163 Ky. 650 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1915
Reversing.
The appellant, Willie Francis, and the appellee, John Sturgill, were candidates for the office of County Court Clerk of Knott County at the November election, 1913, the former running as the nominee of the Democratic party and the latter claiming to be the nominee of the Republican party. Following the election the County Board of Election Commissioners, by a canvass of the returns, found and declared that appellant had received 960 votes and appellee 929 votes, giving the former a majority of thirty-one votes. The board then issued to appellant a certificate declaring him duly elected to the office in question,- and thereafter, by executing the required bond and taking the necessary oath, he was inducted into the office and began the performance of the ' duties thereof. On November 13, 1913, this action was ■ instituted by appellee in the Knott Circuit Court for the purpose of contesting appellant’s right to the office and asserting his own election thereto. On the hearing the circuit court held that appellee had been elected to the .office of County Court Clerk of Knott County by a majority of nine votes. From the judgment declaring that result this appeal is prosecuted.
It is insisted for appellant that the judgment of the circuit court should be reversed because that court erred: ' (1) In not holding appellee ineligible to have his name go on the ballot under the Republican device and as the’ nominee of that party for the office of clerk of the .Knott County Court, at the November election, 1913; (2) in overruling’ appellant’s exceptions to appellee’s depositions; (3) in permitting the filing by appellee of °the amended petition, appearing in the record; (4) in adjudging appellee elected to the office of clerk of the Knott County Court.
The second contention can be quickly disposed of. It makes complaint of the refusal of the circuit court to sustain appellant’s exceptions to appellee’s depositions and rests upon the ground that, as the taking of the depositions was not completed within thirty days after the issues were made up, they should have been suppressed; it being insisted that the requirements of Section 1596a, Sub-section 12, Kentucky Statutes, that the contestant’s evidence in chief be so taken, is mandatory and must, therefore, be strictly obej^ed. It is admitted by
The novelty and importance of the question raised by the first contention has commanded the careful consideration of the whole court.
The facts furnished by the record show that appellant and appellee are both Democrats and have always voted and affiliated with that party, the latter having as a Democrat repeatedly held office in Knott County, to which he was elected by Democratic votes; that they were rival candidates at the primary election held in Knott County in. August, 1913, for the Democratic nomination for the office of clerk of the Knott County Court, in which primary appellant, by reason of his receiving a majority of the Democratic votes cast, secured the nomination and was duly returned and declared the nominee of the Democratic party for the office in question. At the same primary the Republicans of Knott County also nominated a. candidate for the same office, who was duly returned and declared the Republican nominee. Notwithstanding his defeat by appellant for
As appellee did not contest appellant’s nomination, as the primary election law permitted him to do, the presumption will be indulged that he was fairly and legally defeated by appellant for the Democratic nomina-, tion; but no such presumption of fairness or legality can arise from the subsequent proceedings whereby the connty Republican committee adopted appellee as the candidate of that party and caused his name to be placed under the Republican device on the ballot for the November election, as its nominee. Obviously, in thus procuring the placing of his name on the ballot' as the candidate of that party, after being defeated in the primary as a candidate for the Democratic nomination for the office, appellee cannot claim to have gotten on the ballot in conformity to the provisions of the primary election law. In order to get his name on the primary ballot as a candidate for the Democratic nomination for the office of county clerk, he had to sign and deliver to the county clerk of Knott County a petition containing, among other things, the statements that he was then “a member of the Democratic party and affiliated with it and supported its nominees at the last regular election.” Primary Election Law 1912, Section 6.
In addition, .at the time appellee filed the foregoing petition with the county clerk there was filed with it, as required by Section 6 of the act, supra, a nominating-petition, signed by certain Democratic electors of the county, recommending or nominating appellee as a candidate for the Democratic nomination for the office of county clerk, and declaring- that they intended to support him therefor in the coming primary election.
