201 Ky. 246 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1923
OPINION OF THE COURT BY
Affirmrng.
Alleging that there were 242 legally qualified voters iii Jeffersontown, a city of the sixth class, and that the petitioners constituted 160 of that number and a great majority thereof, Joseph L. Ellingsworth and others filed their petition in the Jefferson `chancery court, second division, to dissolve the city's charter. The action resulted in a spirited contest which continued over a period of two years, during which numerous demurrers, motions, pleadings, amended pleadings and affidavits were filed, and many arguments heard on the questions involved. In the meantime some of the petitioners died, while others withdrew their names or moved away, and several newcomers moved into the town, with the result that the status changed from time to time, the advantage sometimeC being with the petitioners and at ether times with the opposition. On March 14, 1921, the cause was referred to the master commissioner to ascertain and report the names and number of legal voters residing in the city of Jeffersontown on December 7, 1920, and to ascertain and report the names and number of voters "who have petitioned and now petition and request the court to dissolve and annul the charter of said pity," etc. cOn April 2, 1922, the commissioner filed a report in conformity with the order, and found that the petitioners had a majority of twelve. Exceptions were filed to the report, and there
It is insisted that the court erred in permitting the amended pleadings to be filed for the reason that the determining factor in the case was the number of voters at the time the petition was filed, and not the number at the time the judgment was rendered.
The proceeding was had under section 3662a, Kentucky Statutes, which is as follows:
“1. A majority of the voters residing in an incorporated town of the sixth class may file a petition asking that its charter be dissolved or annulled.
“2. Whenever a petition signed by a majority of the persons entitled to vote living within the boundary of the proposed town is filed in the circuit court clerk’s office of the county in which a greater part of the town is located, not less than twenty days before the commencement of the next regular term of said court, the petitioners shall cause notice of the filing of such petition and the object thereof to be published in two issues of some newspaper of general circulation published in the county; or, if none, by notices posted rip for at least ten days before the commencement of the term¿ one at- the court house door and the others at public places within the boundary of the proposed town.
‘ ‘ The petition shall set out the metes and bounds of the town, and the number of voters and inhabitants resident within the boundary thereof, and such other facts as may be thought proper.
*248 “3. A defense may be made to the petition by any voter of the town, and if a defense is made, the court shall hear and determine the same and may render judgment dissolving and annulling the charter.
“The pleadings and practice, except as herein provided, shall be the same as in equity cases; an appeal shall be from the judgment, provided the record is filed in the clerk’s office of the Court of Appeals twenty days prior to the second term of the Court of Appeals after the rendition of the judgment.”
The act was upheld on the ground that the only authority conferred on the court was to determine the existence of the facts upon which the statute became operative. Boone County v. Town of Verona, 190 Ky. 430, 227 S. W. 804. The purpose of the act was to permit the majority of the voters to have the charter annulled, and to that end authority was conferred on the court to hold an election by taking evidence as to the choice of the voters. Though the question is not precisely the same, we have ruled in numerous cases that signers of a petition for a local option election may withdraw their names before the petition is acted on. O’Neal v. Minary, 125 Ky. 571, 101 S. W. 951; Davis, County Judge v. Henderson, 127 Ky. 13, 104 S. W. 1009; Grover v. Newton, 154 Ky. 479, 157 S. W. 716. The reason for the rule is thus stated in Davis, County Judge v. Henderson, supra.
“A petition is but a formal written request or prayer for a certain thing to be done. He who signs it must do so voluntarily; otherwise he cannot be in the attitude of making a request. The signature of the petitioner is but evidence of the request or prayer. In the absence of anything to the contrary, the signature is conclusive. But, when the signer appears in court and asks that his name be withdrawn, he indicates that he is no longer a petitioner. To hold that, he is is simply to make him a'petitioner by a process of legal coercion, which is contrary to the very spirit of a petition.”
Manifestly, the same rule applies to a signer who has since died. He can no longer be regarded as a petitioner. Not only so, but we can hardly believe that the legislature intended that, regardless of deaths, withdrawals or other changes thereafter occurring, the court should enter an order annulling a charter merely because a majority of voters filed a petition. Such a construction would often result in the ‘dissolution of a charter in opposition to the
Judgment affirmed.