O'Neal v. Minary

125 Ky. 571 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1907

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Hobson

Affirming.

The regular terms of the Woodford county court are held on the fourth Monday in each month. July 23, 1906, was the fourth Monday. On Saturday, July 21st, a petition signed by 152 citizens of Versailles was filed with the county judge, asking that an election be ordered held in the city of Versailles on the 19th of September, 1906, for the purpose of taking the sense of the legal voters of the city upon the proposition whether or not spirituous, vinous, malt, or other intoxicating liquors should be sold therein, the law to apply to druggist’s; and the court, being satisfied from the petition and evidence heard that the petition was signed by the number of legal voters in each precinct of the city, as required by the statute, *576ordered the petition filed. Thereafter, on the same day and hy the same attorneys, W. 0. Davis and Lewis A. Nuekols, a petition was filed signed by the requisite number of voters in each precinct in Wood-ford county, asking an election he held in. the county on September 20,1906, for the purpose of submitting the same question to the vote of the county. The court in like manner ordered this petition filed. On the following Monday morning, when the county court was. in session, the petitioners in the first petition, asking the vote to be taken in Versailles on September 19th, appeared by the attorneys who had filed the petition, and asked the court to withdraw it, declining to make any deposit, as required hy the statute. The court sustained the motion, and, the deposit having been made upon the petition asking the vote in the entire county, ordered an election to he held in the county as therein prayed. Both the petitions above referred to had been gotten up by the people who were opposed to the sale of intoxicants in the county, and it was evidently contemplated by them that, if the election was held on the 19th, the subsequent election by the whole county on the 20th would control the result in the whole county under the county unit law; the city not having voted on the same day as the county. But some of the persons who wanted whisky sold in the city had an attorney present in the county court apparently to ask that the city election should be held, not on the 19th, as asked in the petition, but on the 20th, the same day as the county election. This attorney objected to the motion to dismiss the petition for the city election; but, as he did not then represent any of the petitioners, the objection was overruled. Later, on the same day, and before any of the orders *577bad been entered on tbe' order book, this attorney* representing the same parties whom be bad represented, in tbe morning and a minority of the petitioners, but. not 25 per cent; of tbe legal voters of the precincts, cast at tbe last election, appeared in court and tendered the' becessary suiri of inoney, and moved the' court upon tbe petition that bad théretofore bee'ni' withdrawn to order an election in Versailles on September 20th. Tbe court overruled this motion on the .grohnd that be did not represent enough of tbe petitioners to authorize tbe action to be taken. After-wards, and oh a subsequent day, tbe same attorney appeared before tbe county court with a paper signed by 34 of tbe petitioners, stating that they bad not authorized the petition, to be withdrawn, and asking that the order be set aside. Tbe court overruled this motion. From these orders of the county court an appeal was taken to tbe circuit court, and, that court having dismissed tbe appeal, tbe parties complaining have appealed to this court. .In the meantime tbe same parties, or they with others, filed a petition in tbe circuit court, asking a mandamus against tbe county judge requiring him to order an election to be held in Versailles on September 20, 1906. The circuit court dismissed tbe petition, and from tbis judgment they also appeal. Tbe election was held in the county, and resulted in a larg-e majority against the sale. The vote was canvassed, and the certificate was given of tbe result. Thereupon those who Were in favor of tbe sale brought an action on October 12, 1906,. reciting tbe facts above stated against tbe county judge and tbe county clerk to enjoin them from spreading tbe certificate of tbe election upon tbe records of tbe county court. Tbe circuit court dismissed tbis petition, and they appeal. They also' brought another *578suit on the same day against the clerk and the county judge, setting out the same facts, and asking on the same and other grounds the same relief. Precincts 1 ¿and 2 of Woodford county constitute the city of Versailles. These two precincts voted in favor of the sale. The plaintiffs asked that the vote of these precincts be certified and spread on the record separately from the vote of the rest of the'county. The circuit court sustained a demurrer to the petition and dismissed it, and from this judgment the plaintiffs appeal.

The four appeals will be considered together, as they involve largely the same questions. The same attorneys filed both the petitions on Saturday. Although the petitions were filed, still nothing could be done under the statute until the necessary deposit was made to cover the expenses of the election, and, until the court had acted upon a petition, the petitioners might withdraw it. It was their petition. They were not -required to go on with the proceeding, if they decided to abandon it, and any one of them had the right to withdraw. The attorneys who had filed the petition had prima facie a right to speak for their clients and withdraw the petition in their names. The county judge, therefore, when they failed to make the deposit and withdrew their petition, did not abuse a sound discretion in allowing them to do so, although objection was made on behalf of other persons who were not parties to the petition.

