State Ex Rel. Jackson County v. Waltner

100 S.W.2d 272, 340 Mo. 137, 1936 Mo. LEXIS 431
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedDecember 22, 1936
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 100 S.W.2d 272 (State Ex Rel. Jackson County v. Waltner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Ex Rel. Jackson County v. Waltner, 100 S.W.2d 272, 340 Mo. 137, 1936 Mo. LEXIS 431 (Mo. 1936).

Opinion

*139 ELLISON, C. J.

Original proceeding in prohibition. The relators, Jackson County and the judges and clerk of the county court thereof, seek to prohibit the respondent, Hon. Marion D. Waltner, judge of the Jackson County Circuit Court at Independence, from entertaining jurisdiction of a suit in equity there pending, wherein the respondent Clarence B. Reed prays a permanent injunction restraining the relators from executing, issuing and selling $2,761,300 in county bonds authorized at a' special bond election held on August 4, 1936, which was also the date of the State primary election. Two proposals were submitted at the election: one for the issuance of $2,465,000 in bonds for the purpose of paying and funding judgment indebtedness of the county, and one for the issuance of $296,300 in bonds for the purpose of refunding outstanding judgment bonds.

In due course our provisional rule in prohibition was issued and the respondents made return thereto, admitting all necessary formal steps were taken for the holding of the special bond election, and that on the face of the returns therefrom more than two-thirds of the qualified voters of the county approved the two bond proposals. But they affirmatively allege the petition of the respondent Reed in the equity suit below states a good cause of action, and that the allegations of fact therein are true; that the respondent Waltner is lawfully possessed of the cause and has inherent power in equity to determine the same; that the jurisdiction of the Circuit Court of Jackson County over the cause is .derived from the common law and provisions of the State Constitution; that said equity suit is not a proceeding to .contest the bond election, except incidentally, but is for the purpose of protecting the property of the respondent Reed, and other taxpayers similarly situated, against the burdens which would be imposed thereon by the issuance of said bonds. The relators *140 filed a motion for judgment on the record praying that our provisional rule in prohibition be made absolute. The case therefore turns solely on questions of law raised by the return of the respondents, and the petition of the respondent Reed.

Reed’s petition for injunction covers about nineteen pages of the-printed record. It starts with a general charge “that there existed at the time of the submission of said proposals a wicked and illegal collusion and conspiracy by and between T. J. Pendergast, who dominates and controls the political machine which bears his name, and certain of the election officials, to certify, after the election, that the proposals had carried, regardless of the number of votes which might be cast against them.”

It is then alleged that as a part of said conspiracy the bond election was held on August 4, 1936, the day of the State primary election, because it was known many voters opposed to the bonds would be absent from Jackson County at that time; and because said political, organization planned to count, cast and certify as many votes, legal and illegal, as it could muster for its candidates for nomination in the primary election, and to certify the same votes for the bonds; that a large number of the judges and clerks of the election had a personal financial interest in the issuance of the bonds because the county was indebted to them in the sum of $138,000 for like services-in a former election, which indebtedness was to be discharged out of the new bond issue; that more than half of said election judges and clerks were not appointed as contemplated by law, but were selected through the influence of said Pendergast organization and were in collusion with it.

Next the petition charges the election was not free and open, as. required by the State Constitution, but that in each precinct of each ward in Kansas City except a few scattered precincts in the Fifth, Sixth, Seventh, Eighth, Fifteenth and Sixteenth wards, the same was attended by oppression, intimidation, coercion, brutalities, false counts and false certification; that the election in a majority of precincts was tainted, saturated and vitiated by fraud; that the entire vote in the First, Second, Third, Fourth, Ninth, Tenth, Eleventh and Twelfth wards was so permeated with fraud on the bond proposals that it should be thrown out and disregarded; and that less than two-thirds of the qualified voters of the county voting at the election voted for the bonds.

On, ten pages of the printed petition are set out tables showing the vote on the bond election with the number of registered voters, in 142 voting precincts in Kansas City wherein there was an aggregate vote for the bonds of 75,609, against the bonds of 1230, and an aggregate registration of 96,954. It is alleged that the vote in twenty-one of these precincts was greater than the total registration therein; and that in sixty-five precincts there were no votes against the bonds. *141 and 34,484 votes for the bonds; that in one preeinet where 1144 votes were certified for the bonds not to exceed seventy-five persons entered the polling place at the election to vote thereon; and that in another precinct where 397 votes were certified for the bonds there were not to exceed fifty qualified resident voters.

The petition then sets out the vote in twenty-one precincts of four rural townships of Jackson County wherein the aggregate vote for the bonds was 2100 and 1224 against them, which was a little over sixty-three per cent in favor of the bonds; and says this vote reflected the true sentiment of the qualified voters of the county in relation to the bond proposals.

It is further alleged that the regisration list in Kansas City on the date of the election contained the names of 100,000 persons who were not qualified voters, and that practically all of these were certified as having voted for the bond proposals; that at least 20,000 votes cast ag'ainst the bond proposals were certified as having been east therefor; that the population of Kansas City has not increased in recent years, but has decreased since 1932; that there were not to exceed 600 qualified voters residing in the second ward on the date of the election, and in the first ward not more than 10,000 qualified resident voters, but that the total vote certified for the bonds from these two wards was more than 40,000.

It is further alleged that in divers precincts throughout the city numerous judges and clerks were driven from the polling places because of their known reputation as law-abiding citizens; and in a certain preeinet of the Twelfth ward the judges and clerks of the election secreted and carried away the ballot boxes more than one hour before the close of the voting day, for the purpose of evading detection in the illegal manner in which the election had there been conducted throughout the day.

Finally, it is alleged “that the ballot boxes, the registry lists, poll books and other records in the office of the Election Commissioners of Kansas City, Missouri, will establish the truth of the allegations contained herein.”

We have endeavored to state the full substance of the petition in the suit below in order to show the nature of the claim made by respondent Reed. There is only one real question in the ease, and that is whether he can by his injunction suit in the Jackson County Circuit Court contest the vote in the bond election.

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Bluebook (online)
100 S.W.2d 272, 340 Mo. 137, 1936 Mo. LEXIS 431, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-jackson-county-v-waltner-mo-1936.