162 Ind. 1 | Ind. | 1904
¡-Appellant and appellee were opposing candidates for the office of county auditor of Brown county at the general election held in November, 1902. The appellee received 1,019 of the legal votes cast at that election, and the appellant 615 of such votes. The appellant, within the time fixed by law, gave notice of his intention to contest the election of the appellee, and filed his statement of the grounds of such contest in the office of the clerk of Brown county. The board of commissioners of said county was thereupon convened do try the cause, and the appellee appeared to the action. On the motion of the appellee the proceeding was dismissed by the board on account of the insufficiency of the facts stated to constitute a cause of action. An appeal from this judgment was taken to the Brown Circuit Court, where the motion to dismiss was renewed. The court sustained the motion, and rendered judgment for the appellee.
The error assigñed is upon the ruling on the motion to dismiss.
The ground of contest was the alleged ineligibility of the appellee to the office at the time of the election, and at the time of the commencement of the term thereof, for reasons which are thus stated in the complaint: “That on the 15th day of November, 1901, the democratic party of Brown county, Indiana, held a primary election in said county for the purpose of nominating county candidates for the offices of said county to be voted for on the 4th day of November, 1902, and the contestee and one John C. Ross were, and had been for more than three months theretofore, opposing candidates for the nomination of county auditor of said county; that said Ross was a qualified elector of said county, and was eligible to said office; that on the 15th day of October, 1901, the said Ross and the said Seitz were the sole candidates for said nomination; that Commodore P. Ilanna and Isaac Tabor were qualified voters of said county, and supporters of said Ross for said
The supposed acts of bribery consisted in procuring the withdrawal of Ross as an opposing candidate for the nomination lor county auditor at a democratic primary election held Ebvember 15, 1901, and in entering into an agreement with Hanna and Tabor, electors of said county, by which they undertook to use their influence with the other electors of said county for the said John B. Seitz as a candidate for the office of county auditor, and to discourage and dissuade any other elector of said county from becom
It is insisted by appellant that these proceedings rendered the appellee ineligible to the office of county auditor, to which he was elected, under §6, article 2, -of the Constitution of this State, and also under §2327 Burns 1901, defining and punishing the offense of bribery at primary elections. The provision of the Constitution, supra, is as follows: “Every person shall be disqualified for holding office during the term for which he may have been elected, who shall have given or offered a bribe, threat or reward to secure his election.” And §2327, Burns 1901, declares that, “Any person being a candidate for nomination to any office of' profit or trust under the Constitution or laws of this State, or of the United States, before any convention held by any political party, or at any primary election, who loans, pays, or gives, or promises to loan, pay or give any money or other thing of value to any delegate or elector, or any other person, for the purpose of securing the vote or influence of such delegate, elector, or person, for his nomination, and whoever hires or otherwise employs for consideration any person to work for the nomination of any person to any office, or to work for the selection of any delegate to be chosen at any party convention or primary election, shall, upon conviction thereof, be fined in any sum not more than $500, and disfranchised and rendered incapable of holding any office of profit or trust within this State for any determinate period, and if nominated shall be ineligible to hold such office.”
Section 6, article 2j of the Constitution, and §2327, supra, are highly penal, and must be strictly construed as against the persons who are sought to be subjected
The complaint charges that in consideration of the withdrawal of Ross, the opposing candidate for the nomination for county auditor at the primary election, and the agreement of Hanna and Tabor, on behalf of themselves and Ross, to use their influence with the electors of the county for the appellee, and to discourage and dissuade any other elector of the county from becoming a candidate for the-nomination for county auditor at said primary election in opposition to the appellee, the latter agreed to pay to Ross $300 and execute his note, with surety, for said sum.
The agreement alleged to have been entered into by the appellee with Hanna, Tabor, and Ross, fell under the prohibition of §2'327 of the statute. It included an express promise, in writing, by the appellee, who was a candidate for nomination to an office of trust and profit at a primary election, to pay $300 in money to Ross, an opposing candidate, for the purpose of securing his withdrawal from the race, and the influence and services of Hanna and Tabor for the nomination of the appellee.
We express no opinion in regard to any objections which may he taken to §2327, supra, but hold that the complaint was insufficient because it failed to allege that the appellee had been adjudged guilty of a violation of its provisions. The pleading was not good under any other section of the statute.
The court did not err in sustaining the motion to dismiss the action. Judgment affirmed.