189 S.W.2d 855 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1945
Affirming.
At the primary election held in August, 1945, there were six candidates for the Republican nomination for the office of city commissioner of Corbin. Two candidates were to be selected. G.W. Walker received the highest number of votes and his nomination is not questioned. The county election commissioners certified that John C. Rose received 537 votes, the next highest number of votes cast for any candidate at the Republican primary election, and that Ed Shotwell received 534 votes.
There are nine voting precincts in the City of Corbin. Seven of them are in Whitley county and two are in Knox county. Within the time required by law, Ed Shotwell, pursuant to the provisions of KRS 122.060, filed a petition for a recount in the seven precincts located in Whitley county. On the recount the court found and adjudged that Ed Shotwell received 540 votes in all of the voting precincts of the City of Corbin, and that John C. Rose received 536 votes, and it was further adjudged *557 that Ed Shotwell was entitled to a certificate of nomination as one of the Republican candidates for the office of city commissioner. Rose has appealed, and the principal ground urged for reversal of the judgment is that the court erred in opening the ballot boxes and counting the ballots, since the appellee failed to establish their integrity.
The rule in recount proceedings is that before a ballot box can be opened and the ballots recounted, the one seeking the recount must prove satisfactorily that the ballot box has been kept as the law requires, and that the ballots have not been tampered with. Moore v. Stephenson,
Six of the precincts in which the ballots were recounted showed a discrepancy of one vote, and this was in favor of appellant. In the remaining precinct, which was precinct No. 5, the county election commissioners had counted 45 votes for Rose and 69 votes for Shotwell. On the recount the court found that 45 votes had been cast for Rose and 77 for Shotwell, a gain of 8 votes for Shotwell. About 30 of the ballots in precinct No. 5 were marked by the voters with a lead pencil, and only 5 of these ballots were voted for Rose. It is argued that this is unusual and indicates that the ballot boxes had been tampered with, and these ballots or some of them had been inserted in the boxes after the count by the election commissioners. All of these ballots were signed on the *559 back by the clerk of election and one of the judges, as required by KRS 118.280, and it is not intimated that the signatures are not genuine. Five disputed ballots counted by the court are filed as exhibits. We find that they were correctly counted with the possible exception of one, which was counted for appellant.
Judgment is affirmed.