Toney v. Harris

3 S.W. 614, 85 Ky. 453, 1887 Ky. LEXIS 62
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedMarch 29, 1887
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 3 S.W. 614 (Toney v. Harris) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Toney v. Harris, 3 S.W. 614, 85 Ky. 453, 1887 Ky. LEXIS 62 (Ky. Ct. App. 1887).

Opinion

JUDGE LEWIS

DELIVERED THE OPINION OP THE COURT.

Appellant instituted this action to prevent an alleged usurpation by appellee of the office of judge of the Louisville Law and Equity Court, and to recover of him the possession thereof, the petition and amended petition, to which a general demurrer was sustained, containing substantially the following statement of facts:

[462]*462That J. G. Simrall was, on the first Monday in August, 1884, elected to that office for the full term of six years, but having resigned, appellee was by the Governor appointed January 1, 1886, to fill the vacancy thus created until the general election on the first Monday in August of that year, and, thereupon, entered upon the duties of the office, and still claims the right to hold it. That, at the general election held at the last-named date, appellant was a candidate for election by the voters of Jefferson county, including the city of Louisville, to said office for the residue of the term, and his candidacy, as well as the fact there would be an election for that office then held, was fully advertised in the newspapers of the county, and by cards and posters. That the qualified voters of said county took notice of the law requiring such election to be held, and had actual notice it would be held, and voted for appellant as a candidate for said office, their votes being -regularly recorded in the several poll-books used at said election. That, in due time thereafter, the county board appointed by law to examine the poll-books and ascertain the correctness of the summing up of votes, made out certificates of the number of votes given in that county for appellant for that office, he being the only candidate, which show that he received 18,580, and that none were given to any other person. That one of said certificates was transmitted to the Secretary of State at the seat of government. But the board for examining-returns of elections for State and district officers, composed of the Governor, Attorney-General and Auditor, refused to make out and deliver to appellant a certificate of his election to said office, upon the ground, [463]*463stated in a written, communication filed with the petition, that the office in question is exclusively within the. gift of the voters oí Tefferson county, and, consequently,, the county board of examiners is alone authorized to-give a certificate of election in such case.

It is further stated that, subsequently, he received a certificate of election from the county board, and, thereupon, qualified, and demanded of 'appellee the possession of the office, which he refused to surrender, and yet. wrongfully and illegally withholds from appellant.

In an amended petition it is stated that the Governor, although actually informed more than six weeks-prior to the first Monday in August, 1886, that a vacancy existed in said office, refused to issue a proclamation for an election on that day to fill such vacancy, and the sheriff of the county, by reason thereof, did not give official notice that an election for that purpose-would be then held. It is further stated that appellant requested the Governor to issue to him a commission as- judge of said court for the remainder of the-regular term, but he refused to do so.

The special relief prayed for is judgment against appellee for' the surrender to appellant of the office, together with the books, records, franchise and emoluments appertaining thereto. And the final judgment of the lower court was, that the action be dismissed, and for the recovery by appellee of his costs.

Tire two sections of the Civil Code applicable to this-case are as follows :

“ Sec. 483. If a person usurp an office or franchise, the person entitled thereto, or the Commonwealth, may prevent the usurpation by an ordinary action.”

[464]*464“Sec. 487. A person adjudged to have usurped an office or franchise shall be deprived thereof by the judgment of the court, and the person adjudged entitled thereto shall be placed in possession thereof ; but no one shall be entitled thereto unless the action be instituted by him,” etc.

The attitude of appellant being that of plaintiff, to recover “he must, as the plaintiff in every other case must do, show a legal title to that which he demands.” (Justices v. Clark, 1 Mon., 82.) And the question directly presented to us by this appeal is whether, assuming the facts stated by him to be true, he is entitled to the office. But, to decide that question, it becomes necessary to ascertain the true meaning of certain provisions of the statutes relating to the office, about which the.parties differ, and, if construed as it is contended on behalf of appellee they should be, to also decide as to their validity. Hence, whether the case be determined one way or the other, we will have to' indicate our views in regard to appellee’s title to the office, and it is proper to state his counsel have requested that we do so.

The commission filed with the petition shows that appellee was appointed by the Governor for the residue of the term of six years, and not, as alleged by appellant, until the August election in 1886.

Appellant admits that he has neither a certificate of election from the State board, which, we think, is alone empowered to give it, nor a commission from the Governor. And whether the possession of either is indispensable to enable him to' maintain this action, we will now consider.

The first was refused under a misconception, as it seems to us, of the statute.

[465]*465It is true section 2, article 5, chapter 33, General Statutes, provides that' the county board ior examining poll-books shall give a certificate of election of the person who has received at an election the highest number of votes for an office exclusively within the gift of the voters of the county. But manifestly that provision was intended to apply only to what are treated in the Constitution and statutes as county offices, and not to what is called a district office, that it generally requires the voters of two or more counties to fill. This is made clear by section 6 of the same article, which makes it the duty of the State board to give certificates ■of the election of judges of the circuit court, considered in connection with section 28, chapter 28, which requires “a circuit court” to be construed to mean any court of similar jurisdiction, either criminal, ordinary or equitable.

But we do not think the refusal of the State board to .give the certificate should defeat appellant’s recovery; for the essential fact that he received the highest number of votes given for the office has been duly ascertained by the board, whose duty it is to examine the poll-books and sum up the votes.

The commission was refused by the Governor upon the ground, stated by him in a communication filed with the petition, that there was not a legal election for judge of the Louisville Law and Equity Court on the first Monday in August, 1886, because no vacancy existed in that office to be then filled by election. And it is now contended, that as appellant had no commission as judge of the court when he demanded possession of the ^office, he is not entitled to sue for and recover it.

[466]

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Bluebook (online)
3 S.W. 614, 85 Ky. 453, 1887 Ky. LEXIS 62, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/toney-v-harris-kyctapp-1887.