275 S.W. 866 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1925
[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *301 Reversing.
Appellant and appellee were contenders for the Democratic nomination for county attorney of Floyd county in the primary of August, 1925. The appellee received the largest number of votes on the face of the returns and was awarded the certificate of nomination. Thereupon the appellant filed this contest proceeding contesting that nomination. The lower court sustained a motion to quash the return of the sheriff upon the notice and grounds of contest and also a special demurrer to the same because of lack of jurisdiction of the court, and then dismissed the contest proceeding. From that judgment this appeal is prosecuted.
The appellee has filed a motion in this court to dismiss this appeal because the appellant failed, as he claims, to file the statement required by section 739 of the Code, in that plaintiff, although he gave in the statement he did file the date of the judgment appealed from, failed to state therein the page of the record on which that judgment might be found, and, also, failed to sign the statement filed. We find no requirement in the Code that the statement should be signed. Kentucky Statutes, section 1550-28, governing contest proceedings in primary elections, provides that the party desiring to appeal from the judgment of the lower court shall execute a supersedeas bond in the time and manner therein prescribed. On the execution of this supersedeas bond, this section provides:
"The clerk shall immediately thereafterwards transmit to the clerk of the Court of Appeals the original papers in said contest, including such transcript of evidence as may be furnished or as may be required by the court or by the parties, and said record *302 of said contest when received by the clerk of the Court of Appeals shall be immediately delivered to the chief justice."
It will be observed that under this section the original record in these contest proceedings is sent to this court. Original records in the lower courts are never paged and very seldom bound together. Such is the condition of the record in this case, and so it was impossible for the contestant to give the page number of the judgment. In such state of case a substantial compliance with section 739 of the Code is all that is necessary. The purpose of the Code is to point out and identify the judgment appealed from and to assist the court in finding it in the record. The judgment in this case was identified in the statement of appeal filed, by its date, there being no other judgment entered in this case on that day. Hence the contestant did substantially comply with the requirements of the Code, and his failure to give the page number of the judgment, since there was no page number to give, is not to be charged against him. The motion to dismiss the appeal will, therefore, have to be overruled.
Three questions are presented on this appeal: First, whether or not the court was correct in quashing the return on the notice and grounds of contest; second, whether or not the court was correct in sustaining a special demurrer because of lack of jurisdiction in the court, and, third, whether or not the presiding judge should have vacated the bench on motion made by contestant for that purpose supported by affidavits. Section 1550-28 of our statutes, above referred to, further provides:
*303"Any candidate wishing to contest the nomination of any other candidate who was voted for at any primary election held under this act shall give notice in writing to the person whose nomination he intends to contest, stating the grounds of such contest, within five days from the time the election commissioners shall have awarded the certificate of nomination to such candidate whose nomination is contested. Said notice shall be served in the same manner as a summons from the circuit court, and shall warn the contestee of the time and place, when and where the contestee shall be required to answer and defend such contest, which shall not be less than three, nor more than ten days after the service thereof."
The notice and grounds of contest in this case were filed on the last day they could have been filed under the statutes, and this was on a Saturday. They were filed in the circuit clerk's office about nine o'clock in the morning. The contestant's proof on the motion to quash the return of the summons tends to show that at the time the contest was filed one of contestee's attorneys, a kinsman of his, was in the circuit clerk's office and there examined or at least looked over the papers being filed. Shortly thereafter the notice was placed in the hands of a deputy sheriff. What that officer did with the notice can best be ascertained from the return he made thereon, which is as follows:
"The within notice and grounds of contest came to hand on Saturday, August 8, 1925, at 9:45 a. m. Immediately thereafter I called at the office of contestee, Porter Mayo, and found the doors to said office open but no one in said office. I again called at said office at a later hour and found the door open but no one in said office, but found the stenographer who works for said Porter Mayo at her usual desk in the adjoining office of A.J. May, brother-in-law of Porter Mayo, each of them being members of the firm of May, Allen Mayo, and was informed by said stenographer that the said Porter Mayo had gone to Beaver creek. I then made inquiry from the ticket agent of the Chesapeake Ohio Railway Company and found that no ticket had been purchased by said Mayo at said office for Beaver creek on this day; I then called at the residence of the said Porter Mayo and was informed by the said Porter Mayo's wife that he was in the town of Prestonsburg and was down at his office.
"I again called at the office of the said. Mayo, but he could not be found there. I then called at the residences of A.J. May and Ed. Allen, each of whom is a brother-in-law of said Porter Mayo, and was informed that he was not at either of said residences. I made a search throughout the whole of said day for the said Porter Mayo and at different places in the town of Prestonsburg usually frequented by the said Mayo, but could not find the said Mayo at any of such places. I again called at the residence of the said Porter Mayo and at his usual place of abode at 5:30 o'clock p. m. and could not find him at his *304 usual place of abode; and I thereupon executed the within notice and grounds of contest upon the said Porter Mayo by delivering a true copy of the same to Reba Mayo, wife of Porter Mayo, at the residence and usual place of abode of the said Porter Mayo, she being a person over the age of sixteen years and residing in the same family with the same and said Porter Mayo, on August 8, 1925, at 5:30 o'clock p. m.