In enacting the primary election law it was the manifest intent of the Legislature to relieve the voters of
Section 5 of the Primary Act provides:
“A political party, within the meaning of this act, is an affiliation or organization of electors representing a political policy and having a constituted authority for its government and regulation, and which, at the last preceding election at which presidential -electors were voted for, cast at least twenty per cent, of the total vote cast at said election in this State. And such political party shall nominate all of its candidates for elective offices to be voted for at the next succeeding; general election at the primary election herein provided! for, and not otherwise: Provided, That when a vacancy occurs after any nomination by death or otherwise, the governing authority of such party may provide for filling such vacancies and making such nominations. And when such nominations have been so made the certifi*656 cates of nomination shall be signed by the chairman and secretary of the governing authority of the party making the same, and shall be filed in the same manner as certificates of nomination at a primary nominating election. * * * No candidate nominated in any other manner than as provided in this act shall be entitled to the use of any word, device or figure in the description of his name or. principle, which are used and have been adopted by any political party entitled under the provisions of this act to nominate its candidates in a primary election as herein provided. ’ ’
Did the fact that the Republican nominee for clerk of the Knott County Court, elected as such by the voters of the Republican party at the primary election in August, 1913, voluntarily resigned such nomination, or was induced to do so, confer upon the Republican county committee authority to fill the vacancy by electing or choosing appellee, then, theretofore and now, admittedly a Democrat, as the nominee of the Republican party for the office of county clerk and cause his name to be placed on the ballot under the Republican device, the log cabin, to be voted for as such nominee at the succeeding regular election in November? If it was permissible under the primary act for appellee, an avowed Democrat, to be thus given the Republican nomination, why was it necessary for the Republican actually nominated at the primary by the Republican party, and whose place he took on the ballot used in the regular election, in order to get his name on the primary ballot as a candidate for the Republican nomination, to file, as required by Section 6, the petition containing the statement that he was a member of the Republican party, affiliated with it and supported its nominees at the last regular election, and, in addition, file the supporting petition of a certain number of Republican electors of the county as further required by the same section?
It must necessarily be the meaning of the act that when a vacancy occurs in a party ticket after the election of its nominees at a primary by the voters of the party, such vacancy must be filled by the governing authority of such party by selecting therefor a nominee who possesses the qualifications as to political belief and party affiliation, that under the provisions of the primary act would have entitled him to get his name on the party primary ballot as a candidate seeking its nomination for
‘ ‘ But when a voter offers himself, as did E. W. Robinson, as a candidate for nomination to an' office at the hands of a political party with which he claims membership, proposing to have his claim to such nomination determined by the electors of the party at a primary election held under the primary election law of the State, he must submit himself to such reasonable regulations or tests as may be required of .candidates by the law under which the primary election is held; and if one of these tests requires him to state, in order to get his name on his party’s ballot, that he supported the nominees of the party of which he seeks a nomination at the last regular election, he must do so; and the disclosure, even if it should give the names of the persons for whom he voted, will not violate the provisions as to the secrecy of the ballot contained in Section 147, Constitution. The tests to which the candidates are subjected by the primary election law of this State are contained in Section 6 of the act. One of them is that he must have affiliated with the party whose nomination he seeks, and also have supported its nominees at the last regular election. The words ‘supported its nominees’ do not necessarily mean that -the candidate should have voted for such nominees. Without voting at all, he may have given them actual and even active support, by advocating their claims, contributing to the legitimate expenses of their campaign, getting out the vote and in other proper ways, yet, by accident or unavoidable casualty have been prevented from attending the election. Therefore, to require one to say that he supported the nominees of his party at a former election would not necessarily compel the admission on his part that he voted for them; for this reason,, if no other were apparent, it cannot be said that the test here imposed invades the secrecy of the ballot. In nearly all the States having a compulsory primary election law this and similar tests have been held to be reasonable. * * *”
While every citizen entitled under the Constitution to vote may do so at a regular election for whomsoever he may prefer, no citizen can do so at a primary elec
“So it is where party primary elections are held, snch as are authorized and required by law, and under the supervision and inspection of public functionaries; it is not a violation of the Constitution that all electors are not permitted to vote at a particular party election. Electors of one party have no desire, unless prompted by sinister or evil motives, nor have they any inherent right, within or without the Constitution, to vote at some other party primary or election; hence no right or privilege of which they can complain has been entrenched upon or violated. We see no objection to the Legislature providing for party elections, and limiting the electoral privilege to party members. The exclusion of other party members from participating in such elections is not an infringement or denial of a constitutional right or privilege.”
