Horton v. Botts

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Settle

Affirming.

By order of the Montgomery County Court an election was held in that county September 30, 1912, to take the sense of the voters as to whether spirituous, vinous or malt liquors should be sold therein. There were 2354 votes cast-; of these 1628 voted against and 726 for the sale of liquor; giving the “drys” a majority of 902 votes.

Within the time prescribed by law the appellee, relying on the alleged invalidity of the order of the county court directing and calling the election, instituted a contest which resulted in a finding by the Board of Contest against the validity of the election. On appeal the circuit court rendered a like judgment, and from that judgment this appeal is prosecuted. The original petitions asking the calling of the local option election were filed in the county court August 1st, 1912; on August 23, which was the next regular term of the county court, petitions containing additional names asking for .the calling of the election were filed and on the same day the order of the county court requiring the holding of the election and fixing the date thereof was entered.

The ground upon which the invalidity of the order for the election was rested by the finding of the board of contest and the judgment of the circuit court was the want of jurisdiction in the county court to make the order, because of the absence from the petitions asking the order, of the names of a sufficient number of qualified voters from each precinct of the county to constitute 25 per cent of the votes cast therein at the last preceding election; it being held that the signers of the petitions from Aaron’s Run precinct, and precinct C. of ward 3 in the city of Mt. *13Sterling, respectively, did not amount to 25 per cent of the votes cast therein at the last preceding election. If convinced by our consideration of the case that this is true as to any one of the precincts mentioned, it must necessarily result in an affirmance of the judgment declaring the-election void.

It is insisted for appellants that the county court had jurisdiction to order the election if the petitions as a whole contained as signers the names of a sufficient number of qualified voters to constitute 25 per cent of all votes east in the county at the last preceding election. In other words, that the county must be the unit in ordering, as well as voting in, a local option election. Manifestly this contention cannot be sustained.' Section 2554, Ky. Stats., under which a local option election for the entire county may be called, provides: “Upon application by written petition, signed by a number of legal voters in each precinct of the territory to be affected equal to 25 per cent of the votes cast in each of said precincts at the last preceding election * * # it shall be the duty of the judge of the county court in such county at the next regular term thereof after receiving said petition, to make an order on his order book, directing an election to be held.”

In construing this statute we have uniformly held that to authorize the calling of a local option election for the county, the petition must contain names of qualified voters from each precinct of the county equal to 25 per cent of the votes cast at the last general election in each of such precincts. McAuliffe v. Helm, 157 Ky., 626; Smith v. Patton, 103 Ky., 452; Nall v. Tinsley, 107 Ky., 441; Barton v. Edwards, 143 Ky., 721; Cooper v. Cardwell, 151 Ky., 620. The case of Com. v. Jones, 27 R., 16, does not, as claimed by counsel for appellants, conflict with the construction given the statute in question by the authorities, supra. In Commonwealth v. Jones the prosecution grew out of Jones’ violation of the local option law by selling spirituous, vinous and malt liquors by retail in a magisterial district where it was in force. . The principal question in the ease was as to the construction to be given the order calling the local option election, and while it was held to be ambiguous in its terms, it was on the whole treated as substantially showing that the petition upon which the election was ordered was signed by a sufficient number' of voters in each precinct to- constitute 25 per cent of the *14number of votes cast therein at the last preceding general election.

It next becomes necessary to determine whether the petitions upon which the election was ordered contained the number of petitioners from each precinct of the county necessary to confer jurisdiction upon the county court to make the order.

The situation as to the Aaron’s Run precinct was as follows: It is conceded that in the last preceding general election, held in November, 1911, there were cast in this precinct 170 votes. Therefore, the names of 43 legal voters were required on the petition from that precinct. The original petition contained the names of 50 signers. It was shown that two of the persons who signed this petition were not legal voters; 14 -withdrew their names, but one of the fourteen revoked his withdrawal before the county court had stricken his name from the petition following the withdrawal. This left 35 of the original names or eight signers less than the required 43 from that precinct. Upon ascertaining this shortage appellants produced and offered to file an additional or supplemental petition containing the names of ten persons claimed to be legal voters of the Aaron’s Run precinct. The county court permitted this additional or supplemental petition containing the ten names to be filed, and by counting the ten names thus added from the precinct, with the 35 remaining of the original names, held that in this manner two more than the required per cent of voters in that precinct had petitioned for the order requiring the holding of the local option election.

