162 Ky. 60 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1915
Opinion op Chief
Overruling motion to reinstate injunction.
New Haven, in Nelson county, is a city of the sixth class. An election was held in said town on November 3, T914, upon the question of authorizing the hoard of trustees to create an indebtedness of $4,500.00, and to issue bonds therefor, for the purpose of building a system of electric lights for the town. Sixty-four votes were cast in favor of the bond issue and thirty-two votes were cast against it. It thus received the necessary two-thirds of all the votes cast upon that question, as is required
(1) Tbe notice of tbe election did not specify tbe amount of indebtedness proposed to be incurred, and did not state tbe amount of money necessary to be raised annually for interest and sinking fund.
(2) Tbe ordinance was illegal and void because it failed to set out particularly, definitely and specifically tbe amount of indebtedness proposed to be voted; how it was to be paid; tbe interest the principal was to bear; tbe kind and character of same; and tbe question submitted upon tbe ballot was not sufficiently specific.
(3) Tbe election was void because four or five voters, after having entered the polling place and voted in tbe regular election for United States Senator and other officers, left the room wherein tbe election was held, and subsequently returned to said polling place and were given ballots and voted in tbe town election upon tbe question of tbe bond issue.
(4) Tbe notice, ordinance and election were invalid because tbe amount of tbe indebtedness proposed, together with the cost of operating and maintaining tbe lighting system, will exceed three per cent of tbe total taxable property of the town, tbe maximum limit authorized and permitted by tbe Constitution.
(5) Tbe election was void because, when tbe acts complained of were done, the board of trustees of the town was composed of only four members instead of five, as required by law, and tbe board was for that reason illegally constituted; and
(6) Tbe 'election was void because tbe election officers failed to detach and destroy tbe unused ballots and return them to tbe clerk of tbe county court, attached to tbe stub of tbe ballot book, as required by tbe statute.
Tbe case was tried upon the following agreed state-D3.GJXfc OÍ fEicfs *
“(1) The exhibits ‘A’,’ ‘B’ and ‘C’ referred to and filed with tbe plaintiff’s petition, herein, are true copies of the Ordinance and tbe Orders of the Board of Trustees of tbe Town of New Haven, Ky., ordaining and adopting said ordinance and directing the notice to be given. And there is no further ordinance or order made or entered by said board of trustees concerning tbe bolding of said election involved in tbis suit.
“ (3) That the ballot used in voting at said election is filed with the plaintiff’s petition in this suit and is marked ‘Educational Ballot,’ and said exhibit is a fac simile of the ballot used at said election, except that it is marked ‘Education Ballot.’
“ (4) That the exhibit filed with the plaintiff’s petition, marked ‘Canvassing Board’ for identification, is a true copy of the certificate issued and signed by the Board of Election Commissioners of Nelson County, Ky.
“ (5) During the holding of said election four or five persons who were legally qualified to vote in New Haven, Nelson county, Ky., for State and county officers and also in said municipal election, and who were not election officers, entered the said polling place where said election was being held and were given a ballot by the said election officers to vote in the State and county election, and, after having cast their said ballots in the regular State and county election, and after same had been deposited in the ballot box, they left said polling place without having voted in said municipal election, and áfterwards returned during the voting hours and re-entered said polling place and were given a ballot to vote in said municipal election on the question of creating said indebtedness, which ballot was cast by said voters and accepted by the officers of said election and deposited in said ballot box with the other ballots cast on said question and counted by the election officers and included in and were a part of the total of 96 votes cast on said question.
“(6) It is further agreed that the taxable value of the property in New Haven is as set out and stated in the petition.
“(7) At the time of the adoption of the ordinance respecting said election by the board of trustees of the town of New Haven said board contained only four members, who constituted the said board, the vacancy in said board having been occasioned by the prior resignation of one of its members.
The clerk of the circuit court granted an injunction in accordance with the prayer of the petition, and the circuit judge having dissolved said injunction, the plaintiff has applied for a re-instatement thereof. On account of the importance of the questions presented, it was brought before one of the divisions of the court in order that the ruling might have the approval of a majority of the judges of this court.
We will consider, briefly, the objections as above stated, the first and second objections being considered together.
(1) Section 3705 of the Kentucky Statutes, which is a part of the charter of cities of the sixth class, in so far' as it concerns the question before us, reads as follows:
“If at any time the board of trustees shall deem it necessary to incur any indebtedness, the payment of which cannot be met by the levy authorized by law, they shall give notice of an election, by the qualified electors of the town, to be held to determine whether such indebtedness proposed to be incurred, the purpose or purposes of the same, and the amount of money necessary to be raised annually by taxation for an interest and sinking fund, as herein provided. Such notice shall be published for at least two weeks in some newspaper published in, or of general circulation in, such town, or by posting written or printed notices at three or more public places in such town. If, upon a canvass of the votes cast at such election, it appears that two-thirds of all the qualified electors in such town shall have voted in favor of incurring such indebtedness, it shall be the duty of the board of trustees to pass an ordinance providing for the mode of creating such indebtedness and of paying the same.”
Upon this point it is sufficient to say that the requirements of the statute have been carefully followed almost to the letter. All the formal preliminaries leading up to the election were strictly and in good faith pursued. City of Covington, ex parte, 160 Ky., 146, relied on by the plaintiff, is not controlling. Covington is a city of the second class, and its charter required the ordinance to state the amount of money necessary to be raised annually by taxation for interest and sinking fund. In the Covington case, however, the ordinance did not comply with the statute in this particular. But in the case at bar the statute requires that the amount of money necessary to be raised annually by taxation must be set out in the notice, and, as we have shown, the notice fully satisfied the statute.
