Bates, Ex-County Court Clerk v. Greenup C'ty

138 S.W.2d 463, 282 Ky. 268, 1940 Ky. LEXIS 160
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedMarch 12, 1940
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 138 S.W.2d 463 (Bates, Ex-County Court Clerk v. Greenup C'ty) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bates, Ex-County Court Clerk v. Greenup C'ty, 138 S.W.2d 463, 282 Ky. 268, 1940 Ky. LEXIS 160 (Ky. 1940).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Judge Perry

— Affirming on appeal and affirming in part and reversing in part on cross-appeal.

Greenup county, through and by Oscar Sammons, county attorney, instituted this action in the Greenup circuit court, seeking recovery of the amount of $1,760, which it claimed had been improperly and without legal authority paid the appellant, J. B. Bates, ex-county court clerk, for services claimed rendered by him to the county board of election commissioners in connection with eleven elections, general and primary, held during the five year period of August, 1933, to November, 1937, inclusive.

It is shown by the record that the appellant, Bates, ex-county court clerk, in March, 1938, following the termination of his sixteen year tenure of office, filed his claim in the fiscal court for the amount of $1,760, represented by. the certified statement of account filed as being the amount owing him for “32 ballots, etc., furnished at a unit price of $5.00” for use in the aforesaid eleven elections, which was by the fiscal court at its regular meeting on March 8, 1938, allowed.

It further appears that the appellant, becoming advised that the county attorney was challenging the propriety of the fiscal court’s allowance of this claim to him, upon' the ground that the ballots for which payment Was being asked had already been paid for by the county *270 and that nothing was owing him therefor, or, as he states it, “seeing that the county attorney was going to be technical, ’ ’ requested, the fiscal court to set aside his statement of account as first submitted and its order made allowing the claim and that he be permitted to file a corrected and accurate statement of his claim. The fiscal court acceded to his request and at its April 5 meeting, he filed in substitution a statement of bis account, in which he set out that the said amount of $1,760 was owing him for “clerical help, etc.,” rendered in connection with the eleven elections held in the county during the five year period next preceding the termination of his tenure of office.

Also it appears that the court, being advised that it did not have sufficient funds in the election item of its budget, conferred with the county budget commission as to transferring the amount of plaintiff’s claim, $1,760, from the reserve fund of the budget over to its election item fund, which was done, whereupon the court, at its April 7, 1938, called meeting, entered an order allowing Bates the amount of his claim, pursuant to which a warrant was issued to him in the amount of $1,760, which was duly paid him.

Challenging the validity of the fiscal court’s proceedings and its allowance and payment of this claim, the county attorney brought this suit, for the use and benefit of the county, to recover the $1,760 from Bates, on the ground that the fiscal court had acted without authority in allowing Bates’ claim and in paying him the $1,760.

Following pleadings made up the issues, when by agreement of parties the cause was submitted to the trial court without a jury for his hearing and judgment.

The court found as a fact and so adjudged that the defendant rendered certain compensable services in connection with the eleven elections held in the county during the five year period mentioned (that is, in registering and listing the names of candidates in the primary elections) for which he was due fees in the amount of $84 and that for all other services referred to in the pleadings and evidence as rendered by him he was entitled to receive the amount of $990, the last named sum being found and adjudged to be the reasonable value of his *271 services rendered the county election commissioners, for which the fiscal court was authorized to allow him compensation.

Both parties, complaining of this judgment as improper, have prosecuted appeals.

The appellant, Bates, appeals, complaining that the court erred in allowing him to retain but $1,074 of the $1,760 the fiscal court had allowed him as the reasonable value of his services rendered, under authority of sections 1550-30 and 1482, Kentucky Statutes.

The county, on the other hand, attacked the judgment as improper and erroneous in allowing appellant recovery in any amount, upon the ground that his claim for services rendered the county in the manner stated was illegal and the fiscal court’s order allowing it void.

Several questions were raised by demurrers, both general and special, filed to the petition, which we conceive the trial court properly overruled. We therefore deem it unnecessary to here discuss them, but will confine our consideration to the main question here presented, which involves the propriety of the trial court’s order in adjudging recovery to the appellant ex-county court clerk for his services rendered, and the further question of whether or not, if the fiscal court were authorized to make any allowance to the clerk for his services (as being legally compensable), the amount allowed of $1,074 was proper as authorized by the law and facts.

Entering upon our consideration of these questions, it may be well to state that the rule of law applicable to their determination is well settled and has been repeatedly declared by this court to be as announced in the case of Bruner v. Jefferson County Fiscal Court, 239 Ky. 613, 40 S. W. (2d) 271, 272:

“The power of the fiscal court is conferred by stafi ute, and it possesses no authority not delegated to it, expressly or impliedly, by some provision of law. Jefferson County v. Jefferson County Fiscal Court, 220 Ky. 678, 299 S. W. 209; Crick v. Rash, 190 Ky. 820, 229 S. W. 63; Riddell v. Boone County, 183 Ky. 77, 208 S. W. 323; Russell County v. Hill, 164 Ky. 360, 175 S. W. 988; Hollis v. Weissinger, 142 Ky. 129, 134 S. W. 176; Jefferson County v. Peter, 127 *272 Ky. 453, 105 S. W. 887, 32 Ky. Law Rep. 374; Perry County v. Engle, 116 Ky. 594, 76 S. W. 382, 25 Ky. Law Rep. 813.”

Again, in the case of Taylor, for Use and Benefit of Laurel County, v. Scoville, 252 Ky. 809, 68 S. W. (2d) 423, 424, the court quoted with approval a like statement of the rule made by the court in the case of Harlan County v. Blair, 243 Ky. 777, 49 S. W. (2d) 1028, 1029, which is as follows:

“In the absence of an express provision of law to that effect, the county is not required or permitted to pay for the services of its officers. Mills v. Lantrip, 170 Ky. 81, 185 S. W. 514; Wortham v. Grayson County Court, 13 Bush 53; Morgantown Deposit Bank v. Johnson, 108 Ky. 507, 56 S. W. 825, 22 Ky. Law Rep. 210; Woodruff v. Shea, 152 Ky. 657, 153 S. W. 1005; Bruner v. Jefferson County Fiscal Court, 239 Ky. 613, 40 S. W. (2d) 271. Indeed, officers are forbidden to demand or to receive fees for services rendered when the law has not fixed a compensation therefor. Kentucky Statutes, section 1749; Wortham v. Grayson County Court, 13 Bush 53; Wright v. Morris, 212 Ky. 403, 279 S. W. 631.”

Further, it is an equally well settled rule that county governments never become indebted by implication to any of their agents, and in order to show that a county is responsible for a claim, the claimant must show a legal obligation on the part of the county to pay it. Wortham v.

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Bluebook (online)
138 S.W.2d 463, 282 Ky. 268, 1940 Ky. LEXIS 160, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bates-ex-county-court-clerk-v-greenup-cty-kyctapphigh-1940.