In precinct C, third ward, of the city of Mt. Sterling the same condition was presented as in the Aaron’s Run precinct, except that there was a controversy as to the number of votes that were cast in the city precinct in 1911; it being the contention of appellants that there were 222 votes then cast, and that of appellees there were 235; the controversy arising from the certificate as to the 1911 election appearing on the stub of the ballot book used in the precinct in question, which is as follows: “Number of ballots counted as valid — 222—Number of ballots spoiled — 3. Number of ballots questioned or rejected — 10. Whole number of ballots cast — 235. Number of ballots remaining in the book not used and which were burned— 150.” We regard it unnecessary to decide which of these contentions should prevail, as in passing upon the real questions to be decided it will be safe to assume that *15only 222 votes were cast in that precinct at the regular election in 1911. If, therefore, there were 222 votes cast, 25 per cent of that number would be 56, and this number of names of legal voters was necessary on the petition filed in the county court from that precinct. Seventy-two names were signed to the petition. Of these two were shown to be disqualified. Thirty-two asked to withdraw their names, hut nine of these revoked their withdrawals before the court acted upon their requests to withdraw. This left hut 47 names on the original petition, 9 less than the necessary per cent required from the precinct, hut the court permitted the filing of a supplemental petition containing thirteen new names of persons claimed to be legal voters of the precinct, which brought the number up to 60 names, four more than the required number.

The first question presented is, had the petitioners who revoked the withdrawal of their names from .the petitions asking for the calling of the local option election, the right to do so under the circumstances appearing in this case. These revocations were in writing, addressed to the county court, as were the previous requests for the withdrawal of the names; and it appears from the record that such revocations were presented before the court had acted upon the written request from the same persons for the withdrawal of their names from the petition. In O’Neal v. Minary, 125 Ky., 571, we held that petitioners for an election under the local option statute might, before action was taken by the court on the petition, he permitted to withdraw their names therefrom. Express authority for this ruling is not found in the statute, so it must have been based upon the theory that the right of the petitioner to withdraw his name in the state of case indicated is an inherent or natural right, the exercise of which is implied from his statutory right to petition for the election. The only reason given for the ruling is found in the following excerpts from the opinion: “There must he a sufficient number of petitioners asking the calling of the election. No one is responsible for the cost of the proceeding hut the petitioners. No one is required to make a deposit but the petitioners. If litigation ensues, no one may he held responsible for the cost hut the petitioners. It would, therefore, he a harsh rule to say that a person who had signed such a petition cannot withdraw from it before it is accepted. Remonstrances against the grant*16ing of license are frequently withdrawn in county courts, although the writing has been filed with the court; and there is no sound reason why the same-rule should not apply to a petition for an election under the local option act, before it is acted on by the county court.”

As, according to this process of reasoning, a petitioner who becomes unwilling to be held for the cost of the proceeding, may be allowed to withdraw his name from the petition before the order calling the election is entered, would it not be equally logical to say that if, after requesting the withdrawal of his name from the petition, he changes his mind and concludes to stand by his original act in signing it, should he not be permitted to revoke such withdrawal; provided, the revocation be made before the withdrawal becomes effective and before the court takes action upon the petition? As well argued by counsel for appellants, the right of the petitioner to withdraw his name from the petition is not greater than .that of a plaintiff to dismiss his suit without prejudice; and if, after entering his motion to dismiss his petition, the plaintiff should ask leave to withdraw the motion before the court has acted upon it, could it be maintained- that leave to him to withdraw the motion to dismiss was a matter beyond the discretion of the court to allow? We are also of opinion that the ruling of the court, in permitting both withdrawals and revocations of withdrawals by petitioners, was allowable on the ground that section 134, Civil Code, provides that a pleading or proceeding may be amended by “adding or striking out the name of a party.” In view of the fact that the revocations of withdrawals in this case were made before the county court had acted upon the applications to withdraw, and before final action had been taken by it upon the petitions for the local option election, it is our conclusion that the revocations were properly allowed.