In Kash v. City of Jackson, 159 Ky., 523, the notice was defective because it did not specify the amount of interest and sinking fund to be raised each year: Bnt the ordinance in that case did set out those facts; and it was contended that the ordinance cured the defective notice. The court overruled that contention and held thát'tlié notice must so provide, because the statute expressly so held. See also Igleheart v. City of Dawson Springs, 143 Ky., 140.
When the notice of election is given in the form required by the statute, and the requisite majority has approved the creation of the indebtedness, the board of trustees may then pass an ordinance providing for the mode of creating the indebtedness and levy a tax to pay the annual interest and raise a sinking fund tp meet the debt at its maturity. The indebtedness is not created until,.the .city, by means of an election, has obtained the
(3) It is next insisted that the election was invalid because four or five voters, after they had voted in the election for United States Senator and other officers, and had left the voting place, returned to the voting place and were permitted to vote in the election upon the- bond issue. It is conceded that these voters were legal voters in the town, and had a right to vote on that question; but the complaint is that they should have voted in both elections upon their first entrance into the voting place, and that after having voted in one election and departed they could not return and subsequently vote in the other election. While this practice is irregular, it is by no means fatal. The voting on the bond issue was by a separate ballot which was deposited in a ballot box used for that purpose only; and it being conceded that the voters had the right to vote in the bond issue election, it is difficult to see how the irregularity vitiated the election. Furthermore, it in no way appears how any of these four or five voters voted, or that the result of the election would be changed by excluding their votes. To declare the election void on this account would be to overthrow the verdict of the voters, fairly, accurately and truthfully expressed in the result. When it is once admitted that no person voted at said election who did not have the legal right to vote, and that the election is free from fraud or bad faith on the part of anyone; that the result fairly expresses the will of the majority, the courts ignore any mere irregularity in the method of establishing that result.
In City of Cynthiana v. Board of Education, 21 Ky. L. R., 731, 52 S. W., 969, the court said:
“The rule is that where there has been a fair and free expression of the popular will, a mere irregularity in conducting an election will not invalidate it. (7 Lawson’s Rights, &c., Section 3798; Trustees District 88 v. Garvey, 80 Ky., 159; Clark v. Leathers, 9 Ky. Law Rep., 558.)”
See also McCreary on Elections, Sec. 126; and Anderson v. Winfree, 85 Ky., 610.
“The statute, however, should be construed with a view of carrying into execution the legislative will; and when an election has been held and the tax imposed, the burden is on the taxpayer who resists its collection to show that the election is void. A mere irregularity in conducting it will not authorize the chancellor to interfere and prevent the imposition of a burden the taxpayer has assumed for the purpose of aiding a great public interest.”
And in Cowan v. Prowse, 93 Ky., 156, this court laid down the general principle that a mere irregularity on the part of officers of an election, or their omission to observe some directory provision of the law would not vitiate the poll. See also Anderson v. Likens, 104 Ky., 699; Napier v. Cornett, 24 Ky. L. R., 576, 68 S. W., 1076; Cooley’s “Constitutional Limitations,” 7th Ed., pp. 928-930.
{4) Little attention need be paid to the fourth objection, that the indebtedness, together with the cost of operating and maintaining the lighting system, will exceed three per cent of the taxable property of the town, as limited by the Constitution, because said objection is. not sustained by any proof. On the contrary, the petition, which, under the stipulation is to be taken as true in this respect, shows the taxable property of the town is $291,854.00, three per cent thereof being $8,755.62, or nearly twice the amount of the proposed indebtedness. The probable cost of maintaining and operating the plant, in the future cannot enter into the question. The constitutional prohibition contemplates a present and not a future indebtedness.
(5) The board of trustees, as constituted by statute, consisted of five members; but at the time it called the election it consisted of only four members. All four members were present, however, and voted in favor of all the steps that were taken. They constituted a legal quorum, and the fact that one member had resigned in nowise affected the legality of the action taken. A majority of a quorum is sufficient unless there be some other rule established by the Constitution or the charter. Cooley’s “Constitutional Limitations,” 7th Ed., p. 201.
Section 3697 of the Kentucky Statutes, being a part of the charter of sixth class cities, expressly provides
In Shugars v. Hamilton, 29 Ky. L. R., 127, 92 S. W., 564, and under a precisely similar provision of the charter of cities of the fifth class, it was held that four members of a council of six members constituted a quorum for the transaction of business.
It follows that the four members in the case at bar were fully authorized to exercise, as they did, the power of the board.
(6) The objection that the election officers failed to perform their clerical statutory duty of detaching and destroying the unused ballots, but returned them to the clerk, is without merit. At most it was a mere irregularity which would not invalidate the election. See authorities cited supra. Graham v. Graham, 24 Ky. L. R., 548, 68 S. W., 1093, is, in effect, conclusive against this objection. In that case the polls were open about an hour later and closed about an hour earlier than the law required ; the ballot box in which the ballots were deposited during the voting hours remained unlocked, and the nnm-ber of unused ballots was not certified at all. In the absence of evidence showing that someone had been prejudiced by these irregular actions of the election officers, thé court declined to nullify the election.
■ After a careful review of the facts of this case, and all the objections taken to the election, we are of opinion that all the necessary steps were taken to authorize the contemplated bond issue, and that the circuit judge properly dissolved the injunction.
The motion to reinstate the injunction is overruled. Judges Settle, Hannah and Hurt concur in this opinion; and by order of the court this opinion will be printed in the Official Beports.