When, in the afternoon, an attorney representing a few of the petitioners tendered the amount necessary, and proposed to have the order entered for an election in the city of Versailles, he could only speak for his clients, and he did not have the requisite number of petitioners; all the other petitioners having with*579drawn their petition. The county judge could not order an election on a petition- signed by less than the statutory number of voters, and, although a voter had signed the petition, still he might at any time before the petition was acted upon withdraw his name, and, if this left less than the statutory number, no election could be ordered. The statute is not satisfied if a petition signed by a sufficient number of voters is filed with the judge. There must be a sufficient number of petitioners asking the calling of the election. No one is responsible for the cost of the proceeding but the petitioners. No one is required to make a deposit but the petitioners. If litigation ensues, no one may be responsible for the cost but the peti-. tioners. It would therefore be a very harsh rule to say that a person who had signed such .a petition cannot withdraw from it before it is accepted. Remonstrances against the granting of license are frequently withdrawn in county courts, although the writing has been filed with the county court, and there is no sound reason why the same rule should not apply to a petition for an election under the local option act before it is acted on by the county court. As all the signers to the» petition , had withdrawn, except the minority who offered to make the deposit, there was not a petition by the requisite number of voters when this offer was made, and the election could not then be called. There was, therefore, no error on the part of the county judge in any of his rulings in this matter. The people who wanted an election held in Versailles on the same day as the county election could have protected themselves by getting up a petition to this effect, having it signed by the -requisite number of voters, and filing it with the county judge after the petiton for a vote in the *580County was filed with Mm on July 21st. They had no light to rely on a petition gotten up by others for an election on another day. It is reasonably clean from the récord that the county petition and the petition for a vote in Versailles on the 19th of September were gotten up by the persons who were opposed to thé sale of whisky, and this fact was evident from the beginning. Versailles is a city of the fourth class. It had a right to vote on the same day as the county voted, and those who wished to secure to it this right should, after the county petition was filed, have gotten up a petition asking the holding of an election by the city of Versailles On the same day as the county election. In this way they conld have protected themselvés.

The order entered by the county court directed an election to be held in the county upon the proposition “whether or not spirituous, vinous, or malt or other intoxicating liquors” should be sold in Woodford county; the law to apply to druggists. The advertisement of the election by the sheriff stated that the election would be held to take the sense of the voters of Woodford county on the proposition stated. The votes, however, as cask were on the proposition set out On the ballots: “Do you favor prohibiting the sale, barter, and loan of spirituous, vinous and malt liquors in Woodford county, Ky., such a prohibition to apply also to druggists” in said county? Section 61 of the Constitution uses the words “spirituous, vinous or malt liquors.” In section 2554, Ky. Stats., 1903, the same words are used. The act of March 14, 1906 (Laws 1906, p. 86, c. 21), which is-now seetion 2560, Ky. Stats., 1903, uses the words “spirituous, vinous, malt, or other intoxicating liquors,” and the county judge in his order used the phraseology *581qI that act. The act of 1906 simply repeals section 2560 of the former local option law, and substitutes a new provision in its stead. • It did not change any of the other provisions of the act. The law .for calling the election is still to be found, as before, in section 2554, and the penalty for violating the law, in section 2557. Section 2560 must be read in connection with the other words of the act- ■ Vfhen thp Legislature used the words “or other intoxicating liquqrs” in the act of 1906, it, no doubt, had ip mind sepfion 2557a, Ky. Stats., 1903, which makes the sale of “any beverage, liquid mixture, or decoction of any kind which produces or causes intoxication” a violation of the local option law. The addition of the words “or other intoxicating liquors”- in tlie act of lyiarch 34, 1906 (Laws 1906, p. 86, c. 21) in no wise changed the sense, for, under the existing law, the amendment would have had precisely the same effect if these words had been omitted. By the old law, no “beverage, liquid mixture, or decoction of any kind which produces or causes intoxication” can be sold legally in a local option district, and, if the act of 3906 had simply used the words “spirituous, vinous or malt liquors,” the legal effect of the act would have been precisely the same as it is now. The addition of the words “or other intoxicating liquors” in the orders of the court and the sheriff’s notice added nothing to the sense, and took nothing from it. The legal effect was the same as if these words had not been used.