But, as the counting of the names of voters permitted to revoke the previous withdrawal of their names from the petitions, still left the number of petitioners from the Aaron’s Run Precinct and Mt. Sterling, Third Ward, C. Precinct, short of the necessary 25 per cent required from each of them; and the additional names necessary to make the 43 legal voters required from the Aaron’s Run Precinct, and the required 56 from the Mt. Sterling, Third Ward,. C. Precinct, were obtained by means of the supplemental petitions from those precincts, the *17court permitted to be filed, it becomes necessary for us to decide whether the filing of the supplemental petitions should have been allowed; and, if so, whether the additional names of legal voters furnished by them, with those of legal voters left on the original petitions, authorized the order of the county court calling the election. We know of no reason for holding that the county court did not have the power to allow the supplemental petitions to be filed. With respect to amendment of the proceedings in a local option election contest, we in Wilson, etc. v. Hines, etc., 99 Ky., 221, said:

“The law regulating such contests (Ky. Stats., section 1535) requires that the notice shall state the grounds of the contest and provides that ‘none other shall afterward be heard as coming from such party.’ Under this statute a contestant is not allowed to set-up, by way of amendment, an entirely new ground of contest, in addition to those stated in this notice, but he is not thereby precluded from amending and making more specific and definite any ground that is embraced in the notice. This may be allowed, and in fact may be required to be done under the Civil Code (Section 134), which applies to proceedings of this kind as well as to regular actions, and under which it was proper for the board and the lower court to permit the contestants to amend, as was done, in such manner as to make definite the charge that the act under which the election was held was not in force and the reason for it. That did not in this case make a new or additional ground of contest, but simply made more definite and certain one of the grounds of contest stated in the notice.”

If the amendments for the purposes indicated in the opinion, supra, are permissible in proceedings appertaining to a contested local option election, even greater is the reason for permitting them in the court invested with the jurisdiction to order the election. We conclude, therefore, that, as the supplemental petitions, containing names of additional voters from each of the precincts in question, presented to the county court were in the nature of amendments to the proceeding, the ruling of that court in permitting them to be filed was not error.

The additional names of petitioners for the local option election contained in the supplemental petitions, with those presented by the original petitions from each *18of the same precincts, furnished for the first time the whole number of petitioners required from each of them; but the county court on the day they were filed, and without giving appellees time or opportunity to ascertain whether any of the additional voters whose names appeared thereon were not legal or qualified voters, entered the order calling the election. It was held both by the board of contest and circuit court that in thus ordering the election the court did not have before it the jurisdictional facts authorizing the entering of the order. It is appellees’ contention that the proceeding should have been passed or laid over to the next succeeding regular term of the county court for final determination, which would have afforded the county court the only correct means of judicially determining whether the additional petitioners were legal voters of the precincts in which they claimed to reside.

This contention suggests the inquiry, why does the petition have to lie over from the term at which it is filed to the next regular term of the county court? In a number of cases we have held that a local option election called at the same term as that at which the petition is filed is void, Wilson, etc. v. Hines, etc., 99 Ky., 229; Smith v. Patton, 103 Ky., 452. This was because the statute requires the petition to lie over from one court to the next. It need not be filed at a regular term, but the filing may be done at a called term of the court — the filing thereof being shown by an order entered of record —and the election ordered at the next regular term of the county court, though it begin but a day or two after the called term at which the petition is filed.

There are, we think, two reasons for the statute’s requiring the petition to lie over: First, that the county court may be enabled to determine judicially whether the petitioners are legal voters of the precincts in which they claim to reside; second, that voters of the county who may oppose the calling of the election may have an opportunity of showing to the county court who, if any, of the petitioners are not legal voters of the precincts in which they claim to reside. Conceding that the legal voters who petition for the election have the right to act for the public as well as themselves in asking that it be called, it is but fair to conclude that the legal voters, opposing the calling of the election, have an equal right to act for themselves and the public in showing that *19those signing the petition are not legal voters of the precincts in which they claim to reside. The thing left open to the county court to hear evidence upon, and, concerning which it may exercise a judgment, is, have the requisite number of legal voters signed the petition; and if the court may hear evidence in order to determine these facts, such evidence ought to be allowed from those opposing the election, as well as those favoring it, and both given a reasonable opportunity to be heard.

It is argued, however, by counsel for appellants, that, as the original petitions for calling this election were filed August 1, 1912, and the order calling the election was not entered until August 23, 1912, no reason is apparent for appellees’ complaint that they were not given time beyond the latter date for furnishing evidence of the disqualification of the voters whose names appear to the supplemental or amended petitions. This argument ignores the fact that the supplemental or amended petitions, containing the additional names, were not filed until the day upon which the order calling the election was entered’. It is patent that the county court did not give appellees any time whatever to ascertain how many of the signers of the supplemental petitions, if any, were legal voters of the precincts in which they claimed to reside. We think the county court should have afforded appellees the opportunity to make the necessary investigation as to the qualifications as legal voters of these signers of the supplemental or amended petitions. The necessary time therefor could have been afforded by allowing the proceeding to lie over to the next regular term of the county court, or for a shorter reasonable time, to include which, the regular term, at which the supplemental or amended petitions were filed, might, by a further, order have been extended, and by this means the order calling the election could still have been made at a regular term of the county court next succeeding the filing of the original petition. But as neither of these courses was pursued by the county court the order calling the election, if not absolutely void, is voidable.

