Warren v. Rayburn

267 S.W.2d 720, 1954 Ky. LEXIS 854
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedApril 30, 1954
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 267 S.W.2d 720 (Warren v. Rayburn) 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
Warren v. Rayburn, 267 S.W.2d 720, 1954 Ky. LEXIS 854 (Ky. Ct. App. 1954).

Opinion

CULLEN, Commissioner.

At. the November. 1953 election, Willie Warren, Republican, and Paul Rayburn, Democrat, were candidates for the office of sheriff of Green County. The canvass of the votes cast in person at the precinct polling places showed that Warren. had received 2,386 votes and Rayburn had received 2,414. However, when the absentee ballots were counted, it was found that Warren had received 181 of the absentee votes, while Rayburn had received only 16. This made Warren the winner by Í37 votes.

Rayburn contested the election, attacking particularly the absentee ballots. The court found that all of the absentee ballots were illegal and void, and thereupon entered judgment declaring Rayburn to have been elected. Warren appeals.. ■

The Honorable W. H. Spragens, Judge of the Green Circuit Court, filed a memorandum opinion, which we quote :

“The record in this case fails to disclose the practice of actual fraud, such as tarn-, pering with the ballots or bribery,.on; the-part of those in charge of the absentee balloting and if it was incumbent upon the contestant to establish actual fraud the petition would have to be dismissed. The ■ question of whether the record makes out a case of constructive or presumptive fraud is'more difficult since some of the earmarks of constructive fraud are disclosed. It is apparent that the County Court Clerk, entrusted with the practically exclusive conduct of absentee balloting, was vitally in-' terested in the result of the absentee voting since he was a candidate with opposition and on the sáme ticket with the contestee. This situation certainly provided him with the opportunity to use his influence to affect the result and the result of the balloting disclosed an astonishing majority of those voting for the Republican candidates, when the result of the absentee balloting is compared with, the results of the vote at the polls on election day. This discloses a defect in the law regulating absentee voting that should be remedied and such a situation, in my opinion, calls upon those in charge to show that the balloting was fairly conducted and that all the requirements of the law designed to insure its fairness were substantially complied ⅛0⅛. Our state constitution contains.á guarantee that all elections shall be free and equal and this provision certainly should be construed to require that all elections be conducted'fairly. The public is vitally interésted in fair elections as well as the' candidates who offer for office.
“As I recall the record, the contestant received a majority, though small, of the votes cast at the polls, but of the absentee votes he received less than one in ten votes. In' the regular balloting at the polls the Democratic candidate for County Court Clerk received approximately two out of . five of the votes cast and tabulated, while of the absentee votes cast and counted he received less than one.out of a hundred. This disparity calls for an explanation' and' ■:I have found no satisfactory or sufficient explanation' in the record other than the placing in charge of the balloting a candidate to be.woted fo.r and his failure'to fol-lojv the' requirements Of. the 'law.-intended. [722]*722to insure the integrity of the ballots and fairness in the conduct of the balloting. KRS 116.080 provides that a candidate to be voted for at an election shall be ineligible as an election officer. An officer of election at the polls does not have exclusive conduct of the election in his precinct and it seems that it would be more' important to deny to a candidate to be voted for the practically exclusive conduct and supervision of absentee voting.
“If it be conceded that the record does not make out a case of either actual.or constructive fraud, we are left with the prob-' lem of deciding whether the failures of the Clerk to observe the provisions of the law set out in the complaint are substantial enough to warrant the holding of the absentee balloting invalid. The.Clerk’s failure in several respects to comply with the statutes is admitted and he attributes this failure to his ignorance of what the law required. He stated that he had never read the law nor had he sought the advice of the County Attorney as to its provisions. That he relied upon the information 'furnished by one of his deputies, who had been a deputy under his predecessor, as to the duties imposed on him by the law and that she told him the procedure followed by the former county clerk. However, the present clerk was elected for his first term at the November 1945- election and this absentee voters’ law was enacted in 1946. It is true that absentee voting for certain U. S. Government officials was authorized by an act of the 1944 legislature, but the procedure provided for in the act was entirely different from the procedure set out in the present absent voter law and bears no resemblance to the procedure adopted by the county clerk here. The only previous absentee voter law that I have found was one passed by the legislature in 1918 and held unconstitutional by the Court of Appeals in 1921. Certainly the Clerk was grossly negligent in not making some other and further effort to ascertain what his duties were.
“The complaint sets out a'number of respects in which the clerk failed to follow the requirements of the law and-the proof, stipulations and examination- of the election records amply sustain the charges or most of them and whether -these failures were sufficiently substantial to invalidate the balloting is the real question presented by the record. Some of these requirements may be classed as directory and some, at least one, appears to me-to be mandatory; but whether directory or mandatory, since they were intended to provide for the integrity of the balloting and fairness in the election, the law should require a substantial compliance under the circumstances shown here. As said.in 29 C.J.S., Elections, § 210:
“ ‘Such statutes confer a privilege and not an absolute right. * * * There should be a substantial compliance with statutory regulations governing absentee voting, as in respect of the application, supporting affidavits, and mode of voting as an absentee; but minor irregularities or technical informalities. in such matters are not fatal.’
“The decisions of our Court of Appeals appear to be in line with this statement of the rule.
“Among the irregularities complained of was the failure of the Clerk to comply with KRS 126.240 which required him before sending an absent voter’s ballot to any applicant to provide himself with at least one legal ballot box for the absentee ballots same to be locked in the presence of the board of election commissioners. Con-testee contends that this was a failure of the Election Commissioners; but the duty of providing the box is imposed on the clerk •by the statute. But whether it was the duty of the Clerk of the county court or the duty of. the election commissioners, the statute directs that no ballot shall be sent to any applicant until the box is provided. This provision of the statute was entirely disregarded.

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Bluebook (online)
267 S.W.2d 720, 1954 Ky. LEXIS 854, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/warren-v-rayburn-kyctapp-1954.