delivered the opinion oe the court.
This appeal involves the validity of an election held in the town of Hartford under the “local option” law. One of the grounds of contest is that the election is void because it was not conducted by secret official ballot but ivas openly conducted, it being claimed that the ballots used were not sufficiently thick to prevent them being distinguished from the back; that is, .they were so thin that, when voted, it could be easily ascertained by looking at the back of ballot thus voted whether a voter had cast his vote for or against the proposition. The questions to be considered on this ground of contest are: (1) If the ballots used were of the character alleged, should they render invalid the election? (2) Hoes the evidence sustain the claim of contestants that the ballots were so thin that it could be easily ascertained, by looking at the back of ballot voted, whether the voter had cast his vote for or against the proposition?
Before the adoption of the present Constitution, the vim vocc system prevailed in this State. In obedience to a popular demand for the reformed ballot system, commonly called the “Australian Ballot System,” the makers of the Constitution inserted a provision therein to the effect that all elections by the people (with one exception) should be by '.'secret official ballot,” and made-it the imperative duty of the legislative department of the State to pass laws to enforce the provision of the Constitution. The constitutional provision (section 347) reads as follows: “. . . *444All elections by the people shall be by secret official ballot, furnished by public authority to the voters at the polls, and marked by each voter in private at the polls, and then and there deposited. . . . The first general assembly held after the adoption of this Constitution shall pass all necessary laws to enforce this provision, and shall provide that persons illiterate, blind or in any way disabled, may have their ballots marked as herein required.”
With the view of carrying out the constitutional demand, the General Assembly enacted chapter 41, Kentucky Statutes; and section 1462 provides that “all ballots shall be printed on plain white paper, sufficiently thick that the printing can not be distinguished from the back. This provision of the statute is applicable to the election, the question as to the validity of which we have under consideration.
That it was the purpose of the Constitutional Convention to require that elections be held by secret official ballot is perfectly manifest by the language-employed. The Legislature so understood that to be the purpose of the makers of the Constitution. It provided that the ballots should be planted on paper sufficiently thick that the printing could not be distinguished from the back. The. language employed excludes the idea that elections can be held in any other manner than that prescribed by the Constitution and General Assembly. The subject was regarded as one of great importance, or the makers of the organic law of the State would' not have made such an imperative demand upon the General Assembly as was done. They were not content to leave it to the good judgment of Subsequent Legislatures to shape the policy of the State with reference to this political matter. That the purpose in view was one worthy of the consideration of the best *445talent in tlie State no one can doubt. Every freeman should be independent, and free from improper influences in the expression of his preference as to who should conduct the affairs of government, and as to the policies that should be adopted. If it is proper to obtain the assent of a freeman in such matters that assent should be the result of an honest judgment. He should be placed beyond reach of intimidation. The impression prevailed in the country that men and concerns employing large numbers of men used the great power which they possessed to control their employes in the exercise of an elective franchise. There was a fear that a system of bulldozing might be engaged in by such persons, which would result in the intimidation of honest employes, and thus force them to express the employer’s judgment, and not their own Whether such a condition existed or not, it was thought wise by the makers of our Constitution to throw around all honest voters all the protection it was possible to gbe them, and the best method of doing so was believed to be the secret official ballot. Again, it was believed that bribery in elections could be checked. It was intended by the secret official ballot, to make the condition such that those wdio were disposed to corrupt the voters of the country could not tell for whom they had cast their ballots, thereby reducing the temptation to use money in elections for corrupt purposes.