The principle announced in Ladd v. Holmes is supported by numerous other cases reviewed in Hager v. Robinson, supra, and in therein giving it our approval we said:
“All that is said by the authorities, supra, as to tests of party loyalty and party membership, applies 'with equal force to electors voting and candidates voted for in primary elections; and whether applied by legislative enactment to the one class or the other, or both, they are equally reasonable. It is to be remarked that the object of the present primary election law is to purify the politics of the State by preventing frauds and wrong doing in making nominations; and it will be in the'interest of political parties and the welfare of all the citizens of the State to effectuate the salutary purpose designated by its enactment. Indeed, no political organization can be effective that does not command public confidence and respect; therefore, the integrity of all party nominations should be so manifest as to put them above being called in question. That the act manifests little concern for the independent voter is because of his resentment of party restraint and disavowal of party allegiance. It, however, neither*659 discredits his citizenship nor interferes with his rights, but leaves him free to support, at regular elections, the nominees of one of the political parties, or to vote for candidates without nominations. Moreover, the independent candidate can by petition, as provided hy Section 1453, Kentucky Statutes, get his name on the ballot at a regular election under a device, other than that of a party, designated by the petition. That the act is in some respects in need of amendment, a cursory reading of it will demonstrate, but it cannot fairly be said of any of its provisions with respect to the qualifications it requires of those who would participate in or be nominated af the elections held thereunder, that they are unreasonable, or obnoxious to any provision of the State’s Constitution.”
In State, ex rel McCarthy v. Moore, 87 Minn., 308, a provision of an election law which prohibits a candidate for nomination at a primary who was defeated from having his name printed on the official ballot, even as an independent candidate, for the same office at the subsequent regular election, was held to be a reasonable regulation, where there is another provision in the law requiring that a blank space be left in which voters may write the names of independent candidates. In the opinion it is in part said:
“Of necessity there must be upon such a ballot a regular order in which the names shall be placed; and other features incident to the procedure that tend to create incidental advantages to one candidate over another ; but it would seem proper that any candidate who seeks the assistance of a primary election law to aid him in securing party support should be bound by the application of good faith and the dictates of fair play to which he has voluntarily subjected himself. It is said by this law to a candidate, ‘if you prefer the advantages of a party nomination which is quite desirable you may seek it; but if the State prepares and prints your ballots and regulates nominations so as to secure the utmost freedom of choice among the members of your party, it does so upon the submission by you to the condition that if you are unstiecessful, it will not thereafter print your name upon the ballot to defeat your opponent;’ and it could not be said, because this is refused, that it is an unreasonable condition, but rather an imposition of even-handed justice that would have been bestowed*660 upon Ms previous contestant, had the result been otherwise.”
The primary election law of this State does not, it is true, expressly provide that a candidate who suffers defeat for a nomination after permitting his name to go on the party ballot, shall not be permitted to have it placed on the ballot at the regular election as a candidate, whether of another party or as an independent, but its provisions by necessary implication mean and declare that his name in such state of case shall not be placed on the ballot for the regular election as the nominee and under the device of a party opposing the party whose nomination he sought and was refused at the primary; and to hold otherwise would utterly defeat the object designed in the enactment of the primary election law and make of it a farce.
It is our conclusion, therefore, that as the provisions of the primary election law would have excluded appellee, a member of the Democratic party, from procuring the placing of his name on the Republican ballot at the primary as a candidate for the nomination of that party to the office of county court clerk of Knott County, he was not, after his defeat in the primary for the Democratic nomination for the office in question, eligible to nomination therefor by the Republican committee of Knott County; and, therefore, that the action of the committee making him the nominee of the Republican party and causing his name to be placed on the ballot for the regular election as such, under the device of the Republican party, was without authority and void. We do not mean to be understood as holding that appellee’s name could not have gone on the ballot for the regular election at all, because there is nothing in the provisions of the primary election law which would have prevented him from getting his name on the ballot by petition as an independent candidate for the office, under a device other than that of a political party.
