123 Ky. 15 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1906
Opinion by
Certifying the Law.
The appellee was indicted and tried for the violation of section 1585a of the Kentucky Statutes of 1903, which reads as follows: “Any officer of the election who shall knowingly and willfully give or certify to an improper certificate of the election as herein required, or shall mutilate or tamper with any of the seals or destroy or remove any of the ballots required to be preserved herein, shall-be guilty of felony, and upon conviction thereof shall be confined in the penitentiary for a .period of not less than one nor more than three years.” The effort to convict him was for knowingly and willfully certifying to an improper certificate of the election, held on November 7 1905, in the Twenty-Eighth precinct of the Twelfth Ward in the city of Louisville.
The indictment is very lengthy. The alleged -certificate is copied in full in the indictment. The substance of the charge is that “one Alex. Metz, who was then and there pretending to be acting as clerk of election in the said place, to wit, a place on Duncan street between. Twenty-Third and Twenty-Fourth streets in the said precinct, wrote the names of the said duly qualified and legal voters upon stubs of the ballot book then and there used by him, 'making it
It is claimed by the appellee that the demurrer should have been sustained for two reasons: First, because it was not alleged that the appellee was properly appointed as an election officer for that precinct. Second, for the reason that it was not alleged that he did act as an officer at the election. We cannot agree with.appellee’s contention upon the first proposition. It matters not, in a prosecution like this, whether the appellee was properly or regularly appointed as an officer of the election; if he acted as an officer at a legal election, and acted corruptly he cannot avail himself of any irregularity in the appointment in his defense.
. The question is: Was this a fatal variance? Section 108, 3 Greenleaf, is as follows: “The writing when produced or proved must agree in all essential respects with the description of it in the indictment; a material variance, as we have heretofore seen, being fatal.” In volume 22 of Ency. Pleading & Practice, p. 551, it is said: “Variances are regarded as'material in criminal cases only when they mislead the defendant in making his defense, and may expose him, to the danger ,of being again put in jeopardy for the same •offense.” The author, to sustain the text, cites many decisions from several states and one from Kentucky, viz: Commonwealth v. Jarboe, 89 Ky., 143, 11 Ky. L. R., 344, 12 S. W., 138. The case of Sutton v. Commonwealth, 97 Ky., 310, 17 Ky. L. R., 184, 30 S. W., 661, also sustains this principle. The charge in the indictment under consideration was that appellee had made a false or improper certification of an election, by knowingly certifying to more votes than had been cast. The mistakes referred to were trivial and not material. They could not, in any way, have mislead the appellee in making his defense, and a conviction or acquittal under this indictment could not have exposed him to the danger of being again put in jeopardy for the same offense.
But the action of the court in giving the peremptory instruction was correct, for the reason the commonwealth did not 'introduce any evidence incriminating the appellee. The commonwealth introduced a witness, who stated that he was the superintendent of the vaults of the Columbia Finance & Trust Company, who produced what was represented to be the original certificate of the election, and the stub-books. He stated that they were placed with the trust company, for safe-keeping, by an agreement of
This opinion is certified as the law of the case.
Petition for rehearing by appellant overruled.