113 Ky. 864 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1902
Opinion of the court by
Affirm ino.
Appellant was indicted and convicted in tlit* Barren circuit court for violating the local option law. It is insisted for him that the indictment is insufficient, bemuse it does not show that the petition under which the vote was taken was filed in the county court at the term preceding that at which the election was ordered. In Com. v. Cope (21 R., 845) (53 S. W., 272), the previous rulings were reviewed
It is also insisted that, there was no evidence to warrant a conviction. The proof by the Commonwealth’s witness was, in substance, that he went into appellant’s drug store, and, without telling his business, walked back behind, and laid his money on a desk or something of that kind back there, and a little pale fellow, who was the only person in there, handed him the bottle of whisky. He did not call for whisky — just laid down his money, and the fellow handed the bottle to him. He guessed he was a clerk in the store, as he waited on him. He went there, hunting for whisky. This was sufficient evidence to warrant the submission of the case to the jury, although the defendant himself was not present; for, as this little pale fellow was the only person in the store, the jury, as well as the witness, were warranted in concluding that he was a clerk, and from the peculiar form of the transaction they were also warranted in concluding that such sales were not unusual there. The court, instructed the jury that if the sale was made by an authorized agent or clerk, in the regular course of business, the defendant was guilty. This was proper. The statute provides that no trick or device shall be allowed to defeat the law, and that a conviction may be sustained against the person in possession of the house in which the liquor is obtained. Kentucky Statutes, sections 2570, 2571. These sections are evidently intended to make the owners of stores liable in cases like this, in the absence of evidence showing that the sale was unauthorized.
1. The petition not having been properly filed, and the county judge having no authority to order the election, it was void, as held in the cases above1 referred to. Being void, the judgment in the, contest case could not cure the vice in it; but that is not the effect of the judgment. A judgment estops the parties against whom it is rendered to raise the question that, has been adjudicated against them. Thus, if a note is a forgery, yet, if a judgment has been rendered upon it by default, the defendant will not be allowed to plead that it is’ a forgery in a subsequent proceeding for the reason that he is concluded by the judgment. So, though a patent is issued without proper legal
2. The rule is elementary that, when a matter is in litigation, parties are required to bring forward their whole case; and “the plea, of res ad-jndicata applies not only to the points upon which the court was required by the parties io form an opinion, and pronounce judgment, but to every point which properly belonged to the subject of litigation, and which 'the parties), exercising reasonably diligence, might have brought forward at the time.” Davis v. McCorkle. 77 Ky., 746; Williams v. Rogers, Id., 776; Hardwicke v. Young, supra. The same rule is laid down in Freem. Judgm., section 240. Near the close of that section the learned author says: “So, where the character and effect of a writing is settled by the judgment of a court of competent jurisdiction, it can not be shown in another action between the same parties that it owdit to be given a different effect; and a judgment in favor of defendants in a suit against county commissioners to enjoin an assessment for road improvements on the ground of their want of jurisdiction to make it a bar to a subsequent suit claiming their want of jurisdiction upon a ground not before urged.” Whether the petition for the election was properly filed and the election regularly ordered was a ground
3. By section 2e(5(>, Kentucky Statutes, elections under the local option law may he contested by any number of the citizens and legal voters, not less than ten, of the territory to he affected; and written notice of the contest must he given to the county judge, and published, as therein directed. Under this provision any one in the district affected may have himself made a contestant, for the number of contestants is unlimited. The statute also provides that any number of citizens and legal voters, not less than ten, may become contestees. The judgment that is rendered is either that the majority of the legal votes east at the election were against the sale of intoxicants or were in its favor; in other words, the judgment is in favor of the law or against it, and puts it in force in the whole territory, or declares that it is not in force. It is, therefore, a judgment binding the entire territory. What, then, is its effect as to persons not in fact parties to the contest?- In Freem. •Judgm.. section 170. it is said: “In many instances tin; relation of the nominal parties to the suit to other persons is such that the latter are conclusively bound by a judgment against tlie former, in the absence of fraud or collusion. although they are not notified of the pendency of the suit, and are not called upon to conduct its prosecution or defense In respect to the question who are those parties whose interests are thus inseparably associated, the decisions are often inconsistent; but undoubtedly the general' principle, sanctioned by a vast preponderance of authority, is that pverv person who has made an unqualified agreement to become responsible for the result of a litigation,