It is, however, insisted for appellee that the question of eligibility cannot be raised as here attempted. Two eases are cited in support of this contention. One of these, Wilson v. Tye, 122 Ky., 508, was an election contest over the office of superintendent of common schools for Whitley County, to which the appellee, Miss Tye, according to the face of the returns, had been elected. The contest was instituted by the appellant, Wilson,
Pending the appeal Wilson instituted a second action, the object of which was to recover of Miss Tye the office of school superintendent upon the ground that she was a usurper; that, being* ineligible to hold the office, her election thereto was void -and appellant, as the incumbent of the office under a previous election, was entitled to hold it until a successor was duly elected. The circuit court dismissed his petition and on appeal the judgment was affirmed. Wilson v. Tye, 126 Ky., 34. The affirmance was rested on the ground that as appellant had failed to establish his right to the office he could not recover it of appellee; and, if she were a usurper, as alleged, that the Commonwealth’s attorney of the judicial district including Whitley County, could, by an action in behalf of the Commonwealth, oust her from the office.
The second ease relied on by appellee is that of Nichols v. Pennington, 118 S. W., 382. In this case there was a contest over the election of a school trustee, on the grounds that the election of the person whose right to the office was contested was secured through illegal votes; and that he was ineligible to hold the office because not a resident of the school district. The circuit court adjudged the contestant entitled 'to the office. On appeal, the judgment was reversed, it being held that neither ground of contest was tenable; and, as to the question of eligibility, the court adhered to the ruling in Wilson v. Tye, supra. When these two cases were decided the present primary election law had not been enacted and party nominations were not compelled to be made at a primary election.
Obviously, the word “eligibility” in the cases cited is used in the sense of constitutional or legal qualifica
“In onr opinion, when the General Assembly enacted this statute, in lieu of the former statute with reference to the trial of contested elections, it was intended to relegate the question of eligibility or legal qualifications for the office to a different or other course of procedure.”
Eligibility, in the sense above indicated, is not here involved. That appellee possesses the legal qualifications required by Section 100, Constitution, to enable him to hold the office of county court clerk, is not questioned ; but he did not and does not possess the political' or party qualifications that legally entitled him to receive the Republican nomination for that office, either by the voters of the Republican party at the primary, or at the hands of its committee after the primary, and thereby procure the printing of his name as its nominee, under its device, upon the official ballot used at the succeeding regular election. Here the question is not whether appellee is eligible (i. e., qualified) to hold the office, but whether he was qualified for or entitled to run or become a candidate for it as the nominee of the Republican party. As he did not possess the political or party qualifications entitling him to get on the primary ballot as a candidate .for the Republican nomination, and could not have been voted for in the primary by the Republicans of Knott County, the Republican county committee were without power to make him the nominee of that party by having his name placed on the ballot for use in the regular election, .under the Republican device, as its nominee; hence the nomination was void ab initio, for the conditions precedent to the procuring of the nomination, imposed by the primary election law, were never complied with.
It seems to be conceded by counsel for appellee that the primary election act contains no provision which could have been invoked by appellant, the nominee of an opposing party, to prevent the placing of appellee’s name on the ballot for the regular election, under the device and as the nominee of the Republican party. This is manifestly true, for the summary, exclusive remedy provided by Section 27 of the act is for the benefit alone of candidates claiming to have been wronged by a refusal to place their names on the -primary ballot.
“It will be observed that ‘only candidates may institute proceedings under this act;’ if they do so and the, relief asked for is denied by the court or judge, the orders or judgment of the court or judge determining •the matter ‘shall be final and not appealable.’ In other words, this section compels the candidate to have determined, by the method or procedure therein declared, whether a wrong has been done him in refusing his name a place on his party’s ballot in the primary, yet refuses him or the alleged wrongdoer the right of appeal, however much either may be dissatisfied with the judgment rendered by the court or judge. To say that this is unwise, not to say unjust, legislation, does not make it unconstitutional, or even unreasonable, as the right of appeal is not an inherent or constitutional right, but a right which the Legislature in i'ts discretion may confer or withhold. Turner v. Commonwealth, 89 Ky., 78; Vinegar v. Commonwealth, 101 Ky., 106.”
It is insisted for appellee that there is no provision of the law respecting regular elections that would have allowed appellant, the nominee of a different political party, to interfere to prevent the placing of his name on the official ballot as the Republican nominee. Whether this is so it is unnecessary to decide, as, in our opinion, when appellant’s election to the office in question is contested by appellee, he has the right to challenge the legality of the means whereby appellee procured the placing of his name on the ballot.
