189 Ky. 378 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1920
Opinion of the Court by
Affirming.
These two cases, heard together below and treated the same way here, involve contests over two of the six memberships in the board of conncilmen of the city of Prestonsbnrg, Kentucky. The right to maintain the actions is claimed to exist because of the provisions of subsection 12 of section 1596a of Carroll’s Kentucky Statutes, edition 1915. The final judgment dismissed each petition and plaintiffs seeking a reversal of the judgments prosecute these appeals.
The record presents the preliminary question of the jurisdiction of the court to entertain the suits, which question is neither argued nor referred to by counsel for either side, but which we deem necessary to first dispose of. No one has an inherent right to an office, because of which fact ■ there existed no remedy at common law by which an unsuccessful candidate upon the face of the returns could ■contest the right of his opponent to the office involved. 15 Cyc. 393-394; 20 Corpus Juris 209-210 ; 9 R. C. L. 1157; Pflanz v. Foster, 155 Ky. 15, and Stine v. Berry, 96 Ky. 65; This principle is thus stated in the Pfianz case: “There is no inherent power in the courts to pass upon the validity of elections or to try contested election cases; their authority is wholly statutory and must be either given expressly,or by necessary implication.” But most if not all the states by their legislatures have prescribed statutory remedies whereby a. defeated candidate may contest with his opponent the right to the office. Our statute conferring such right is subsection .12, supra, and in so far as it makes provision for contesting the office here involved it says: “In case there shall be a contest of the election ... of any police judge, clerk, marshal or other elective municipal officer, where there is no" other provision by law for determining the 'contested election of such municipal officer, the contest shall be made by the filing of a petition in the circuit
There is likewise-a conflict in the opinions as to whether the statutory right given to municipal councils to judge of the election and qualification of its members, to hear and determine contests of municipal offices are exclusive or only cumulative with the jurisdiction to hear and determine election contests conferred by statute upon the courts. 20 Corpus Juris 15; 15 Cyc. 396-397,'and 9 R. C. L. 1160-1161. But in those jurisdictions, whére the remedy before the municipal council is held to be cumulative with a contest suit in court it is admitted that if is within the power of the legislature providing the respective remedies to expressly or by necessary implication make the one exclusive of, the other. Hence in 9 R. C. L., supra, it is said: “The legislature may, however, grant to city councils the right of final determination of contests for membership and exclude the courts from consideration of the question on the facts of the case.” See also New Orleans v. Morgan, 18 Am. Dec. 232; State v. Kempf, 69 Wis. 470, 2 A. S. R. 753. But the question is no longer an open one with us since it was expressly held in the case of Stine v. Berry, supra, and impliedly so in the case of Scholl v. Bell, 125 Ky. 750, that municipal councils possessed exclusive ' jurisdiction for the trial of contest cases involving the right to a municipal office, the court in the Stine case saying': - “We understand, and so adjudge, that the statute in regard to contested elections for state and county offices is exclusive, and that when a mode of contest is provided in a city charter for contesting the election of city officers, it 'excludes any other remedy.” In the Scholl case the court took jurisdiction because, and only because, the title to
Tbe city council for cities of tbe fifth class is composed of six members and they are elected by all tbe qualified voters in tbe city from tbe city at large. No candidate for tbe office of councilman either runs for or is elected to any particular one of tbe six seats to be filled. Each candidate in tbe election is opposing all others and tbe six receiving tbe highest number of legal votes are elected and entitled to serve. It is therefore necessarily true that in contest proceedings tbe title of each of tbe contestee members of tbe council to their respective offices is involved even in a single contest, for it might be that tbe contestant received a greater number of legal votes than either of those who were declared elected, and in case of there being two contests, as is true here,'one contestant
In the case of Conway v. Sexton, 243 Ill. 59, 90 N. E. Rep. 203, the plaintiff contested the right to the office of one of the five trustees of a sanitary district created and organized under an act of the legislature of that state. The contestant made all five of those who had been declared elected parties defendants and eontestees in his suit. It was objected that there was a misjoinder of parties, but the court held otherwise, saying: “Under this statute five trustees were to be elected. Each candidate was opposed to every other candidate who was running for the office of trustee. Neither candidate was running for any particular one of the five places to be..filled, but under the law -the five candidates, that received the highest number of votes at this election were elected to the five positions.” The same proposition is in effect held by this court, in the case of Burns v. Lackey, 171 Ky. 21. The office of four members of the city council of Prestonsburg is involved in these cases which is more than a majority of the members of the board, thus disqualifying . that body under the doctrine above discussed from sitting as a contest tribunal in these cases. We therefore conclude that the provisions, supra, of the charter of cities of the fifth class conferred exclusive jurisdiction upon the municipal council of said cities to try contested elections such as are involved here, but when that body is disqualified because of a majority of its members being directly interested, the jurisdiction to hear .and try the contest is conferred upon the circuit court, since necessarily a provision for the trial of cases before a tribunal whose title to the office and whose right to sit are involved is no provision at all.
The first ground of contest with reference to the casting of - illegal ballots for the contestees was virtually abandoned in the preparation of the eases, since but little proof was attempted to be taken upon that issue, and what was taken wholly failed to establish it and it is admitted in briefs on this appeal that there was an entire failure to sustain that ground.
