Affirming in part and reversing in part.
June R. Bogie and Dillard Hill were opposing candidates for the office of Member of the Board of Education of Madison County from School District No. 2 at the November, 1940, election. Bogie received 876 votes and Hill 712. Hill filed this action contesting Bogie's election on the ground that his nominating petition did not meet the requirements of sec. 4399-25, Ky. Stats. (Baldwin's 1940 Supplement), in that it failed to show the district, or division of the county district, and the place of residence of each person signing it; therefore, Bogie's name was not properly on the ballot.
After traversing the petition, Bogie's answer pleaded affirmatively that all but two of the sixty signers of his nominating petition were legal voters and residents of School District No. 2, and that the petition furnished sufficient information of that fact; that sec. 4399-25 relative to the place of residence of each signer is directory and not mandatory; that the county court clerk was the judge of the sufficiency of the petition, and he, knowing that the signers were legal voters of the district, filed same; that the statute only required the nominating petition to show the identity of the school division involved in the election from which the candidate is to be elected, A reply completed the issue. *Page 734
In the recent case of Allen v Hardin,
"The petitions must be filed in the office of the county clerk * * * and each petition must be signed by the requisite number of qualified persons, and shall show the district or the division of the county district, as the case may be, and the place of residence of each person signing it."
As this part of the statute was held to be mandatory with the italicized words omitted, certainly their addition does not prevent it from now being mandatory.
Our question now is to determine whether or not the nominating petition of Bogie sufficiently complied with sec. 4399-25 as amended in 1940. The caption of Bogie's petition reads:
"We, the undersigned legal voters of Madison County Kentucky respectfully petition the County Court Clerk of Madison County, Kentucky to cause the name of June R. Bogie to be printed on the ballot used for the election of members of the County Board of Education in the election of such members in the district No. 2 of Madison County on the regular election day of Nov. 1940, and we further state that we have not signed more than one petition for this office and that said person resides in the school district No. 2 of Madison County, Kentucky."
Under the caption appears the name of 60 signers, of whom only 17 of the required 50 made any attempt to give their place of residence. Therefore, it is unnecessary for us to say whether or not these 17 complied with the statute.
It is earnestly argued in appellant's brief that the caption gives the place of residence of the signers in that "said" (the thirteenth word from the end) refers to "we" and by thus substituting one for the other the *Page 735 last phrase reads: "And we further state that we have not signed more than one petition for this office and that we (said) person resides in the school district No. 2 of Madison County, Kentucky." It takes no one skilled in grammar to determine that "said" as used in the caption refers to June R. Bogie and not to "we." While the petition was drawn by a layman and not by a lawyer, yet the instrument shows its draftsman was conversant with the rules of grammar and was not one who would mix the singular with the plural. Nor can we accept the argument that there was a typographical error made by omitting the letter "s" from the word "person" and adding it to "resides", as there are no other typographical errors in the instrument. It would be a most strained and unnatural construction if we were to say that "said" referred to "we" and not to June R. Bogie. Indeed, the caption when read as a whole clearly shows that it was intended to give the place of residence and the county district of the candidate only and not of the signers of the petition.
In Allen v. Hardin,
"We, the undersigned voters of Greenup County, Kentucky, ask you to cause the name of G.R. Remines, Greenup County, Kentucky, to be printed on the School Ballot to be voted for as members of the Greenup County Board of Education on November 2nd, 1937."
It was there held that the petition not only failed to state the place of residence of the signers, but that it failed to show they were qualified voters in the school district. The caption in the nominating petition now before us likewise failed to state the place of residence of the signers, or that they were qualified voters of the school district. As the body of the petition gives nothing but the signers' names in all but 17 instances, Allen v. Hardin, supra, is controlling on the insufficiency of the petition. Should Bogie's argument be accepted that after the election he could plead and prove that the signers resided in the school district wherein the election was held, the effect would be to nullify or abolish this mandatory provision of the statute.
We are not impressed by appellant's argument *Page 736
that the statute makes the county court clerk the judge of the sufficiency of the petition, and his judgment that it was sufficient, as shown by his act in filing it, cannot be collaterally attacked in an election contest. The county court clerk is a ministerial officer and this statute does not clothe him with judicial authority. Clark v. Nash,
We now approach the question of whether or not the chancellor correctly adjudged Hill to have been elected after holding Bogie was not properly on the ballot. Bogie contends that under sec. 6 of the Kentucky Constitution, "all elections shall be free and equal," as construed in McKinney v. Barker,
McKinney v. Barker, supra, expressly recited it did not overrule King v. McMahan,
King v. McMahan, supra, is overruled insofar as it holds the votes cast for a candidate not entitled to receive them are illegal and that a candidate in a general election receiving less than a majority, or plurality, of the legal votes cast is entitled to the office. Some of our opinions have followed King v. McMahan on this point, two of the most recent being Ison v. Weddle,
"It is a well-settled rule that one receiving less than a plurality of legal votes cannot be declared elected, and the only exception to this rule is where a successful candidate has violated the Corrupt *Page 738 Practice Act (Ky. Stats. sec. 1565b-1 et seq.) in a primary election. This exception cannot be applied in a general election. The candidate for an office who has not received a plurality of the legal votes cast is not entitled to the office, although the candidate who received a plurality of the legal votes is, for any reason, ineligbile."
That part of the chancellor's judgment which holds Bogie's nominating petition did not entitle him to a place on the ballot is affirmed. But so much of the judgment as holds Hill was elected is reversed, and the office is declared to be vacant.