In discussing the object of the Australian ballot system, Wigmore on the Australian Ballot System (2d Ed., p. 52), says: “On the one hand, it checks bribery, and all those corrupt practices which consist in voting according to a bargain or understanding. No man has ever placed his money corruptly without satisfying himself that the vote was cast according to the agreement; . . . *446and when there is to be no proof but the word of the bribe taker (who m'ay have received thrice the sum to vote for the briber’s opponent), it is idle to place any trust in such a use of money. In other words, take away all interest in committing an offense, and the offense will soon disappear. . . . On the other hand, the marking of the vote in seclusion reaches effectively another great class of evils, including violence and intimidation, improper influence, dictation by employers or organizations,- the fear of ridicule and dislike, or of social or commercial injury,— all coercive influence of every sort depending on a knowledge of the voter’s political action. Tumult and disorder-at the polls, bargaining and trading of votes, and all questionable practices depending upon the knowledge gained, as the day goes on, of the drift of the contest,— it would hardly be necessary to argue in advance, even if England’s experience did not prove it, that these practices, wherever they have prevailed, must disappear. In short, the secret ballot approaches these more or less elusive evils, not merely with the weak instrument of a penal clause for this and that offense, but with the effective methods of modern legislation. By compelling the dishonest man to mark his vote in secrecy, it renders it impossible for him to prove his dishonesty, and thus deprives him of the market for it. By compelling the honest man to vote in secrecy, it relieves him, not merely from the grosser forms- of intimidation, but from more subtle and perhaps m-ore pernicious coercion of every sort. By thus tending to eradicate corruption, and by giving effect to each man’s innermost belief, it secures to the republic what at such a juncture is the thing vitally necessary to its health, — a free and honest expression of the convictions of every citizen.”
*447It is clear that tlie purpose of tlie constitutional provision was to liave a secret official ballot, so that corruption and intimidation in elections might be minimized, if not absolutely prevented. The organic and statutory law having been changed to put in force a new system of voting is conclusive evidence that it was intended to entirely eliminate the old system, and that the new law creating the new system must be construed as mandatory, if necessary to accomplish its purposes. It certainly violates the spirit and letter of the new law to so construe it as to leave in force the old law in a modified form. To do so destroys the essence of the .substance of the new law. In the judgment of tlu' makers of the Constitution, an election is not fair if the method employed exposes for whom or for what the electors vote. To pursue such a method isi to disregard the spirit and language of the Constitution and law, and render abortive the attempt to have a secret official ballot and a fair election.
A rule for the interpretation of statutes is given by Sutherland on Statutory Construction (section 459) as follows: “. . . Where the whole aim and object of the Legislature would be plainly defeated if the command to do the thing in a particular manner did not imply a prohibition to do it in any other manner, no doubt can be entertained that the command is imperative. . . .”
Endlich on the Interpretation of Statutes, in section 431, says: “When a statute requires that something shall be done, or done in a particular manner or form, without expressly declaring what shall be the consequence of noncompliance, the question often arises, what intention is to be attributed, by inference, to the Legislature? Where, indeed, the whole aim and object of the Legislature would be plainly defeated if the command to do the thing in a particular *448manner did not imply a prohibition to do it in any other, no doubt can be entertained as to the intention. . .
The Supreme Court of Nebraska, in State ex rel Waggoner v. Russell, 34 Neb., 118; [33 Am. St. R., 625; 51 N. W., 466], stated the rule for the interpretation of statutes relating' to the conduct of elections as follows: “Since the first consideration of the State is to give effect to the expressed will of the majority, it is directly interested in having each voter oast a ballot in. accordance with the dictates of his individual judgment.
Recognizing the principle first stated, the courts have uniformly- held that when the statute expressly or by fair implication declares any act to be essential to a valid election, or that an act shall be performed in -a given manner, and no other, such provisions are mandatory and exclusive. By an application of the second principle, the courts, in order to give effect to the will of the majority, and to prevent the disfranchising of legal voters, have quite asi uniformly held those provisions to be formal and directory merely which are not essential to a fair election, unless such provisions are declared to be essential by the statute itself.”
We are aware that a majority o-f the- courts of the country hold that mere irregularities on the part of election officers, or their omission to observe some merely directory provisions of the law, will not vitiate the poll, especially when the voters were in no wise responsible for the act or omission of the officer.
McCrary on Elections, section 225, says: “. . . But if, as in most cases, that statute simply provides that certain acts.or things shall be done within a particular time or in a particular manner, and does not *449declare that their performeance is essential to the validity of the election, then they will be regarded as mandatory if they do, and directory if they do not, affect the actual merits of the election.”
As the provision of the Constitution in question is, in effect, a declaration that the old viva voce system fails to produce fair elections', and that the new system is the proper means to accomplish it, it necessarily follows that the use of any except the secret official ballots affects the merits of the election, inasmuch as it was not a fair election, for that the law essentially requires.