There is a marked difference between one’s being ineligible to hold an office' and ineligible to run for it as the nominee of a particular party. Eligibility to hold the office must depend upon whether the candidate claim
The Republican party of Knott County had the right to' refrain from nominating a candidate for county court clerk, if it saw fit; but, in that event, the place on the official ballot that would have been occupied by the name of its nominee for that office, had it made a nomination, must have remained vacant. It could not have been filled by the name of a candidate nominated by petition signed by voters of the Republican party; for the name of a candidate so nominated cannot, under the provisions of the present primary or general election law, go on the ballot under the device of any political party, but must be printed under a device, other than
Political party organizations are maintained as aids to good government, and if they accomplish their mission in this State, there must be a reasonable compliance with the requirements of the primary election statute; otherwise, electors would be deceived and defrauded of their right to vote for candidates of their own or their party’s choice. To permit appellee to profit by the nomination he secured, would be an injustice to the voters of the Republican party, as well as all other voters of Knott County, whether of other political parties or independents. The fact that the subterfuge by which his name was printed on the ballot, under the Republican device, and as its nominee, might have been prevented by the members of that party, is beside the question. Whether they were informed of it in time to have prevented it does not appear. At any rate, its. illegality can be raised by appellant in the contest instituted by appellee for the office, on the ground that it destroyed the validity of the votes cast for the latter-at the election, as it enabled him to practice- a deception on the Republican voters of Knott County and obtain their votes under the false pretense that lie .was a Republican ; whereas, he was, when posing as their nominee, has been at all times since, and is now, professedly a Democrat.
In our opinion appellee did not have the right to have his name go on the ballot as the Republican nominee, for which reason he was not eligible to be voted for at the election and could not properly be adjudged entitled to the office involved, even though it were made to appear that he received a majority of the votes cast.
Although the conclusion last expressed adversely disposes of appellee’s claim to the office in question, it nevertheless remains to be determined whether appellant was elected thereto. As said by Judge Cooley in his “Constitutional Limitations” (4th Ed.), page 787:
*666 “The questions involved in every case are: First, has there been an election? and, second, was the party who has taken possession of the office the successful candidate at such election, by having received a majority of the legal votes cast?”
A defeated candidate has the prima facie right to contest the election of his successful opponent. To recover the office he must show his own election to it; bijt though he fail in this, if he prove that the contestee did not receive a majority of the votes legally cast at the election, he may prevent him from taking the office; or*, “in case it shall appear from an inspection of the whole record that there has been such fraud, intimidation, bribery or violence in the conduct of the election that neither contestant nor contestee can be adjudged to have been fairly elected, the circuit court, subject to revision by appeal, or the Court of Appeals finally may adjudge that there has been no election. In such case the office shall he deemed vacant, with the same legal effect as if the person elected had refused to qualify.” Section 1596a, Sub-section 12, Kentucky Statutes.
So, notwithstanding appellee’s failure to show that he was elected to the office of county court clerk of Knott County, his institution of the present contest compels us to decide, upon the record before us, whether appellant was legally elected to the office. If appellant’s election to the office in question cannot he thus attacked, how and by whom can it be challenged? A court could, at the suit of the State by the Commonwealth’s attorney of the district as relator, oust him from the office if it were made to appear that he is a mere usurper; but in such action his ineligibility to hold the office, and not the 'illegality of his election to it, would constitute the ground for his removal. But in a contest his election to the office may he questioned, and if it be made to appear that he was not legally elected thereto, the court may, by its judgment, compel him to surrender it.
But before considering the grounds of contest upon which appellant’s election to the office in question is challenged, we will.pass on his third contention, which makes complaint of the ruling of the circuit court in permitting the filing of appellee’s amended petition, as its decision at this juncture will clear the way for a better understanding of the questions affecting the election.
At rule day, on December 1, 1913, appellant filed in the office of the clerk of the Knott Circuit Court a motion to strike' from the petition paragraph No. 2, a motion to make more specific and certain the averments of the petition, and, without waiving either of the foregoing motions, at the same time filed answer.