"Given under my hand this August 8, 1925. "(Signed) M.V. ALLEN, Sheriff Floyd Co. By JERRY ALLEN, D.S."
Contestant also filed affidavits of others to the same effect. On the other hand, contestee's proof on this issue tends to show that he was in the town of Prestonsburg until after the 9:40 a. m. train arrived and until after the mail which came on that train had been received at the post office and distributed; that he was at the post office while this mail was being distributed and there talked to several residents of the town; that he then got in a wagon and rode out of town in a northwesterly direction, but shortly thereafter returned to the town and was seen by several people about the streets; that the went home to dinner at 11:30, and after eating went out to his mother's farm a mile or so south of the town to sow a turnip field, where he remained for some two hours; that on his return to the town he went to the safety vault of the bank where he did business, remained there some little time, after which he was again seen on the streets, it being then about five o'clock; that on his return home for supper his wife gave to him the notice and grounds of contest theretofore served on her by the sheriff. It is also shown, and indeed it is not disputed, that the sheriff first gave to contestee's wife the notice and grounds of contest when he met her on the streets of Prestonsburg about five o'clock in the afternoon; that after he had reported his actions to contestant's attorneys, there being some doubt as to the legality of the same, he went to the home of contestee and there found his wife. The sheriff avers that he asked her to give the notice which he had served on her back to him, and this she did, whereupon he again served it upon her. The contestee's wife says that he simply asked to see it and that when she handed it to him he looked at it a moment and gave it back to her without further comment. On this, however, we must accept the return of the deputy sheriff, for the manner of *305 his service is involved, and in the absence of a charge of fraud or mistake, his return on this point is conclusive. Kentucky Statutes, section 3760.
On this proof both parties rely upon the case of McKay v. Grundy,
Passing to appellee's second contention, we find that the notice of contest, in so far as it warned appellee to appear and defend, reads is follows:
"The contestee, Porter Mayo, is hereby notified and warned that the contestant, Joe P. Tackett, will on the third day after the service of this notice, together with the grounds of contest attached hereto, at the hour of eight o'clock a. m. in the court room of the court house, in the town of Prestonsburg, Floyd county, Kentucky, move the honorable judge of the Floyd circuit court to set aside and vacate the certicate of nomination as awarded to him, the contestee herein, to declare the same null and void and to award him, the contestant herein, a certificate of nomination as the Democratic nominee for the office *307 of county attorney, to be voted for at the regular November election, 1925. The said contestee, Porter Mayo, is hereby notified and warned to appear to make answer and defense to the said contest, if any he may have."
The parties agree that it is the duty of the contestant to fix a time in the notice for contestee to answer, failing which, the notice is defective and the court has no jurisdiction of the contest. Baxter v. Watts,
It is also urged that the notice does not warn the contestee to appear on this third day and make his answer, but only states that contestant will move for judgment on that day. We regard this objection as super-technical, since the notice, when fairly read, fairly warns the contestee to make his defense at the time the contestant will move the court to set aside and vacate the contestee's certificate of nomination. Any reasonable man knows that if he does not make a defense at the time of such a motion, the same may go by default, and, therefore, when the contestant states that he will make such motion at such a time and place and the contestee is warned to appear and make answer, any reasonable man knows that the contestant is calling upon the contestee to make his answer at the time of such motion. The lower court sustained the special demurrer for want of jurisdiction on the ground that the notice failed to designate the time when appellee should appear and defend the contest. As seen, the lower court in this was in error and the special demurrer should have been overruled.
As the case must be reversed for the foregoing reasons, it becomes necessary also to consider contestant's contention that the trial judge should have vacated the bench. In support of his motion to that effect, contestant filed certain affidavits, the purport of which is that the trial judge had openly and publicly stated that the notice of contest filed in this contest was insufficient prior to the time when its sufficiency was before him for decision; that he had been in frequent conference with the contestee and his counsel, and that he was hostile to contestant and very intimate with the contestee and his attorneys, to the latter of whom he was related by blood or marriage. Under our practice the trial judge could not file counter affidavits, and the correctness of his ruling in refusing to vacate the bench must be measured solely by the sufficiency of the contestant's affidavits. These affidavits failed to bear out contestant's contention that whatever conferences the judge had with the contestee and his attorneys were with reference to this case. In so far as contestant avers that the judge was hostile to him and friendly to the opposing party and his counsel, to the latter of whom he was related, the affidavits are also insufficient. On this point, the whole matter was considered in the recent case of Nelson v. Commonwealth,
For the reasons herein given, the judgment of the lower court quashing the return on the notice and grounds of contest and sustaining a special demurrer thereto for want of jurisdiction is erroneous and is reversed. The clerk will issue the mandate forthwith.
Whole court sitting.