delivered the opinion of the court.
The indictment charges that the accused, on the 15th day of May, 1895, unlawfully sold spirituous, vinous and malt liquors in Stanford magisterial district. The indictment is under the “Local Option Law.” The election to determine whether or not liquors should be sold in the Stanford magisterial district was held under the local option act of 1892.
•It is contended the act is invalid because the Journals of the House and Senate relating to the passage of the act show a certain state of facts with reference thereto. The *122Journals are not admissible as evidence tor the purpose mentioned. The act in question must be accepted as having, been constitutionally passed. (Lafferty, county judge v. Huffman, &c., ante.)
This question was so fully considered in the opinion in that case it is unnecessary to discuss it here. The petition was lodged with the judge of the county court on the 25th day of January, 1894, and on the 26th day of March, 1894, the election was held. The act provides that the election shall not be held “earlier than sixty days after the application is lodged with the judge.” It does not say sixty days after the day on which the application is made, but says after the application is lodged. The time begins to run after t he act of lodging the application, not after the day on which the application is lodged. In estimating the sixty days the day on which the application for the election is made must be included, and sixty days had elapsed before the day on which the election was held. This interpretation is in accord with numerous decisions of this court. (Wood v. Commonwealth, 11 Bush, 220; Handley v. Cunningham’s trustee, &c., 12 Bush, 401; Mooar v. Covington City National Bank, 80 Ky., 305; Chiles v. Smith, 13 B. M., 460.)
It follows the election is not invalid for the supposed reason that the required time had not elapsed from the time of the act of lodging the application therefor until the election. The indictment alleges that “the judge of the-county court of Lincoln county, upon a written petition which he had received and filed January 25, 1894, by a number of legal voters, equal to 25 per cent, of the votes cast in each of the precincts in said Stanford magisterial district at the last preceding general election, and which, requested him to do so made an order,” etc.
*123It is not alleged in terms that the application for the election was made by written petition, “signed by a number of legal voters in each precinct” of the magisterial district, equal to twenty-five per cent of the votes cast in each of said precincts at the preceding general election. It is insisted that the indictment should charge that the petition was signed by the legal voters, and further that the legal voters thus signing the petition were voters in Stanford magisterial district. The indictment charges that upon a written petition, received and filed January 25, 1894, by a number of legal voters, equal to twenty-five per cent, of the votes cast, etc., the order for the election was made directing the sheriff of the county to open a poll in the Stanford magisterial district for the purpose of taking the sense of the legal voters in the district as to whether liquors' should be sold in the district. There is a failure to allege that the legal voters who presented the petition were such .voters in the precincts of the Stanford magisterial district. It is only on the application “by written petition, signed by a number of legal voters in each precinct of the territory to be affected,” equal to twenty-five per cent., etc., which authorizes the judge of the county court to make the order for the election. The indictment is defective because it fails to state the petition was by “legal voters in each precinct” of the Stanford magisterial district. It is essential that that allegation should be made, because the first section of the local option law requires that those signing the petition should be “legal voters in each precinct of the territory to be affected” by the election. The indictment is not defective because of a failure to allege the petition was signed. To say as the indictment does, that upon the written petition by a number of legal voters, etc., the order *124for the election was made, imports that the legal voters presenting it had signed it. This opinion (as have been many others by this court), is in conflict with Young v. Commonwealth, 14 Bush, 161.
That case was under the former local option law, which provided for taking the sense of the voters as to whether or not liquors should be sold in a given territory, and the court said: “An indictment under the act should charge the defendant with the offense of selling spirituous, vinous and malt liquors without a license therefor, and contain a statement of the acts done by him, which constitutes the offense, and of the place where the acts were done, as in Civil District No. 5, in Meade county, and that the defendant had no license authorizing him to so sell.”
In many cases the Young case has been followed, the court holding that when an act can only be put in force by taking the sense of the legal voters of a given territory the court can not fake judicial notice of the acts which are essential to be done to put it in force. In other words, the court does not judicially know the act, thus depending upon the will of the legal voters, has been.put in force. We think the better rule is to require the indictment to allege a state of facts which show that the act has been put- in force as required by its terms. In so far as this opinion is in conflict therewith, Young v. Commonwealth is overruled.
For the reasons we have given the judgment is affirmed.