Taylor v. Nuetzel

295 S.W. 873, 220 Ky. 510, 1927 Ky. LEXIS 575
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedJune 14, 1927
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 295 S.W. 873 (Taylor v. Nuetzel) 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
Taylor v. Nuetzel, 295 S.W. 873, 220 Ky. 510, 1927 Ky. LEXIS 575 (Ky. 1927).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Judge Logan

Reversing.

This case, and its 33 companion cases, involve the determination of a contest of the 1925 election for city offices in the city of Louisville, and county offices in the county of Jefferson. These cases were heard together in *513 the circuit court and disposed of by the chancellors in one joint opinion. The petition in each case was dismissed by the judgment of the chancellors. The. contestants, who were the candidates of the Democratic party at said election, are the appellants on this appeal, and contestees, who were the candidates of the Bepublican party at the same election, are the appellees.

The basis of the contest as set up in the original petition was that a conspiracy was entered into by persons interested in the election of appellees, the object of which conspiracy was to procure their election by fraud, im timidation, and violence; and that the conspiracy was consummated and as a result thereof appellees obtained certificates of election. The details relating to the formation and execution of the conspiracy were set out at length in the petition. The answer of appellees denied either the existence or consummation of a conspiracy. The answer was filed December 5, 19'25. On March 27, 1926, the appellants offered and were permitted to file an amended petition in which it was alleged that appellees violated sections 1565b-13 to 1565b-18, Ky. 'Stats., which is a part of what is known as the 'Corrupt Practices Act, in that they expended greater sums of money in procuring their election than were allowed by said sections,, or that greater sums of .money than those allowable under these sections were expended by others in their behalf with their knowledge. Upon final hearing the chancellors concluded that the amended petition should not have been allowed, as it came too late. It was stricken by the judgment of the chancellors. The ruling of the chancellors, was correct. Grounds of contest must be set out in a petition filed within the time prescribed by the provisions of section 1596a-12, Ky. Stats., and the contestant must state all of his grounds of contest within the time so prescribed with the exceptions herein noted. He may amend his petition to enlarge the ground or grounds of his contest or to make it more definite and certain, but he must maintain in his amendments his connection with his original ground or grounds of contest. No new ground may be brought in.

It is suggested in argument by counsel for appellants that the post-election expense account of a candidate need hot be filed until after the day for instituting a contest, has passed, and that by the provisions of section l'565b-ll, Ky. Stats., it may be alleged in the pleadings in a contest *514 case that the provisions of ■ the Corrupt Practices Act have been violated by the candidate or by others in his behalf with his knowledge. It is argued that a contestant cannot set up in his petition any violation of the law shown by the post-election expense account unless he may bring it in after such statement has been filed. This is true because section 1565b-6, Ky. Stats., allows 30 days after the election in which to file the post-election statement. Considering section 159'6a-12 in connection with section 1565b-6 and section l'565b-ll, we have reached the conclusion that a contestant, or a contestee for that matter, may avail himself of any new ground of contest or countereontest which may be disclosed by the post-election statement, but in doing so he must file his amendment within ten days after the post-election statement has been filed.

The amended petitions in-these cases charged the excessive expenditure of money in violation of the sections of the Corrupt Practices Act aforesaid. If it added anything to the original petition, it was a new ground of contest, and therefore not allowable under the law as above construed. If it added nothing to the original petition, it should not have been filed.

The chancellors found no basis for the charge made in the petition that appellees took part in the conspiracy. The evidence, according to the findings of the chancellors, did not disclose that appellees had any part in the conspiracy, or that they had any knowledge of the conspiracy, or the execution thereof, or of any attempt at its consummation in whole or in part. We agree with the chancellors in that conclusion. We think it exceedingly doubtful whether appellees know at this time all of the things which were done by their lawless partisans to bring about their election.

The chancellors also found that the Republican campaign committee — that is, the committee nominally in charge of the campaign — had no knowledge of the conspiracy or the acts of the conspirators, and we accept the findings of the chancellors as correct on this point. If the Republican campaign committee sinned, it was through omission and not commission.

The chancellors found that the charge of bribery was not sustained. If it is not bribery to employ, by wholesale, impostors to vote the names of the dead, the absent, the fictitious, and the real, and the paying of such im *515 postors for so doing does not constitute bribery within the meaning of our laws, the finding of the chancellors on this point is correct. The nature of this case makes it unnecessary for us to determine whether the hiring and paying of impostors to cast illegal votes in an election is bribery.

The chancellors found from the evidence, and pointed out certain acts of violence and intimidation. A repetition of all the acts of violence and intimidation disclosed in the evidence is deemed unnecessary, but we call attention to some of the happenings in certain precincts which were unseemly, unfair, and unlawful. Members cf a negro Democratic club were driven away from precincts where they had been assigned as workers through acts of actual violence or threatened violence. They left the precincts and were not particular about the manner of their going. In one precinct a negro Democratic election officer was first threatened and later called outside of the voting place, assaulted and knocked down, shot at, and otherwise mistreated. Another was struck from behind, knocked down, and his Democratic badge taken from him. Another was assaulted on the way from the polls to his dinner. In another precinct a white Democratic worker was knocked down. In some of the pre-. cincts the shooting of pistols occurred more or less frequently. A white voter in one of the precincts inhabited almost exclusively by negroes was assaulted by a police officer and dragged from the line where he stood for the purpose of proceeding into the polling place, although it was shown that, when this was called to the attention of the police authorities, he was promptly removed from the polls and another officer assigned to that duty. There were other scattered acts of violence and some threats calculated to intimidate, but on the whole the election was orderly so far as outward appearances went.

The outstanding acts of violence and intimidation were referred to by the chancellors in their opinion, and on this point they said:

“The foregoing is the story of violence and intimidation found in the record. New as these episodes are, involving only 4

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Bluebook (online)
295 S.W. 873, 220 Ky. 510, 1927 Ky. LEXIS 575, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/taylor-v-nuetzel-kyctapphigh-1927.