As said in Wyatt, Judge v. Ryan, etc., 113 Ky., 306: “The election cannot be held without an order of the county judge. The purpose is not to have the question submitted unless qualified voters, equal in number to 25 per cent of the legal voters at the last general election, *20desire it;' and it was not contemplated that there should be the expense and trouble of an election before the jurisdictional facts warranting the county judge in making the order were made to appear to him. It is a special proceeding, and the jurisdictional facts should have been established before the county judge would have been warranted in making the order. It was not necessary that the petition should show that the signers to the petition were in fact legal voters — that is, the facts as to their residence in the county or precinct need not be shown in the petition; and it was not necessary for the petition to show that the signers were equal in number to 25 per cent of the votes cast in the precinct at the last preceding general election, but these facts should have been made to appear before the county judge on the hearing of the motion, and the genuineness of their signatures should also have been shown. Until this was done he was not authorized to make the order, and the mandamus against him was, therefore, improperly awarded.”

It is manifest from the record before us that the county judge did not have before him in this case the number of petitioners from each precinct of the county required to order the election, until the supplemental or amended petitions containing the additional signers were filed, if t-hen shown; and they were not filed until the time at which, or the clay upon which, the order calling the election was entered. It is ordinarily true that upon the filing of an amended pleading, it is to be treated as relating back to the time of the filing of the original pleading. But this rule should not be made to apply where, as in this case, the facts necessary to give the court jurisdiction to act, if presented at all, were not shown until the amendments containing the names of the necessary additional voters were filed, which was on the day the election was ordered, therefore the filing thereof required the proceeding to lie over to a later day, to which the court might have adjourned, or to the next regular term of the court. In the situation presented, the county court should not have ordered the election, at the time it was done, upon the mere prima facie showing of the jurisdictional facts made by the petitions for the election, as that day amended by the addition of the ‘ names of voters contained in the supplemental petitions, in view of the fact that the provision of the statute re*21quiring the petitions, as thus amended, to lie over, had not been complied with.

To hold otherwise, would be -to declare that only signers of the first or original petitions for the local option election, filed with the county court, could be subjected to investigation as to their legal status as voters; and that persons illegally claiming to be residents and qualified voters of certain precincts in the county, who might wish to aid in procuring the calling of the local option election, could, notwithstanding their disqualification, escape such investigation and be counted as legal voters, by signing a supplemental petition filed on the day the order calling the election is entered. While the petitions from the Aaron’s Bun and Mt. Sterling, Third Ward, C. Precinct, as amended by the addition of the names of alleged voters contained in the supplemental petitions from those precincts, respectively, might, upon investigation, have been found to constitute 25 per cent of the votes cast in these precincts respectively, in the last preceding election, and, together with the other petitions filed, might have furnished all the facts necessary to give the county court jurisdiction to order the election, still, as no investigation was made, or permitted, of the names of alleged voters contained in the supplemental petitions from these precincts, it does not appear that the county court, in fact, had such jurisdiction or that it was in the position to exercise such jurisdiction, at the time of entéring the order calling the election. It does, however, appear from the record that the county court, by ordering the election on the day the supplemental petitions were filed, refused appellees an opportunity to ascertain whether the names appearing to the supplemental petitions from the two precincts mentioned were those of legal voters in those precincts; and under these circumstances it cannot be known that the county court had before it the jurisdictional facts authorizing the ordering of the election.

As the statute makes no provision for an appeal from the decision or any ruling of the county court in ordering the holding of a local option election, the board of contest, and also the circuit court, upon the appeal from the finding of the board, had the right to pass upon all questions affecting the validity of the order of the county court calling the election and- any ruling made by it, in regard thereto. This was so- decided in Wilson v. Hines, *22supra, where it was held in substance that a contested election board has jurisdiction to pass upon the constitutionality of the act under which the election was held, and that a judgment by it to the effect that the act under which the election was held was unconstitutional and the election void, was a final judgment from which an appeal could be prosecuted. So, it is not material in this case whether the order of the county court calling the election is void or merely voidable; in either event it was the province of the contest board and circuit court to determine whether the order and election were valid or otherwise. Both declared them invalid, and no reason appearing from the record for disturbing the judgment of the circuit court, it is affirmed. The whole court sitting. Judge Hannah dissenting.