Court Opinion

ID: 7135919
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-24 15:23:55.498312+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:14:37.625836
License: Public Domain

Opinion by
Chiee Justice Hobson
Reversing.
T. J. Hill and Gr. W. De Borde were candidates for tlie Democratic nomination for sheriff of Lincoln county at a primary election held on December 3, 1904. On the face of thek returns Hill received one vote more than De Borde, and on December 6th the *663committee, after canvassing the returns, issued to him a certificate of nomination. On December 16th De Borde instituted proceedings of contest, and gave notice to Hill and the committee. Hill insisted that the notice was too late-, but the committee overruled his objection, and fixed a day for the hearing of the contest. Hill thereupon brought this suit against the committee and De Borde to enjoin them from proceeding further in the matter. The circuit court dismissed his petition, and he appeals.
In Batman v. Megowan, 58 Ky., 533, it was held, under a statute requiring notice of contest to be given in 10 days, that where the final action was taken on the 6th of the month, and notice was given on the 16th, it was too late. This case has been since followed by the court. Primary elections are regulated by secs. 1550-1565, Ky. Stats., 1903.
Sec. 1551 provides: “All primary elections held in this Commonwealth by the various 'political parties shall be held and conducted in the same form and manner and under the same requirements as are or shall be provided by law for the holding of regular State elections,' except „ in such particulars as are herein excepted.”
Sec. 1563 further provides: “The duly authorized and constituted committee or governing authority in the county or district in which a primary election may be held hereunder is hereby empowered to count the votes received by all candidates in such primary elections, and to declare the candidate or candidates, in cases where candidates for more than one office are to be nominated, receiving the highest number of votes the nominee of such political party for the office for which he was voted for at such primary election. In all cases of a tie vote or contest, the committee or governing authority of the political party holding *664such primary election shall have the power to hear and determine such contest, and decide who shall be entitled to the nomination. The proceedings in such cases shall be in such form and manner as the committee or governing authority shall determine upon.”
The committee had not prescribed the form and manner in which proceedings of contest were to be made, and it is insisted that the time within which notice of contest must be given was a matter to be determined by the committee. We do not so understand the statute. By sec. 1551 all primary elections must be held and conducted in the same form and manner and under the same requirements as are provided by law for the holding of regular State elections, except in such particulars as are. excepted in the statute. The only provision of the statute referring to the matter before us is sec. 1563, above quoted. Under that section, in the case of a tie vote or contest, the committee has the power to hear and determine who is entitled to the nomination. But in the ease of a tie the question does not arise until upon a count of the votes it is ascertained that two candidates have received an equal number of votes, and then, under sec. 1551, it must be settled by the casting of lots, as provided in sec. 1596a, sub-sec. 11; for, under sec. 1551, the primary election must be held and conducted in the same manner and under the same requirements as regular State elections, and this includes not only the receiving of the votes, but the counting of them and the ascertaining of the result.
A contest can not arise until it is instituted by the candidate defeated on the face of the returns. When it is instituted by him, the proceedings must be in such form and manner as the governing authority of the party shall determine upon; but until it is instituted there is nothing for them to act upon, just as *665there is nothing for them" to act npon in the case of a tie vote until two candidates are found to have received the same number of votes. As there is nothing for the committee to act upon until there is a contest, and as primary elections are governed by the statute regulating State elections, except as otherwise expressly provided, its provisions limiting the time for beginning contests must control contests of primary elections. If the committee had the power to regulate when notice of contest might be given, then there would be no uniform rule for instituting such contests, and the committee, by failing to meet or provide for the contest, might defeat the right of a candidate to contest altogether. The statute was intended to put primary elections on the plane of regular elections. It only makes the committee the forum in which the contest is to be determined, leaving it to decide the form, and manner of the proceedings, and exempting primary elections from the statute prescribing how the evidence must be taken and within what time. The governing authority of the •party is given exclusive jurisdiction to determine the contest. (Commonwealth v. Combs, 120 Ky., ----, 27 Ky. Law Rep., 750, 86 S. W., 699.) The courts can not review or correct the decision of the committee on the merits of the contest. (Beasley v. Adams, 118 Ky., 695, 26 Ky. Law Rep., 573, 82 S. W., 249.) But the court may require the committee to act, or it may restrain them from acting when they have no jurisdiction. (Mason v. Byrley, 26 Ky. Law Rep., 487, 84 S. W., 767; Neal v. Young, 75 S. W., 1082, 25 Ky. Law Rep., 186; Brown v. Republican Committee, 119 Ky., 720, 68 S. W., 622, 23 Ky. Law Rep., 2421; Eagan v. Gerwe, 112 Ky., 232, 23 Ky. Law Rep., 1495, 65 S. W., 437.)
In Henry v. Secrest, 114 Ky., 677, 71 S. W., 892, 24 *666Ky. Law Rep., 1505, we said: “If appellee intended to institute a contest, lie should have done so in the usual and only proper manner, by giving notice to the committee, as well as to the candidate whose right to the nomination was to be contested, and by filing with the committee specifications showing fully the grounds upon which the contest was to be based. ’ ’
By the statute in this State for over 50 years, contests for county offices have been required to be instituted within 10 days after the final action of the canvassing board. By the present statute such contests shall be by a petition filed in the circuit court, but the petition must be filed within 10 days after the final action of the board of canvassers. The time limit within which contests must be instituted remains the same, and, contests of primary elections being by sec. 1563 to be decided by the governing authority of the party holding the election, the grounds of contest should be filed before it, and notice given the contestee. Appellee properly served his notice on' the appellant, and also lodged it with the committee, but, not having instituted his proceeding in time, the committee was without jurisdiction to proceed.
Judgment reversed, and cause remanded for a judgment as herein indicated.