The answer contains a traverse and attacks appellee’s right to become the candidate and nominee of the Republican party, or to have his name on the official ballot under'its device; and, in addition, alleges that in precinct No. 8, known as Jones Fork, not less than seventy of the 145 votes shown by the return of the election officers to have been received and counted for appellee, were illegally and wrongfully counted and certified for him; that twenty-five of the seventy votes referred to were not legal voters in that precinct; an equal number were allowed to vote by marking their ballots openly on the table without first having been sworn; the votes of
The proof in the case was taken between December 1st and the succeeding term of the Knott Circuit Court, which began on the second Monday in March, 1914. During that term of the court neither appellant nor appellee requested of the court a ruling’ on the motions which had been filed by appellant December 1, 1913, but on the motion of the latter the case was stibmitted for trial and judgment at the March term. For some reason, however, perhaps because there was not time at that term to try it, the case went over to the next term, which began the second Monday in July, 1914, and during that term it was tried and disposed of. At no time during the July term, either before the trial of the case or while it was in progress, did appellant or appellee ask the court to pass on the previous motions of appellant to strike from the petition and make it more specific. On the 21st of July, however, apparently after the pleadings and evidence had been read and the case argued by counsel, but before the court announced or entered its judgment, appellee was permitted, over the objection of appellant, to file the amended petition.
Whether the filing of the amended petition resulted from the court’s discovery at that time of the motion to
“Comes the plaintiff, tendered an offer to file amended petition setting up the names of voters in compliance to defendant’s motion to require them to make more specific and certain the allegations of their petition; to which filing the defendant objects, the court being advised permits same to be filed, to which the defendant excepted and still excepts.”
The opening statement of the amended petition is: “The contestant, John Sturgill, pursuant to the ruling of the court herein, amends his original petition to make same more definite and specific.”
The amended petition presents for the first time the names of the voters whose .votes are alleged to have been illegally received and counted for appellant in the following precincts, viz., precincts Nos. 1, 2, 5, 6, 7. It will be recalled that the vote in the above precincts was assailed in- the original petition without naming the voters. In addition to the foregoing names, however, the amended petition sets forth the names of fourteen voters in precinct No. 9 (Ball), which it alleges were also illegally received, counted and certified for appellee; whereas, no attack was made in the original petition on the vote of precinct No. 9, or on that of precincts No. 3 (Beaver), No. 4 (Quicksand), or No. 8 (Jones Fork).
It is patent that the amended petition in attacking appellant’s vote in precinct No. 9 (Ball), sets up a new or additional ground of contest, not relied on in the original petition. This should not have been allowed. In a case of this character it is ordinarily admissible for the contestant or contestee to amend his petition or answer by making more definite and specific the grounds of contest or counter-contest set .out therein, but not to set up new or additional grounds. Indeed, this is expressly prohibited by Section 1596a, Subsection 12, Kentucky Statutes, which declares as to the petition that it “shall state the grounds of the contest relied on, and no other grounds shall afterwards be relied upon.” This is also true as to grounds of counter-contest made by the answer of the contestee. Wilson, etc. v. Hines, etc., 99 Ky., 221; Adams v. Roberts, 119 Ky., 364; Weller v. Muenninghoff, 155 Ky., 77; Butler v. Roberson, 158 Ky.,
It may happen, however, that the circumstances attending the offer to file an amended petition in a contested election ease, though for the sole purpose of making more specific the grounds of contest contained in the original petition, would be such as to make the permission to file it an abuse of discretion on the part of the court. In our opinion such is the situation here presented. In the first place, appellant’s motion to require appellee to make his petition more specific, is not itself specific, for it does not indicate in what respects the petition is indefinite or in what particulars it should be made more specific. In the second place, as appellant failed at the March term, 1914, of the circuit court, or at any time thereafter before the trial of the case, to call up the motion and ask the court to take action upon it, such-failure constituted a waiver or abandonment of the motion by him; and as appellee, though advised of the pendency of the motion from the time it was made, did not see fit to ask action of the court upon it, the presumption should be indulged that he consented to the waiver of the motion or was content to rest his case upon the grounds of contest as stated in the petition.
