104 Ky. 843 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1898
delivered the opinion oe the court.
The appellant and appellee were opposing candidates for the office of sheriff of Letcher county at the regular election in November, 1897. On the face of the returns the appellee received five hundred and five votes and appellant four hundred and sixty-nine votes. The comparing board gave the certificate of election to the appellee. Thereupon
The notice oT contest given by appellant seeks to have election returns from precinct No. 1 of Letcher county-disregarded because of the fact, among others, that the polls were not closed at 4 p. m., the hour fixed by law, but that more than one hundred votes were permitted to be cast at that precinct after 4 o’clock j). m. The returns of precinct No. (5 are sought to be disregarded for the same reason — that from twenty-five to fift3r votes were x>armitted to be cast at that precinct too late, and because fifteen illegal voters had been permitted to vote; for apx>ellee, giving names. The charge is that each of these fifteen persons had been disfranchised by the judgment of a circuit court. It is also claimed by the notice1 that there1 is an error of tern votes in precinct No. 2, in that appellant by the returns is certified as having receiveal flft3r-seven votes, when as a fact he received sixt3'-seven votes. This notice also complains of the action e>f the election officers in precinct No. 5 in refusing to count certain ballots returned with the1 certificate, and appellant seeks to have these counted. There are other grounds of objection to precinct No. 1 — of fraud on the part of the1 election officers, in that they changed and falsified the re>sult at that precinct as actually cast, by deducting from appellant’s number twelve votes; the certificate being that he received seventy-five votes, when it is alleged that he received
It is contended by appellee that appellant must fail in
After the board of contest had assembled and were sworn, the ajjpellant offered to file additional grounds of contest, and the board refused to permit same to be filed, or to consider them, because they were not in the notices given within the ten days allowed by law. This action is assigned by appellant as error, as the amendment was again offered in the circuit court with a like result, the court refusing to permit same to be filed. This question has been passed on by this court at this term in the contested election case of Anderson v. Likens, 20 Ky. Law Rep., 1001 [47 S. W., 8G7]. In that case it was expressly held that, after the limit fixed by law for giving notice of contest, an amendment or additional grounds of contest could not be filed. . To that opinion we adhere.
Appellant complains of the action of the contesting board and the circuit court because they refused to count .certain ballots returned from precinct No. 5. The orig
It is contended by appellant that voting- precinct No. 1 should be disregarded, and the returns therefrom not counted for any person for the reason of the almost total failure to comply with any provision of the election law. The same contention is made as to precinct No. G. On the other hand, appellee contends that the returns from precinct No. 5 should be disregarded, and not counted for any person, because of misconduct of the officers of election, and an almost utter failure to comply with the election law' as to the secret ballot, and in canvassing and certifying returns. From the proof before us it appears that in precincts Nos. 1 and G the polls were kept open till after 4 o'clock p. m. At precinct No. 1 more iban one hundred votes were received after 4 o’clock p. m. and at precinct No. 6 fully thirty votes w7ere received after 4 o’clock p. m. We are of opinion that the provision of the election law' requiring the polls to close at 4 p. m. is
It is insisted, however, that the counter notice given by contestee is insufficient to bring before the court these irregularities in No. 5, and that, therefore, they can not be considered. 'Without deciding whether a counter notice of contest is necessary, and without even intimating an
Disregarding these three precincts (Nos. 1, 5, and 6), and also counting for the contestant, Banks, the ten votes in precinct No. 2, the result is not different from that certified by the county canvassing board. It results in the election of appellee, Sergent. The judgment of the circuit court, resulting the same way, is affirmed.