The county court had only ordered an election tq be held in the county of Woodford, and only a potice for the election for the county had been given. There was no order for an election in the city of Versailles, and no notice that such an election would be held. In canvassing the vote, therefore, the canvassing *582officers properly canvassed the vote of the county, and certified it accordingly, for there was nothing to authorize them to make a separate canvass or a separate return as to the city of Versailles. The appellants were not entitled to an injunction restraining the county clerk from spreading upon his record book the certificate given by the canvassing officers, as that certificate was legal, and was the only certificate which the canvassing officers were authorized to •make. The canvassing officers are not a party to these proceedings; but, if they were, the result would be the same. They could not be required to certify the result in an election which had not been ordered to be held, and of which no notice had been given. The difficulty in the case probably arises from the fact that, when the act of 1906 was passed, there were some newspaper publications to the effect that the act made cities of the first, second, third, and fourth classes a unit, and the remainder of the counties in which such cities were situated outside of the city another unit, for local option purposes. But this is not the language i of the act. The act makes the county the unit. It does not except cities of the first, second, third, and fourth classes out of the operation. It only allows them to vote on the same day that the county votes. If the act had' excepted cities of the first, second, third, and .fourth classes out of its operation, then the position taken for appellants could be maintained; but the act was evidently drawn intentionally to avoid this very thing. The county is made the unit, and the city within the county is bound by the action ’of the county, unless an election is held for it on the same day with the county; and, in that event, as some force must be given to every part of the act, and the privilege given the *583city is not an empty form, it must mean that, when the election is held for the city on the same day on which an election for the entire county is held, its vote is to he counted separately, and is to have effect, although the city may vote one way, and the county another. In the ease at bar, as no election was held for the city on the day when the county election was held, the vote of the county must control. The precincts within the city of Versailles, when an election is held for the entire county, and not for the city, stand just as any other precincts in the county. The purpose of the elcetion is to ascertain the will of the county as a whole, not the will of a particular precinct. If the county should vote in favor of the sale, the precincts which vote against the sale would not have the right to have their vote so recorded, and the law declared thereafter in force in those precincts. Unless an election is held for the city on the same day as the county election is held, the vote of the county as a whole must control.

. By section 978, Ky. Stats., 1903, appeals are allowed from orders of the county court in certain named cases, and ‘ ‘ in all other cases allowed by law. ’ ’ Orders calling an election in local option cases are not mentioned, nor have we been able to find any provision of law allowing an appeal from an order of the county court in such matters. If the county judge refuses to order an election when the statutory requirements are complied with, he may be compelled by mandamus to act; hut his discretion cannot he controlled by mandamus. Although a day is named in the petition for the election, the county judge may fix another day in his discretion, not earlier than 60 days after the application is lodged with him. When a petition is filed for an election in an entire county, *584and it appears that a city of the first, second, third, or fourth classes desires to vote on the same day, the county judge should so frame his orders that justice may be done to all parties. If a petition is filed for an election in an entire county, and also a petition for an election in a city of the first, second, third, or fourth class within the county, while the county judge cannot be required by mandamus to name a certain day for the county election, when he has fixed the day for the county election, he may be required by a mandatory injunction to fix' the same day for the city election, if he should refuse to do so, for in no other way may the rights of the city under the act be preserved. In the case at bar, the county judge was required by statute to order the county election at the July term as he did, and under the facts shown hie had no authority to order an election for the city of Versailles at that term, as there was no sufficient petition before him, after the one which had been filed was withdrawn.. Under the circumstances, it would have been proper for the county court to have set the date of the county election a month later, so as to «have given an opportunity for the town to get up its petition and have an election ordered on the same day; but he was not asked to do this. As no appeal lies from his order directing the elction to be held, we cannot review it. As the county judge has a discretion in fixing the day for an election, he cannot be controlled by mandamus as to what day he shall fix. His discretion is not to be exercised in the interest of either side, but to give both sides a fair- show under the law. A city of the first four classes is entitled to vote on the same day as the county, if the necessary petition for this purpose is filed, and the county judge in the discharge of *585liis official duty should in this, as in all other matters exercise his discretion to prevent an advantage being taken and secure justice. The trouble here seems to have grown largely out of a misapprehension of the meaning of the act, and there appears no error in the rulings of the county judge.

The constitutionality of the act of 1906 was affirmed by this court in the opinion this day delivered in the case of Trustees of New Castle v. Scott, 101 S. W- 944.

The judgment in each case is therefore affirmed.

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