194 S.W.2d 174 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1946
Affirming.
This appeal is from a judgment dismissing the plaintiffs' petition in an action to test the legality of the election held on November 7, 1944, in Beaver precinct in Pulaski county, at which the question propounded to the voters was whether cattle should be prohibited from running at large in the precinct. A majority of the electors who took part in the election voted in favor of the prohibition. *185
KRS
On August 9, 1929, the fiscal court of Pulaski county adopted the following order: "On motion of Esq. Warren and duly seconded by Esq. Randolph a quorum present and concurring it is ordered and adjudged that all elections held on the proposition whether cattle or any species thereof shall be permitted to run at large on the public highways and unenclosed lands of any proposed territory shall be held in and confined to voting precincts and not otherwise."
The appellants challenge the election held on November 7, 1944, on the ground that the foregoing order is void since it fails to show that a majority of the members of the fiscal court voted in favor of the proposition that all elections held in the county on the question whether cattle shall be permitted to run at large shall be confined to voting precincts. It is conceded that the election is valid, as held by the lower court, if the order is valid. The decision of the question turns on the proper construction of the phrase "a quorum present and concurring." Appellants argue that this phrase properly construed means that "as there are eight justices and the county judge composing the fiscal court, five would be a quorum and that if three of the five voted for the resolution, there would have been a concurrence of the five." This is a strained construction. The record discloses that the county judge and seven justices of the peace were present at the meeting of the fiscal court when the order was entered. The order clearly means that all members of the fiscal court present at the meeting voted for the resolution. Webster's New International Dictionary defines concurring as united in agreement. As used in the order before us, it means *186
something more than mere acquiescence. As said in Blakemore v. Brown,
The circuit court properly held the election valid, and the judgment is affirmed