-As to the second ground the court, upon the hearing of the motion to open the ballot boxes, appointed two commissioners for that purpose, who after being sworn opened the boxes and made a report showing the number of votes that the commissioners found .each of the eleven candidates for member of the council received at the election. This report gave to the contestant Williams 161 votes and to the contestant Craft 160 votes, or more than the canvassing board certified as having been received by either the contestees Layne, Harris, May or Blackburn. On the same, day that the report of the commissioners was filed the contestees entered a motion that the court set aside and vacate the order appointing the commissioners and directing them to recount the ballots, and to quash their report, which motion .was continued.until the next term of the court when it was sustained and the causes were submitted for final judgment and the petitions were each dismissed. The order of the court sustaining the motion .to open the ballot boxes and in which the-commissioners were appointed recites that the court heard evidence thereon as to the preservation of the ballots and in :the order sustaining the motion of contestees to set aside the order'authorizing a recount of the ballots it is said that “The court sufficiently advised upon proof
It has been repeatedly held by this court that the certificate of the canvassing board is prima facie evidence of the result of an election, but that the ballots themselves ■constitute the best evidence, but before a counting of the ballots shall be permitted to overcome the prima facie result of the certificate of the election officers the one who questions the correctness of the certificate must show by clear and satisfactory testimony that the ballot box has been kept as the statute requires; that the ballots have not been tampered with since the election, and that the ballots offered in evidence are the identical ones cast. Some of the cases so holding are Edwards v. Logan, 114 Ky. 312; McEwen v. Carey, 123 Ky. 536; Baker v. Dinsmore, 138 Ky. 217; Pace v. Reed, idem. 605; Morgan v. Sparkman, 143 Ky. 27; Thomas v. Marshall, 160 Ky. 168; Ottley v. Herriford, 161 Ky. 7; Thompson v. Stone, 164 Ky. 18, and Rich v. Young, 176 Ky. 813. Those cases as well as that of Roby v. Croan, 177 Ky. 9, furthermore hold that the burden is upon the contestant to establish the integrity of the ballot boxes as well as their contents in conformity with the above rule. Whether the contestants in the instant cases sustained that burden we are unable to say since, as we have seen, a large portion, -if not all, of the testimony heard 'upon the motion concerning the counting of the ballots (which was' necessarily directed to the proper preservation of the ballot boxes and their ballots) was not in any manner made a part of the record and is not before us. In such case the rule is that it will be conclusively presumed that the omitted evidence from the record was sufficient to authorize the judgment complained of. Roundtree v. Meadors, 183 Ky. 47; Neely v. Strong, 186 Ky. 540, and Bridgewater v. Continental Fire Insurance Co., 187 Ky. 43. Following this universal rule we must conclude that the oral testimony heard by the
But it is insisted'that having'pnce determined'to count the ballots, and the appointed commissioners haying done so and made their report,' the court was without authority to set aside those orders at a subsequent term and to reject the report of the commissioners., This argument of counsel is made upon the theory that tlie first order of the court with reference to counting the ballots was such a final one as to put it beyond the power of the court to set it aside and disregard it at a subsequent' term. But ' counsel is evidently mistaken in this contention. The first order with reference to the counting of the ballots' was purely interlocutory, it being essentially a determination ' by the court as to the admissibility of offered evidence (the ballots themselves) and such rulings are always interlocutory and subject to be reconsidered by the court at any time during the progress of the cause. As a trial proceeds the' admissibility of testimony 'is' of ■ necessity hurriedly' passed upon and it would "be both an impractical and an unreasonable rule indeed that would deprive the court of the ■ right to correct an error of this nature however convincing it might be made to appear. On the contrary it is the constant practice to withdraw from the jury testimony which had been previously admitted, and there can be no difference in this regard between a trial by jury and one by the court trying'a suit in equity.
Having failed to establish any of the grounds of contest, alleged in the petitions and amendments it is next insisted that the names of the appellees w.eré improperly and illegally printed upon the ballots.. The foundation .’for this contention is that each of them filed separate petitions with the county court clerk for the printing of their names upon the ballot and in each petition tlie'candidates designated “Peoples” as the name of the party . emblem of the candidate and the picture of'a mule as the device for such party. The petitions of the' appellees were exact copies of each other. Section 1460 of the statutes directs the county clerk as to how he shall cause the names of the candidates who filed petitions with him to be printed on the ballots'and it authorizes him to print “on one ballot all nominations of any party or group of ’petitioners, as.designated by them in their certificate or petition.” When there are n,o more petitions than the required-number of offices to be filled and each of them designates the same party name and asks for the same
Another contention is that the contestees did not comply with what is generally known as “The Corrupt Practice Act” by filing with the proper authorities expense accounts either before or after the election; but the trouble with this contention, as well as the one just considered relating to the grouping of the candidates, is that neither of them was relied on as a ground of contest. Subsection 12 of section 1596a, supra, under which these cases are prosecuted, sáys that “Such petition shall be filed and process issued . . . within ten days after such action (final action of the board of canvassers), and shall state the grounds of the contest relied on, and no' other grounds shall afterwards be relied upon.” Section 1565b-ll, which is a part of “The Corrupt Practice Act,” provides that the failure to file the expense accounts required by the act shall constitute grounds for contesting the election. And in the case of Sparkman v. Saylor, 180 Ky. 263, it was held that the only way by which the un-' successful candidate might avail himself of the failure of his opponent to comply with the requirements of the statute as to filing the expense accounts therein provided for was by a contest of the election. Having failed to allege either of the two grounds last considered herein in their petitions or any amendment thereto, appellants are deprived of the right to rely upon either of them although the first one, as we have seen (grouping the candidates), would not have been available if it had been properly alleged as a ground of contest:
Upon a consideration of the entire record we are convinced that the judgments were proper and they are each affirmed.