86 Ky. 596 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1888
delivered the opinion op the court.
At the August election, 1886, the appellant and appellee were opposing candidates for the office of jailer of Pike county, Kentucky.
It is agreed that the officers of the election for pre
The appellee contested the appellant’s right to the office upon the ground that these twenty-five votes cast for the appellant after seven o’clock in the evening were illegal votes, and should not have been received or counted, because they were cast without the hours prescribed by the Constitution of the State. The circuit court sustained the appellee’s contention, and
This court has held time and again, and recently in the case of Anderson v. Winfree, 85 Ky., 597, that where the election has been held within the hours fixed by the Constitution of the State, and at the place designated by law, mere irregularities in appointing the officers of. the election, or mere irregularities in the proceedings of the officers of the election, will not vitiate the poll; nor will such irregularities be permitted to disfranchise, for the time being, a legal voter voting at such an election, unless such irregularities affect the real merits of the case.
This court has announced the foregoing doctrine upon the ground that the appointment of the officers of the election, and the manner of their conducting it, are regulated by statute; and in order that the legal voter may be protected and not be disfranchised, for the time being, by mere irregularities in the appointment of the election officers, or mere irregularities in the proceedings of the election officers, the statute authorizing their appointment and prescribing the manner in which they shall conduct the election must be construed to be directory merely, and not mandatory, unless such irregularities really affect the merits of the case, in which case the statute must be construed to be mandatory.
But the question presented in this case is altogether different. Here we are called upon to deal with a constitutional question. For section 16 of article 8 of the present Constitution of this State provides: “All -elections by the people shall be held between 6 o’clock in the morning and 7 o’clock in the evening.”
Should this rule of construction be applied to the Constitution of the State? We think not. The Constitution of the State was adopted by the people of the State as the fundamental law of the State. This-fundamental law was designed by the people adopting it to be restrictive upon the powers of the several departments of government created by it. It was intended by the people that all departments of the State-government should shape their conduct by this fundamental law. Its every section was, doubtless, regarded by the people adopting it as of vital importance, and worthy to become a part and parcel of the constitutional form of government, by which the governors-as well as the governed were to be governed. Its every mandate was intended to be paramount authority to all persons holding official trusts, in whatever department of government, and to the sovereign people themselves. No mere unessential matters were intended to> be ingrafted in it; but each section and each article was solemnly weighed and considered, and found to-be essential to the form of constitutional government adopted. Whenever the language used is prohibitory,, it was intended to be a positive and unequivocal nega
The section under consideration uses the word “shall;” it is mandatory, and excludes the right to hold the election earlier than six o’ clock in the morning, and later than seven o’clock in the evening. If' the language was construed as directory merely, the election might not only be continued until nine or ten o’clock at night, but all next day and the day after, and on and on, unless the courts in the exercise of a discretion should limit it, and thus make a constitutional provision in disregard of the one made by the people, for the government of elections.
For these reasons it is clear’ that the votes cast after seven o’clock in the evening, for the appellant, were illegal, and that the circuit court did right in excluding them.
Subdivision 8 of sec. 1, art. 7, chap. 33, of the Gen. Stats., provides: “Where another than the person returned shall be found to have received the highest
Deducting the twenty-five illegal votes from the number of votes that the appellant received in the county, the appellee received the majority of the legal votes cast. And according to the section of the statute supra he was elected and entitled to the office.
The judgment of the lower court is affirmed.