Something may have occurred during the trial to make appellee apprehensive as to the sufficiencv of the petition; and, if so, appellant’s neglected motion merely furnished a pretext for the offer to file the amendment. Under the circumstances, the court should not have allowed it to be filed. Without it the parties were on an equal footing. Neither had set out in his pleading the names of any of the persons of whose votes he complained. If the petition was insufficient by reason of the indefiniteness of the grounds of contest upon which appellee rested his case, the. answer was equally so with respect to the grounds of counter-contest relied on by appellant. The proof was taken and the case otherwise prepared by the parties and submitted, with the expectation that it would be tried upon the petition, answer and reply as framed and filed by them, respectively. If they were willing to try the case as they had prepared it, neither of them should have been required by the .court, after its submission, to question the sufficiency of the pleadings, or allowed to amend them. We had before us in Lunsford v. Culton, 15 R., 504, a state of case similar to that here presented. In dealing with it we said:
*671 “The names of the illegal voters are not given, or the reasons why these votes were illegal, and it would seem that this statement would scarcely apprise the contestee of the grounds of contest, so that he might be prepared to meet them. The contestant, in his reply to the causes of contest, sets up similar* charges, and as indefinite as those made by the contestee. * . * * The testimony before the contesting board was not objected to, nor any motion made asking that the notice be made more certain and definite, and it was not until the case reached the circuit court that a motion to quash the notice was made, and no motion in fact made in that court to make this statement more definite. * * * A notice of the contest because of illegal votes being.cast for the one party or the other, while it should be required to be made more definite, if objection is made in proper time, is sufficient if parties see proper to make an issue without objection and proceed to investigate the case.”
Another analagous case is that of Weller v. Muenninghoff, 155 Ky., 77, and we in that case said:
“When an election is over and the certificate has been issued to the successful party, no person who was a candidate, and who cannot point out some certain and sub-. stantial grounds of contest, should be allowed to harass and annoy the successful candidate by a law suit or put him to the expense and trouble of defending a case without knowing what charges he must be expected to meet and answer. Of course, if both parties, without raising any objection, are willing to try the issues on an indefinite and insufficient notice or other pleading, neither of them will be heard after the case has been submitted for judgment to raise a question as to the sufficiency of the notice or pleading. * * *”
For the reasons given, and because of its setting forth new grounds of contest, in addition to making more specific those alleged in the original petition, the ruling of the circuit court in permitting the amended petition to be filed was error.
We now come to the consideration of the final question, did appellant receive a majority of the legal votes cast at the election? While there is some evidence of bribery of voters at the election, in which the friends of both candidates engaged, but appellant did not personally participate, we concur in the conclusion of the circuit court that bribery was not so well established as to
We do not, however, concur in the circuit court’s conclusion as to the result of the election. It appears from the record that according to the certificate of the county election commissioners appellant received 960 and appellee 929 votes. It appears from the judgment appealed from that the circuit court deducted from the total vote accredited to appellant by the certificate of election, fifty-three votes, which he found to be illegal, either because of the ballots having been marked by or for the voters upon a table without their being sworn by the election officers as to their inability to mark them without assistance, or that they were exposed by the voters after being marked by them. These votes were deducted in the following precincts: Three from precinct No. 1 (Hindman), seven from No. 2 (Upper Carr), three from No. 5 (Lower Troublesome), eight from No. 6 (Lower Carr), eighteen from No. 7 (Caney), fourteen from No. 9 (Ball).
A careful analysis of the evidence convinces us that it is very indefinite as to the illegality of some of the votes thus deducted by the court, but, for the purposes of this case, we will concede that there was evidence conducing to show that thirty-nine of them were illegally cast and counted. It is manifest, however, that the fourteen votes in precinct No. 9 (Ball), were erroneously deducted from appellant’s vote, for, as previously stated, it was not alleged in the petition or made a ground of contest, that appellant had received any illegal votes in that precinct; and though such claim was attempted to be made by the amended petition, it could not be so done. So, crediting appellant with these fourteen votes in the Ball precinct, there will be left but thirty-nine votes to be taken from the 960 received by him, which will leave him a total of 921 votes.
It further appears from the judgment that thirteen votes were deducted by the circuit court from the 929 votes certified as cast for appellee. These deductions were properly made. Of these thirteen votes four were taken from precinct No. 8 (Jones Fork), and nine from precinct No. 9 (Ball). The evidence showed many addi
For the reasons indicated in the opinion the judgment of the circuit court is reversed and the cause remanded, with directions to that court to set it aside and enter in lieu thereof a judgment declaring appellant duly elected to the office in cpiestion.