120 Ky. 368 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1905
Opinion by
Certifying opinion.
The governing committee of the Republican party of Owsley county ordered a primary election to select candidates of that party for the various county offices to be voted at the November election, 1901. The election was held, but, owing to some mishap, the ballots prepared for one precinct were not provided, or were not delivered, so that the voters of that precinct did not get to vote in that primary. The election proceeded in the other precincts. The result showed that A. C. Hyden had received the highest number of the votes cast as the nominee for county judge. He was then the county judge of that county, and was a candidate for re-election. Others were likewise nominated for other offices. \ Upon its being discovered that the missing precinct had not had a chance to vote, the county committee called all the candidates to meet it at Booneville, ihe county seat, when it was agreed that on the following Saturday the election should be continued in the missing precinct, and that the result there should be added to the total of votes east in the other precincts, and that the final result was to be so ascertained as if all the precincts had voted upon the same day. The election was continued accordingly, with the result that Hyden was defeated upon the face of the returns. The committee thereafter met, and canvassed the returns, and certified to the county court clerk, as required by law, the nominations for the various offices, including that of county judge; Hyden’s opponent being certified as the nominee.
The Australian system of voting by secret ballot has come into use in this State only within the last few years. The Constitution of 1891 for the first time provided that elections should be by secret ballot. The laws enacted from time to time since by the Legislature to carry into effect the constitutional requirement have been found not entirely adequate to prevent frauds. To cure the defects, actual or supposed, the Legislature has adopted numerous amendments, in some instances amounting to almost complete revisions. Throughout all these efforts to perfect the law this main idea has been kept prominent; to insure an absolutely fair, untrammelled expression of the choice of the legal voters. It is realized that unless this fountain of all power and government under the American system is preserved from the control of fraud, the State is imperiled, and government by the people will be impossible. For government by fraud is the basest of social existence, and is utterly inconsistent with the idea of government by popular will. The machinery necessary for conducting elections has been found more or less cumbersome, because of the intricacy required to prevent all manner of frauds — to make them, as far as practicable, impossible in the first instance. For it is realized that if fraud can triumph at first, so as to get hold of the functions of government, it would be more difficult to right it, to the extent that its agents or recipients were to execute the laws to' punish it. Therefore, the prevention, in preference to the punishment, of frauds, has been sought with a diligence indicated by the extreme care exacted of all officers in holding elections. The voter can vote only by using the official ballot. (Sec. 1446,
Though it be conceded that an election was void M which one preomct of the county was deprived of an opportuMty to vote by not havmg ballots furnished to it (Hocker v. Pendleton, 100 Ky., 726, 19 Ky. Law Rep., 135, 39 S. W., 250), and if it be further conceded that there was no authority for completing the election in the missing precinct on a subsequent day, those facts are matters which pertain to the duty of the party govermng authority, and lie back of its certificate of nomination. When the certificate is filed substantially in the form and manner prescribed by the statutes, it is not within the province of the county court clerk to go behind it to determine whether it was rightfully done. (Hollon v. Center, 102 Ky., 119, 19 Ky. Law Rep., 1134, 43 S. W., 174; Wilkins v. Duffy, 70 S. W., 668, 24 Ky. Law Rep., 913, 968.) No party nomination could be safe if that were so. We do not decide that a fraudulent certification by a party authority, though in the form prescribed by statute, is not impeachable. We oMy go so far here as to say that the county court clerk and other election officers can not collaterally impeach or ignore it. Until it',is set aside by the governing authority of the party, as permitted by the statute (secs. 1563, 1460, Ky. Stats., 1903), or by a court of competent jurisdiction, officers of election can not question it. It follows that the nomination of McGuire, being the only one certified to appellee, as county court clerk, as the nominee of the Republican party for the office of county judge of Owsley county, it was the duty of appellee to have recognized it alone? unless its validity was impeached in
McGuire’s nomination had been certified several days before the suit was brought to enjoin the clerk from putting it on the ballot as a nominee of his party. His nomination, under which he was asserting title to the party emblem and position on the ticket, bad taken place nearly a year previous. The election was to occur on November 5th. The petition seeking the injunction was filed October 24th. The petition says that the plaintiff learned on October 21st that McGuire’s name had been certified as the nominee of the Republican party for county judge. It claimed that “unless an injunction was immediately granted and issued, irreparable injury would result at once to him.” Notice of the application for the injunction Was not given. It was a notorious fact, and was doubtless known to all the parties, that the ballots for the regular November election would have to be printed elsewhere than in Owsley county; that it would take several days, in any event, to get them printed and returned so as to have them at the various voting places on the morning of the election; that, if the order for a change or reprinting of ballots was not placed with the printer by the 1st of November anyhow, it would mean that it would then be useless to do so; it wp-uld be too late. The restraining order, so called, issued on October 24th, which forbade the county clerk from putting McGuire’s name on the ballots as the nominee of the Republican party for county judge, was served
But this matter goes deeper than that. There was evidence tending to show, that appellee and the plaintiffs engaged in those suits brought them not in good faith, and not that the courts might redress a right claimed by them and wrongfully withheld by another, but to use the process of the law to do an unlawful act; that is, to prevent in an irregular way those persons’ names from appearing on the official ballot that Were entitled then to so appear. If appellee obeyed the order in good faith, and in an honest belief that the order of injunction issued in' the Hyden-McGuire suit
The statute under which the indictment was returned in this case reads: “If the county court clerk shall wilfully and knowingly refuse or fail to have the name of any candidate printed on the official ballot in the manner provided for in this act, he shall forfeit his office and be guilty of a felony, and upon conviction, be confined in the penitentiary not less than one or more than five years.” (Section 1457a, Ky. Stats., 1903.) Section 1591, Ky. Stats., 1903, reads: “This chapter shall be liberally construed, so as to prevent any evasion of its prohibitions and penalties by shift or device.” * * * If it were permitted to an -officer of an election to join with others in an undertaking to violate the election law, and do by a misuse of the process of the courts what the statute positively prohibited as a high crime, then it were possible always to violate the statute, and to escape its punishment, too. Judgments and orders of courts of general jurisdiction are entitled to great consideration, as being binding upon all persons connected with the record. But if the judgment has been procured by fraud in order to perpetrate a crime, then it will not be a shield for those who brought it into being for the unlawful purpose: We are, therefore, of opinion that the court
This opinion is directed to he certified to the lower court.