110 Ky. 261 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1901
Affirming.
It appears from, the petition in the case that on the 7th June, 1897, a petition was presented to the county judge of Spencer county, signed by the voters- in Mt. Eden precinct, exceeding 25 per cent, thereof, petitioning the judge to make an order directing an. election to bfa held in said district to take the sense of the voters upon the proposition whether -or not spirituous, vinous, or malt liquors should be sold, bartered, or loaned therein. On the next county court day thereafter the said county judge directed Sheriff A. J. Massie to open a poll in said district and hold an election therein on August 7, 1897, for the purpose of taking the sense of the voter» in said district, and on said day appointed officers to conduct said election. It further appears that the sheriff gave the proper notice of said election, and the election was held August 7, 1897, and at the time provided the canvassing board canvassed the returns, and are threatening and about to have said certificate spread- upon the order book of the Spencer County Court. It is further alleged that at the July term certain parties- — not the ones named in the order af appointment for officers — were the legal officers of the election, having been appointed in August, 1897. The return of the canvassing board showed the following result: “In favor of the sale of liquor is 124. Against the sale of liquor, 141.” It is further alleged that said election is null and void for many reasons. First, because the petition in writing did not name or state therein any day on which the election was to be held; second, because it did not state that the election should be held not earlier than sixty days after said application is lodged with the judge of said court; third, because said election was held on a day fixed by the county judge,
Section 2554, Kentucky Statutes, provides for elections to be held to determine whether or not spirituous, vinous, or malt liquors shall be sold, bartered, or loaned therein, and it is provided that, if 25 per cent, of the votes- cast in such precinct at the last preceding general election shall be signed to the petition, the judge at the next regular term thereof after receiving said petition shall make an order on his order book directing an election to be held “on some day named in said petition, not earlier than sixty days after said application is lodged with the judge of said court, which order shall direct the sheriff, or other officer of said county, who may be appointed to hold said election, to open a poll at each and all of the voting places in said county . . . for the purpose of taking the sense of the legal voters of said county . . . upon the proposition whether or not spirituous, vinous or malt liqors shall be sold,” etc., therein. Section 2566 provides that any election held under the local option law may toe contested, and shall be heard and determined by certain county officers, who are by law the board of contest.
As .tb the first ground relied on in this action, it is sufficient to say that the omission of the petitioners to name a day upon which the election should be held did not in
We think the county judge had power to fix any day not earlier than sixty days after the application was lodged with him, whether such day or any day was named in the petition. This being true, the third and fourth grounds relied on by appellants are not tenable.
The fifth reason given for invalidating the election was because said election was held by officers appointed by the judge to hold said election, when it should have been by the regular officers then in office. We are inclined to the opinion that it was proper for the county judge to appoint special officers' to hold said election, for the reason that the spirit, if not the letter, of the statute required a division of the officers between the parties favoring the sale of liquor and those opposed to it. If the regular county officers for that precinct had been directed to hol’d the election, it might have happened that they would all have been in favor of the sale, or all against it. And the manifest intention of the law seems to be that the order directing an election to be held should have been directed to the sheriff of the county, whose duty it was to give requisite notice thereof, which it is admitted he did give.
The sixth ground is because the result of the election was not publicly announced by one of the judges at the close of .the polls, and this ground is controverted by the defendants, and no proof introduced upon the question, and the presumption is that the officers discharged the siatutory duty required. Rut, even if such announcement was hot made, tlu; election would not thereby be invalidated.
The seventh objection is that the ballots unvoted were
If is the contention of appellees that the. only remedy open to the appellants was to contest the election as provided by statute. It was decided in Russell v. Road Co., 13 Bush., 307, that when a statute has created a new right, and' has also prescribed a remedy for the enjoyment of a right, he who claims the right must pursue the statute remedy. It was also said in the case of Kentucky River Navigation Co. v. Commonwealth, 13 Bush., 436, that, whenever a statute creates a right and provides a remedy, that remedy can alone be made available. In the case of Stine v. Berry, 96 Ky., 66; 16 R., 279 (27 S. W., 809), this court had under consideration a suit in which it was sought to question the right of Berry to hold the office of mayor of the city of Newport. The law authorized a contest for the office in such cases. Stine gave notice of contest, but afterwards withdrew the same, and instituted an action against appellee for the usurpation of an office. The court, in discussing the question, said; “'It is insisted that the manner of contesting oity elections provided by the city charter is merely cumulative, and the action in ordinary, in lieu of The writ of quo warranto, may be maintained. We understand, and so adjudge, that the statute in regard to contesting elections for State and county offices is exclusive, and that, when a mode of contest is provided in a city