Opinion op the O'ourt by
John D. Carroll, CommissionerAffirming.
The parties to this litigation were contending candidates for the office of county judge of Perry county at the regular election in 1905. On the face of the returns appellant, who was contestee, received 735 votes and appellee, who was contestant, received 727 votes!, being á majority of 8 votes in favor of appellant, and he was given the certificate of election by the hoard of election commissioners. The appellee contested his election, and upon a trial of the case- the circuit court found that appellee received 792 votes and the appellant 763 votes, and adjudged that appellee was elected by a majority of 29 votes.
It is contended for appellant that the court erred in counting for appellee the questioned ballots in Leatherwood, Troublesome, and Mason Creek precincts, and in refusing to throw out Carr’s Pork, *76Forked Mouth, Hazard precinct No. 4, and Hazard precinct No. 10, that gave substantial majorities for appellee, on the ground that gross frauds and irregularities were practiced in these precincts. In Leather-wood, Troublesome and Mason’s Creek precincts the election officers returned a number of ballots, inclosed in sealed envelopes and marked “Rejected;” but there was no certificate or statement, signed by the election officers, as to whether they had or had not been counted, and, if counted, what part, and for whom, as required by section 1482 of the Kentucky Statutes of 1903. The circuit court counted these rejected ballots, and found that, in addition to the votes returned by the election officers, appellee was entitled to 2 votes and appellant to 13 votes in Mason’s Creek; in Troublesome precinct that appellee was entitled to 5 votes and appellant to-2 vote's; and that appellant was entitled to 13 votes in Leather-wood precinct and appellee to 58 votes- — counting for appellee 65 votes of the- rejected ballots, and for appellant 28. Under the authority of Neely v. Rice, 29 R. 1142, 123 Ky. 806, 97 S. W. 737, in which the opinion was delivered in November, 1906, none of the rejected ballots from these precincts should have been counted for either candidate, because the election officers failed to comply with the requirements of section 1482 of the Kentucky Statutes of 1903 as above set out.
Rejecting these ballots, the result would be the same as that certified by the election commissioners, if no changes were made in other precincts; but the ballot boxes in all the disputed precincts were brought before this court and the ballots recounted, and it appears that in Bowling precinct the election officers certified that appellant had received 110 votes, and appellee 72 votes, when the ballots show that appel*77lant received 88 votes and appellee 87 — the recount of this precinct making a difference of 37 votes in favor of appellee, as appellant only received 1 majority, when the election returns gave him 38. In Lost Creek precinct the election officers returned that appellant had received 65 votes and appellee 35 votes, making a. majority for appellant of 30 votes; whereas the recount -of the ballots show that appellant received 57 votes and appellee 35 votes, appellant’s majority being 22, in place of 30. In Mason’s Creek precinct the election returns gave appellant 88 and appellee 55 votes. A recount of the ballots shows that appellant received 91 votes in this precinct and appellee 54 votes, making a gain for appellant of 4 votes. To recapitulate:
The election returns gave to appellant... .735 votes To this should be added in Mason’s Creek.. 4 votes
Making a total of...........•.........739 votes
From this must be deducted:
In Bowling precinct............37 votes
In Lost Creek precinct......... 8 votes— 45 votes
Leaving appellant’s total............694 votes
As appellee on the face of the returns received 727 votes, his majority was 33 votes.
At Forked Mouth and Carr’s Fork precincts a large number of illiterates voted in violation of the law, and in these precincts appellee received a substantial majority; but the record fails to show for whom the illiterates voted, and therefore the returns cannot be purged of their votes. The law is well settled that, where illegal votes are cast and counted, the candidate who undertakes to purge the ballots of 'these votes must show' for whom they voted, and this can be done by the evidence of the officers of election *78who saw the persons vote, or, if need be-, by the evidence of the voters themselves voting openly and illegally, who may be compelled to testify for whom they voted; and, where- the party undertaking to purge the ballots fails to adopt this method, the- entire vote of the precinct will not be rejected for any irregularity of this character. Napier v. Cornett, 68 S. W. 1076, 24 Ky. Law Rep. 576; Preston v. Price, 85 S. W. 1183, 27 Ky. Law Rep. 588; Browning v. Lovett, 94 S. W. 661, 29 Ky. Law Rep. 692. We do not feel authorized to reject the entire vote of these precincts because of the irregularities practiced, and therefore the vote in these precincts must stand as returned by the election officers.
The record shows that the town of Hazard has twD voting precincts, known as “.Hazard Precinct No-. 4” and “Hazard Precinct No. 10.” There were only 23 registered voters in Hazard precinct No-. 4, and 70 registered voters in Hazard precinct No-. 10, while there was cast and counted in each of these- precincts a greater number of votes than those registered; but it appears that these precincts embraced territory not within the town- of Hazard, and,- as the- registration law applies only to voters residing in a city or town, those voters who lived outside the corporate limits of the town had the right to vote without being registered, and this fact accounts for the discrepancy between the registered vote and the vote- cast.
Irregularities were practiced in other precincts; — in fact, in a majority of them — by both parties.; but they are not sufficient to affect the result.
Upon the whole case, we conclude- that appellee was fairly elected, and the judgment of the lower court is affirmed.
Petition for rehearing by appellant overruled.