Shindler v. Floyd

Opinion of the court bv

JUDGE PAYNTER

Affirming.

A local option election was held in Taylorsville, and the result was duly certified. More than ten citizens and legal *471voters of the town proposed to contest the election, and filed a written statement of the grounds of contest. They proposed to contest it before G. B. Shindler, county judge of Spencer county, and J. W. Snyder and B. L. Lutz, justices of the peace living nearest to the courthouse. These officers appeared, and, after considering the question, decided that they did not, under the law, constitute a board of contest to try the contested election, and refused to act. Thereupon the contestants instituted this proceeding, and seek to compel them to do so by mandamus. To determine this question involves the necessity of examining, to some extent, the statutes with reference to contested elections, etc.

Section 1534, Ky. St., (1899 Edition), which is part of the act of 1892, as amended on February 24, 1894, reads as follows: “The judge of the county court and two justices of the peace residing nearest the court house in each county, shall be a board, with like powers as those named in the last section, for determining the contested election of any officer elective by the voters of the county, or any district therein, except members of the General Assembly, and also of any police judge, clerk, marshal, or other elective municipal officers, where there is no other provision of law for determining the contested election of such municipal officers. . . .” It will be observed that this statute constitutes the judge of the county court and two justices of the peace residing nearest to the courthouse a board of contest to determine the contested election of any officer elective by the voters of the county, and also of any police judge, clerk, marshal, or other elective municipal officer where there is no other provision - of law for determining a contested election of such municipal officers. It is certain from The language of this section that this board was only au*472thorized to determine the contested election of officers. No jurisdiction is conferred upon that board to determine a contest of an election held for the purpose of determining whether the local option law should become operative, or whether the prohibition law should become inoperative. Thus the matter stood until 1894, when the Legislature enacted a law which provided that a local option election should be contested, and that provision is part of the local option act, and is section 2566, Ky. St., 1903. It reads as fol. lows: “The contest shall be heard and determined by the same board which, by law, is authorized and empowered to hear and determine a contest of an election for county officers. . . By section 13, p. 55, c. -13, of the election law of 1898, the county board of election commissioners is made a board of contest in lieu of the county judge and two justices of the peace, and this board was only authorized to determine the contested election of certain officers. There is nothing in the act showing an intention of the Legislature tu confer jurisdiction on this board to try. a contested election growing out of an election under the local option law.

The election law of 1900, Ex. Sess., p. 39, c. 5, section 32, repealed the provision of the law making the county-board of election commissioners a board of contest, and conferred jurisdiction upon the courts to try contested elections of certain officers. It will be observed that the Legislature enacted separate and distinct statutes, relating to contested elections of officers, from the statute providing for a contest of an election under the local option law.

The question here for determination is did the provision of the statute conferring jurisdiction upon the county judge and two justices of the peace to try contests of local option elections remain in force? When section 2566 was enacted, the General Assembly, in effect, wrote into it that the *473contests shall be heard and determined by a board consisting of the judge of the county court and two justices of the peace, residing nearest the courthouse. The act of 1898, as we have said, only conferred jurisdiction upon the board of county election commissioners to try contested elections df officers. The act of 1900 only provided that such contests should be tried in the courts. As the General Assembly in effect wrote in the section of the local option law that a contested election under it should be determined by the county judge and two justices of the peace, it is evident that the acts of 1898 and 1900 did not repeal it, because no reference is made to the act, and therefore it was not in terms repealed, and, as the act did not relate to the subject of contested elections under the local option law, it can not be held that it did so by implication. If the words had been actually written in the statute which we have said, in effect, were written therein, no one would contend that the acts of 1898 or 1900 repealed it. The office of county judge still exists, and likewise the office of justice of the peace; hence the incumbents of these offices may compose the board to determine contested elections held under the local option law, although the jurisdiction has been taken away from them to try contested elections of'officers. We have reached the conclusion that the county judge and two justices of the peace compose the board to try the contested election in question.

The judgment is affirmed.