192 S.W.2d 84 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1946
[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *360 Affirming.
On the face of the returns of the November, 1945, election, Frank E. Schaffield, Democrat, was elected Police Judge of Dayton over Arthur E. Hebel, Republican, by a majority of 11 votes. Hebel petitioned the court for a recount and Schaffield made his response a contest. The recount showed Hebet elected by a majority of one vote. The court dismissed Schaffield's contest, and he appeals.
It is now agreed that the court properly refused to count for either party five ballots which were not signed by one of the judges of the election. One ballot has a small cross mark, almost invisible, in the block opposite Schaffield's name, and he claims it should be counted for him. Apparently the shadowy mark was not made with a stencil. The folding of the ballot did not cause it; nor does it appear to have been left after an attempted erasure. The ballot was clearly and properly voted with distinct, clear stencil marks in three other races and for six of eight candidates for councilmen. There may be several guesses as to how or why this indistinct mark appears on the ballot in the race for Police Judge, but we are very sure that the voter did not make it with any intention that it should be counted and, therefore, that the court properly disregarded it. Another ballot had been stamped for Schaffield and then vigorously erased in a smearing manner. The rubbed fiber of the *361
paper shows the erasure. There was no attempt to vote in several other races, which would indicate that the voter had no purpose of voting in all the races. It is a well established rule that where a mark on a ballot reveals an effort to correct an error, or perhaps a change of mind, or evidences an intention not to vote, the ballot should not be counted. The two contested ballots, therefore, were properly not counted for either party. Wurts v. Newsome,
We are of opinion, therefore, that the result of the recount was proper.
The principal point presents an apparently new question in election contests. In two precincts the ladies appointed to be sheriffs of the election by the County Election Commission acted as judges, and the two ladies named as judges acted as sheriffs. In another precinct a lady who had been appointed a judge was disqualified and did not serve. The election was held by the other three officers, two ladies and one man. The other lady named as a judge served both as judge and sheriff, and also assisted the clerk, while the man appointed as sheriff acted as the other judge. In all these precincts the three persons appointed as sheriffs, but who served as judges signed their names on the ballot as judges. Hebel received 281 of the ballots so signed and Schaffield received 194. Schaffield contends that all of these ballots are invalid because not signed by the judges appointed by the County Election Commission; that the signatures of the sheriffs were nullities so far as giving validity to the ballots. If he should be sustained, then he would have a majority of 86 votes.
The swapping of offices in this manner is not to be approved or commended. The Board of Election Commissioners presumably exercised care and discretion in choosing and appointing persons to the respective election offices, having consideration for their special qualifications. KRS
As stated, the point here is that the ballots are invalid because not authenticated by one of the legally appointed judges as the statute requires. KRS 118.280; Johnson v. Caddell,
An officer de facto is to be distinguished from a mere usurper or one not having some color of title to the office, and to be one whose title is not good in point of law but who is in fact in the unobstructed possession of an office and is discharging those duties in full view of the public in such manner and under such circumstances as not to present the appearance of being an intruder or usurper. 43 Am. Jur., Public Officers, Sec. 471; Waite v. Santa Cruz,
"The general rule is well established that mere irregularities in the conduct of an election will not render it void; and it has been held that the holding of an election by persons who were not officers de jure, but who had colorable authority and who acted de facto in good faith, was not so grave an irregularity as to avoid the election."
In Trustees, Common School District No. 88 v. Garvey,
In the instant case, it may be said that each of the persons appointed by the County Board of Election Commissioners to be judges in the several precincts had declined to serve and that their respective places were filled by the other officers of the same political party, for they agreed to it, and also by the voters present, for they made no objection. This would bring their selection within the provisions of the statute relating to filling a vacancy. Certainly, those who acted as judges and signed their names as such were de facto judges of the election and their acts in signing the ballots constituted a proper authentication of them. This is in accordance with the general rule that the exercise by an officer de facto of authority which lawfully appertains to the office of which he has possession is as valid and binding as if exercised by an officer de jure, and an act by the one has the same force and effect as an act of the other so far as it is for the interest of the public or of third persons. Pence v. City of Frankfort,
Wherefore, the judgment is affirmed.