with the clerk of the Lincoln county court, as required by section 1550-7 of the Kentucky Statutes, and requesting the clerk of the Lincoln county court to place his name on the Democratic ballot as a candidate for said office, he, the contestee, published in the Interior Journal, a newspaper published in Stanford, Lincoln county, Kentucky, his announcement as a candidate for the Democratic nomination for county attorney of Lincoln county, and in his said card of announcement he stated over his own signature the following: £It is my purpose to do all in my power to aid and assist the fiscal court that you elect in handling the affairs of the county in a good business manner. It is imperative that something be done by the fiscal court to put the public roads of the county in better traveling condition than they are now in, and I think the court can put the public roads of the county in practical condition suitable for traveling without any increase of taxation, by economically and wisely using the road revenue now available from all sources. I propose to have the fiscal court to take from the county attorney’s salary $400.00 per year and place same to the credit of the road fund.’ And said contestee signed said article -with his own signature, ‘ T. J. Hill, Jr.’ And the contestant notifies the contestee that the said statement was made with the deliberate intention to bribe and influence the voters of Lincoln county, Kentucky, to vote for him for county attorney, and used said statement to personally persuade persons and voters to vote for him. That on the 17th day of July, 1925, said contestee' likewise had published and paid for in the same paper, to-wit, the Interior Journal, of Stanford, Lincoln county, Kentucky, a write-up of himself and his platform, and among other things said article contained the following language: ‘His program in the present campaign should receive the approval of the voters in every district of the county. He favors restoring *288 the old salary to the county attorney, for -which he is an aspirant, and transferring the increase of $1,-600.00 during the term to the repairing and construction of public roads.’ And contestant notifies the contestee that he had same printed for the purpose of deliberately influencing and bribing the voters -of Lincoln county to vote for him for county attorney. The contestant further notifies the contestee that both his announcement referred to herein and his write-up, to give to the road fund $400.00 of his salary, was a direct offer of a bribe and expenditure of $1,600.00, which was in excess 6f the amount allowed under the Corrupt Practice Act of the Kentucky Statutes to be expended by any candidate for a county office, and that both of said statements were contrary to and in violation of the spirit of public policy, and also violated section 1565b-3 of the Kentucky Statutes.
Second, “The contestant further notifies the contestee that his statement of expenditures and promises filed with the clerk of the Lincoln county court was false and untrue at the time that he made same, and that he expended for the purpose of securing his nomination for the office of county attorney large sums of money vastly exceeding the sum of one thousand dollars, which is the amount allowed under section 1565b-16 of the Corrupt Practice Act. of the Kentucky Statutes.
“The contestant, J. S. .Owsley, notifies the contestee and alleges that said contestee, T. J. Hill, Jr., spent in the election, and others spent for him, with his knowledge and consent, more than one thousand dollars, which is the maximum amount for purely legitimate purposes allowed by the Kentucky Statutes for a county office, and that he failed to include in his statement of expenditures and. promises filed on the 18th day of July, 1925, with the clerk of the Lincoln county court, the clause in his card of announcement published in the Interior Journal of Stanford, Kentucky, referred to above, to-wit: ‘I propose to have the fiscal court to take from the county attorney’s salary $400.00 per year and place same to the credit of the road fund; ’ and failed likewise to put in said statement of expenditures as filed with the clerk of the Lincoln county court on the 18th day of July, *289 1925, the write-up of himself and his platform referred to above, and which contained the following language: ‘His program in the present campaign’ (referring to T. J. Hill, Jr.) ‘should receive the approval of the voters in every district of the county. He favors restoring the old salary paid to the county attorney, for which office he is an aspirant, and transferring the increase of $1,600.00 during the term to the repairing and construction of public roads.’ ”
Third, ‘ ‘ The contestant further notifies the contestee, T. J. Hill, Jr., that he, in connection with candidates for other nominations, formed a slate and pooled their money in a ‘jack-pot’ to be used in the election, and especially on the election day, to bribe and otherwise corrupt voters to support the candi-dates who were members of the pool, and that he himself and his friends contributed a large sum to such fund, amounting, as the contestant believes, to the sum of $2,000.00, which was used by his friends and ‘strikers’ both in the pool and otherwise, at the various precincts of Lincoln county on the primary election day, in carrying out the purposes for which it was contributed, with his. knowledge and consent, and that all of this was in direct violation of the provisions of the Corrupt Practice Act, known as article Xlla and its subsections, of the Kentucky Statutes. ’ ’

The court sustained a demurrer to the first and second grounds, and required him to make his third ground more specific, and upon his failure so to do, dismissed his contest.

In support of his first ground he relies upon two cases, one from Wisconsin, the other from Ohio. The Wisconsin court, in State v. Purdy, 36 Wis. 213, 17 A. Rep.

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Bluebook (online)
275 S.W. 797, 210 Ky. 285, 1925 Ky. LEXIS 661, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/owsley-v-hill-jr-kyctapphigh-1925.