A fair consideration of the provision of the Constitution and statute shows, that it was intended that a compliance with their provisions is essential to the validity of the election.
Judge Cooley, in Hoyt v. East Saginaw, 19 Michigan, 39; [2 Am. R., 76], says: “The courts, in their anxiety to sustain the action of public officers, where irregularities have occurred without the intervention of bad faith, have gone to the very extreme in holding legislative enactments to be merely directory, and have perhaps sometimes made decisions which dispensed with those things which the Legislature intended as1 essentials: The duty of the courts is to examine the statute-carefully, with a view to giving the legislative intention effect; and they ought to sustain defective proceedings* only in those cases: where it is fairly inferable that they observe that intent more nearly by sustaining them than by setting them aside on account of the omitted formality.”
It is not essential that the Constitution or statute should declare that ballots in violation thereof should not be counted, in order that they may be.rejected, because the object of the Legislature would be defeated if the kind *450of ballot prescribed is not used, and the use of any other kind of ballot is, from the language used, impliedly prohibited. It is suggested that such an interpretation may disfranchise voters, and that they should not be so disfranchised by reason of the fraud or mistake of some county clerk whose duty, under the law, is to furnish the ballots. Whilst the voter may lose his vote by reason of such conduct of a county clerk, still that fact can not change the meaning of the Constitution and the statute; nor, to prevent such wrong in a given case can the courts afford to give such an .interpretation to them as will destroy their purpose, and render possible the- evils which were intended to be remedied.
Should a county clerk fail to furnish any kind of ballots for the use of the voters, and the regular officers of the election should open a poll and permit the electors to vote viva voce for the candidates of their choice, we certainly would hold that the election was) invalid, because it was not in compliance with the law, but in disregard of it. The electors would not in any wise be responsible for the conduct of the clerk; still, their votes would not be counted.
Exactly the same condition exists when ballots are printed on paper so thin that it can be seen from the back for whom the electors cast their votes. The officers of the election could see for whom they voted, and it would be practically viva voce voting, and the evils intended to be remedied by a secret official ballot would still remain with us. Such an election would be invalid.
This court has been holding the constitutional and the statutory provisions made pursuant thereto mandatory.
In Banks v. Sergent, 20 Ky. L. R., 1027, [48 S. W., 151], it appeared that seventy-ñve persons had their ballots *451marked on the table by some officer of the election, without any disability being shown, or without swearing the voter; that the voters appeared with a card upon which was written the names of the parties for whom they desired to vote, and one of the election officers would read it aloud, usually, and the clerk would mark the ballot, and it was then deposited in the box. It was also shown that the booths were placed near a window with the window lights out, and large cracks in the log house; that, when the voter went into the booth to vote, it could be seen by persons outside how he marked his ballot. In passing upon the question, the court said: “It seem®1 to us that at precinct No. 5 the officers of election wholly failed to hold the election under the law. It was in no sense a secret ballot. The secrecy of the ballot is the fundamental idea of all elections, and this is required by the Constitution as well as by the statute.
“This central idea, being disregarded in .this precinct, and a practical viva voce election held, as the proof shows, we are of the opinion that the returns therefrom should be disregarded.”
In Major v. Barker, 99 Ky., 308; [35 S. W., 544], it appeared that some ballots were marked openly by the clerk of the election without a statement under oath of disability required by section 1435, Kentucky Statutes. The court said:
“In our view, the statute imperatively requires that the voter shall declare his disability on oath before his ballot can be marked for him by the' clerk, and to permit the officers to ^assume, either from the voter’s appearance or from their own alleged personal knowledge, that he is so disabled as to be unable to mark his own ballot, would be to open a door for wholesale evasion of the require*452ment of the secrecy in the ballot. This rule may result in hardship to the individual voter in cases where the officers are neglectful of their duty in requiring the oath of disability to be made, but the requirement ■ that the voter shall take the oath before his ballot can be marked' and deposited in order that he may be punished if he make a false declaration is in our judgment mandatory to the voter.” ' • •
■ We are of the opinion that all ballots should be printed on white paper, sufficiently thick that the printing can not be distinguished from the back, and if ballots are used at an election which do not substantially comply with the law, the election is not conducted as required by law, and is invalid.
