187 S.W.2d 447 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1945
Issuing writ of mandamus.
The petitioners, Clyde R. Widick, Marvin Adams, O.U. Kays, E.K. Arnold, Ralph Wesley, E.L. McClurkan, G.D. Tinley, L.C. Kelly, and D.L. Cornn, suing for themselves and all others desiring an election on the question of prohibition in Bell County, have petitioned this court to issue a writ of mandamus directing the respondent, Honorable J.M. Pursifull, Judge of the Bell County Court, to enter an order calling for an election to be held in Bell County for the purpose of taking the sense of the electorate of that County on the question of continuing or discontinuing the legal sale of alcoholic beverages in the County as a whole. A petition requesting the call of the election to be held May 26, 1945, allegedly was signed by 5,225 voters of Bell County. Several dealers in alcoholic beverages in the County protested the calling of the election, upon the ground that there was not appended to the petition a sufficient number of bona fide signatures to demand the call of the election. The respondent permitted the parties representing each side of the question to introduce a vast amount of evidence, at the conclusion of which he struck 2,998 names from the petition, leaving 2,227 signatures, which admittedly is less than twenty-five per centum of the voters who cast their ballots at the last general election held in Bell County, and which is necessary to demand the call of the election. KRS
Of the 1,952 signatures struck by the court because they were appended by persons other than those whose names were written, the uncontradicted evidence shows that many hundreds of these witnesses authorized their names to be appended to the petition, and the signatures were appended in their presence. It is insisted that the court erred in not counting the names of the persons who authorized their signatures in this fashion. We are in accord with this contention. In Ledford v. Hubbard,
The evidence that many hundreds of names were signed by the passers of the petition at the direction and in the presence of the persons whose names were appended was refuted in respect to one signature only. We are of the opinion that the petitioners conclusively met the burden imposed upon them in respect to the remaining names signed in this manner. We conclude, therefore, that the respondent erred in striking these signatures from the petition; and, since their addition to the 2227 signatures, which are admitted to be valid, raises the number of petitioners beyond the necessary twenty-five per centum of voters who cast their ballots in the last general election, the court further erred in refusing to call the election.
But it is insisted that the court should have stricken from the petition the signatures of all voters living and voting in territory previously rendered dry by magisterial *776
district elections. The basis of this contention is that they are not voters of "the territory to be affected", as required by KRS
A writ of mandamus will issue forthwith directing the respondent to enter an order at the next regular term of the Bell County Court, to-wit, May 7, 1945, calling an election to be held on May 26, 1945, to take the sense of the voters of Bell County on the following question:
"Are you in favor of adopting prohibition in Bell County, Kentucky?" KRS
It is unnecessary to determine the other questions raised.
Whole Court sitting, except Judge Tilford.