Barbour v. City of Louisville

83 Ky. 95, 1885 Ky. LEXIS 44
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedMay 23, 1885
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 83 Ky. 95 (Barbour v. City of Louisville) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Barbour v. City of Louisville, 83 Ky. 95, 1885 Ky. LEXIS 44 (Ky. Ct. App. 1885).

Opinion

JUDGE HOLT

delivered the opinion oe the court.

The claim of the city of Louisville to the hues imposed by the Jefferson circuit court in misdemeanor cases arising within the city limits is based upon a legislative act, approved March 29, -1882, entitled “An act to amend the charter of the city of Louisville,” and the fourth section of which reads thus:

“4. It shall be competent for the said city to institute or maintain an action for injury or damage done to any of the public ways in said city, and in addition thereto the person so injuring or damaging such public way shall be liable to a fine of not less than fifty dollars or more than one hundred dollars, and, >on conviction thereof, in the city court of said city, [98]*98shall be confined in the work-house of said city until such fine and the cost shall be paid by work at the rate of fifty cents per day, unless such fine and cost be replevied or otherwise paid; and all such fines, as well as the fines for all other misdemeanors committed in the city of Louisville, shall, when collected, be paid into the treasury of said city, and be subject, to appropriation by the general council of said city.”

It is urged upon the part of the city that the words,, “and all such fines, as well as the fines for all other misdemeanors committed in the city of Louisville,” show unequivocally that the fines and forfeitures of the circuit court in such cases belong to it; also; that it has been the settled policy of the State for many years to give to the city the fines for misdemeanors, committed within its limits, whether imposed by the-circuit or its city court. Upon the part of the State,, however, it is claimed that its policy has been the-reverse as to the judgments of the first-named court;: and a brief review of it will serve to some extent as a. guide to the proper construction of the law.

The first general law in this State (1 M.. & B., 718)< as to fines, provided that they should be applied in. the same way as the county levies; and they were used to pay the expenses of the county, which included the costs arising from the holding of its circuit court.

By the act of February 14, 1820, fines imposed by the circuit court of a county were given to the public schools of the Commonwealth within such county, and not to any city in it. The first charter of the city of Louisville did not give to it the fines, imposed, by the' [99]*99•circuit court for offenses committed within the corporate limits, but only those of its mayor’s court.

By the act of February 13, 1833, fines assessed by the circuit court for misdemeanors committed within the city were given, not to the city generally, but to its public schools ; and this was done because by said act a part of the State's public school system became public city schools, and the State's public school system in the city received the money. The act of February 22, 1836, establishing the police court of the-•city, provided that the fines recovered in favor of: the Commonwealth in said court should be for the-, benefit of the public schools of the city; and in consideration thereof the city was annually to pay into-the Treasury of the Commonwealth “ $1,200, in addition to the sum heretofore directed to be paid;”' and by its charter of 1851, it was for the same consideration “to-pay into the Treasury of this Commonwealth the like sum of $1,500.” In 1838, the mode of supporting the common schools was changed from the precarious one of fines to that of taxation; and the law was then altered so that the trustee of' the jury fund of the circuit court received the fines imposed by it, they to be applied by him in paying the expenses of holding the court; and from that time until this action was brought, save a portion of said period when the city court had exclusive jurisdiction of such cases, the'fines imposed by the Jefferson circuit court for offenses committed within the city limits of Louisville have been paid, not to the city, but into the State Treasury or to the trustee of the jury fund; and by law any balance in his. [100]*100Rands had to be paid to the State Treasurer by the •first of January in each year.

The legislation upon the subject indicates that it has been' the purpose and policy of the State to reserve to itself the fines and forfeitures of the Jefferson circuit court, to aid in the expense of holding it; and in the light of this policy we must examine •the law now in question.

It is a rule of construction, that where particular words of a statute are followed by those of a general character, the latter are to be restricted to the -objects particularly mentioned. If the act begins with words which speak of things or persons of an inferior degree and concludes with general words, the latter are not to be extended to anything or person of a higher degree. If a particular class is •mentioned and general words follow, they must be treated as referring to matters of the same kind, thus subordinating general terms to the preceding particulars.

• It is said in Sedgwick on Statutory Construction, page 361: “Where general words follow particular words, the rule is to construe the former as applicable to the things or persons particularly mentioned. So a statute treating ©f persons or things of an inferior rank can not, by general words, be extended do those of a superior rank.”

The “particular ” words in the act of 1882 relate to fines by the city court for injuries to the public ways of the city, and if not paid the offenders are to be confined in the city work-house; and if the words “as well as the fines for all other misdemean[101]*101ors committed in the city of Louisville,” include fines; imposed by the circuit court, then the “general”' words of the act must be held to relate to those inflicted by a superior court, and the punishment of which reaches higher than confinement in the city work-house; and the rule that the general words: must be held.to relate to things ejusdem generis is; violated.

It is noticeable that the act is a local one; that; it ‘does not in terms relate to the circuit court; that-it is an amendment to a charter, which, so far as it relates to .fines, speaks only of those imposed by the city court; that it contains no repealing clause, and does not purport to repeal the general law, which provides that the fines of the circuit court shall be paid to the trustee of the jury fund. The latter court represents the State, and the city court, the city; and the fines imposed by the former naturally should aid in its support, or go to the State. If the construction contended for by the city is correct, then, it follows that the State, or, in other words, the other counties, must, by taxation, support the circuit court of Jefferson county, while the city of Louisville gets the benefit of the fines imposed by that court. It should not be presumed that such partial legislation was intended, or a repeal by implication of the general law; and it does not seem to us, since repeals by implication are not favored, that such a construction should be given to the ambiguous words of a local statute as to produce such a result; but that the words “as well as the fines for all other misdemeanors committed in the city [102]*102of Louisville,” refer to fines imposed by the city

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83 Ky. 95, 1885 Ky. LEXIS 44, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/barbour-v-city-of-louisville-kyctapp-1885.