Smith v. Howard

120 S.W.2d 1040, 275 Ky. 165, 1938 Ky. LEXIS 387
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedOctober 28, 1938
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 120 S.W.2d 1040 (Smith v. Howard) 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
Smith v. Howard, 120 S.W.2d 1040, 275 Ky. 165, 1938 Ky. LEXIS 387 (Ky. 1938).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Fulton

Affirming.

Section 21 of the Democratic party law adopted at the State Convention held on June 9, 1936, provides that:

“In counties containing more than one Legislative District the respective Chairmen of the Legislative Districts shall constitute a County Committee for said County, which Committee shall meet on December 14, 1936, and elect a Chairman and Secretary, who may or may not be a Chairman of the Legislative District in said County, provided that in the event of a tie of said votes, the then County Chairman shall cast the deciding vote, and said County Committee shall have the same general authority of all Committees pertaining to the nomination and election of Candidates for the entire County. ’ ’

Section 1596a-2, Kentucky Statutes, provides that ■two members of the County Board of Election Commis¡sioners shall be appointed, one for each party, from five ¡names designated in writing by each of the county ex- ■ ecutive committees of the two parties and these appointments are, of course, made by the State Board of Elee■tion Commissioners.

Fayette 'County is a county containing two Legislative Districts, :the 75th and 76th. In each of these Legis'lative Districts precinct committeemen were duly elected according ¡to ;.t'he party law and in the 75th Legislative Distric,t:of that .county, Joe Smith, one of the appellants, was elected chairman; in the 76th Legislative District, i Charles Finnell was elected chairman.

JP.urs.uant ;t.Q the above provision of the party law, *167 these two chairmen constituted the county committee for said county and have the same general authority of all committees pertaining to the nomination and election of candidates for the entire county.

These two chairmen were unable to agree and failed to elect a chairman and secretary. With this condition existing, the retiring county chairman had the deciding vote, but this retiring chairman, who was William F. Klair, deceased, had theretofore resigned and there was no acting county chairman to break this tie; consequently, no proper certification of five names had been made to the State Election Commission for the purpose of having one of them designated as Democratic Election Commissioner for Fayette County.

Sometime prior to July, 1937, appellant Joe Smith, Chairman of the 75th Legislative District, called a meeting of the precinct committeemen of that district on July 2, 1938, for the purpose of certifying these names to the State Board of Election Commissioners. About the same time a majority of the precinct committeemen of the 76th Legislative District requested Charles Finnell, Chairman of that District, to call a meeting of the same committeemen of his district for the same purpose and on the same date, and Finnell having failed to issue the call, a majority of the committeemen of that district, pursuant to the party law, called such meeting.

At the meeting of the 75th Legislative District Committeemen, presided over by Smith, the names of appellants J. Porter Land, J. W. Bodes, Alberta Haley, Thomas S. Scott and Wilber Stone were certified.

At a meeting of the 76th Legislative District Committeemen, Tom Mooney was elected temporary chairman in the absence of the regular chairman, Finnell. Mooney is a committeeman in that district and an appellant here. At this meeting the same five names were certified to the State Board of Election Commissioners.

At these meetings a motion was adopted for a joint meeting of the precinct committeemen from both Legislative Districts and this meeting was held on the same day immediately after the adjournment of the separate district meetings, and Mooney was elected temporary chairman of this joint meeting of committeemen. At this joint meeting also the same five names were certified to the State Board of Election Commissioners for *168 the designation of a Democratic Election Commissioner in Payette County.

The State Board of Election Commissioners met during the month of August and the Election Commissioners were designated for all counties in Kentucky, except Payette, no action being taken as to that county.

On September 1, 1938, the appellant Joe Smith, suing as chairman and on behalf of the Democratic Executive Committee of the 75th Legislative District, and Tom Mooney, temporary chairman, suing on behalf of the Democratic Executive Committee, together with a majority of the precinct committeemen from both districts, filed this suit in the Franklin circuit court against the State Board of Election Commissioners, seeking to compel them to appoint a county election commissioner for Payette County from the list of five names submitted.

Shortly after this suit was filed, the State Board of Election Commissioners met and appellee Dixie McKinley was named Democratic Election Commissioner for Payette County. It does not appear in the record why McKinley was thus designated.

Thereafter, the appellants filed an amended petition, setting out these facts, in which they prayed that the appointment of Dixie McKinley be set aside and adjudged null and void. The case was set for hearing in the Franklin circuit court and on the calling of the case an intervening petition was tendered on behalf of the five persons whose names had been certified, as above set out, asking that they be made party plaintiffs to this action. The court refused to permit the filing of this amended petition, but it was made by order a part of the record.

The appellees filed special and general demurrers to the petition and to the petition as amended. The court sustained the demurrers and, the plaintiffs declining to plead further, their petitions were dismissed and they prosecute this appeal from the judgment dismissing the petition.

In counties containing one, or less than one, Legislative District, the precinct committeemen of the county, together with the duly elected chairman of the committee, constitute the county executive committee, pursuant to the Democratic narty law.

*169 However, by reason of Section 21 of the party law, above quoted, in counties containing more than one Legislative District, the precinct committeemen in each Legislative District elect a chairman and these two, or more, chairmen constitute the county committee of that county and are vested with the same general authority pertaining to the nomination and election of candidates for the entire county that is vested in the precinct committeemen, who constitute the committee in counties containing one Legislative District, or less than one.

Under the party law the chairmen of the Legislative Districts elect a chairman and secretary who may, or may not, be a chairman of a Legislative District in the county. This means that in Payette County the two chairmen might well be the entire county committee, because the two could elect one of them as chairman of the committee and the other as secretary.

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State Ex Rel. Le Blanc v. Democratic State Central Committee
86 So. 2d 192 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1956)
Rosenberg v. Republican Party of Louisville & Jefferson County
270 S.W.2d 171 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 1954)
Routh v. Hughes
190 S.W.2d 351 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976), 1945)
O'Neil v. O'connell, Secretary of State
189 S.W.2d 965 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976), 1945)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
120 S.W.2d 1040, 275 Ky. 165, 1938 Ky. LEXIS 387, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-v-howard-kyctapphigh-1938.