. Whilst a majority of the court concur in the views expressed as to the law, there is a difference of opinion on the question as to whether the testimony >is sufficient to sustain the ground of contest we have expressed. A majority of the court being of the opinion that it is not sufficient, therefore we do not hold that the election was invalid for that reason.
Counsel for appellants contend that the petition asking that the election be ordered is defective because it does not purport to have been signed by a number of legal voters of each precinct or polling place in Hartford equal to twenty-five per cent, of the votes cast in each of the precincts at the last preceding general election.
Section 2554, Kentucky Statutes, provides:
“Upon 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, of the votes-, cast in each of said precincts at the last preceding general election, and when, for town or city elections, the num-
*453ber of votes cast at the last city or town election, it shall be the duty of the judge of the county court in such county, at the nest regular term thereof after receiving said petition, to make an order in his order book directing an election to be held in the said county, city, town, district or precinct, as the case may be, on some day named in said petition,” etc.'
A careful reading of the section shows that the first-clause of it relates to legal voters in each precinct to be affected by the election. The territory referred to is a precinct or- precincts which compose the political subdivision of a county. The second clause relates to city or town elections. When it is proposed to have an election in a city or town, the petition must be signed by a number of legal voters, equal to twenty-five per cent, of those cast at the last city or town election.
When the election is-proposed to be held in a territory comprising precincts, the petition should, be signed by a number of voters equal to twenty-five per cent, of the votes cast in each of the precincts at the last preceding general election.
Although there may be a number of voting places in a town or city, still it is not necessary that the petition should be signed by a certain per cent, of those living within a prescribed territory within the town or city, but it means a number equal to twenty-five per cent, of those who cast their votes at the last city or town election; so-we think counsel is in error in saying that the petition is not sufficient.
It is contended that the county court is of inferior and limited jurisdiction, and therefore, the order should state all facts essential to show that it had jurisdiction to order the election; that it should recite that there was a *454written petition filed, signed by a number of legal voters in each precinct of the territory to be affected, equal to twenty-five per cent, of the votes cast in each of the precincts at the last preceding general election.
Assuming for the argument that counsel is correct as to what the order should contain, still we do not think there was any substantial error in the proceedings, or that the order was defective in the particular mentioned. We have stated our conclusion that the petition should be signed by a number of legal voters, equal to twenty-five per cent, of the votes cast at the last town or city election. This being true, it follows that we do not agree with counsel that the petition should be signed by twenty-five per cent, of the legal voters of precincts, &e., as in the meaning'of the statute under consideration precincts were not to be affected by the result, but the town.
There appeared in the order directing the election to be held language as follows, to-wit:
“It is adjudged by the court that the petition had been signed by twenty-five per cent, of the legal voters in each of the precincts to be affected by the proposed vote before the same was filed herein, and the court being advised, it is ordered that an election be held in the town of Hartford, Kentucky, county of Ohio, on the 3d of September, 1808, to take the sense of the legal voters, &c.”
The county court assumed that there were two precincts in Hartford to be affected by the proposed vote, and therefore adjudged that the petition had been signed by twenty-five per cent, of the legal voters in each of the precincts, because the order recites the fact that twenty-five per cent, of the legal voters in each of the precincts to be affected by the proposed vote had -signed the petition.
If this be true, more legal voters had signed the peti*455tion than was required to sign it, because the record shows that at the last election in Hartford, one hundred and fifty-eight votes were cast, and forty-one legal voters appear to have signed the petition asking for the election.
While the language of the order does not follow strictlj the statute, yet it recites that more voters signed the petition than was required by law. The criticism that the order does not recite that a written petition was filed is not proper, because the order recites that the petition had been signed, do. This, in effect, states that the application was made by written petition.
We are of the opinion that if it was necessary to recite in the order the facts to give the court jurisdiction, the proper time to do so was when the order was entered directing the election to be held.
There are other objections raised to the validity of the election, but we do not think they are sufficient to warrant us in adjudging the election invalid.
The judgment is affirmed.
JUDGES' DuRELLE and BURNAM dissenting. JUDGE GUFFY delivered SEPARATE OPINION.