Bates v. City of Monticello

190 S.W. 1074, 173 Ky. 244, 1917 Ky. LEXIS 440
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedJanuary 16, 1917
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 190 S.W. 1074 (Bates v. City of Monticello) 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
Bates v. City of Monticello, 190 S.W. 1074, 173 Ky. 244, 1917 Ky. LEXIS 440 (Ky. Ct. App. 1917).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Thomas

Reversing.

[245]*245This case is no stranger to this court. It began its visits about two years ago, and has continued them as regularly and as frequently as the law would permit. What we said about it on the first occasion will be found in the case of City of Monticello v. Bates, 163 Ky. 38, and the entertainment which we gave it on the second occasion is reported in same styled case, 169 Ky. 258. The matters involved, as well as the facts in the case, will be found fully stated in those two opinions; but, briefly, they are that the city of Monticello is one of the fifth class, and in 1904 it passed an ordinance, known in this record as No. 16', which was supplemented or amended by another one passed in May, 1905. Each of these ordinances is set out in the second opinion.

The first ordinance was directed toward preventing the erection or construction of any building within the limits of the city without permission of the city council to do so. This also included the repairing of any building within the corporate limits of the city and imposed a fine for the violation of the ordinance. Section 3 of the first ordinance specified the material with which newly constructed roofing should be made, and provided that it should not be made with other than noncombustible material. ■

The second ordinance prescribed a fire limit within the city, and provided that no building should be erected or repaired ‘1 except of brick or stone to be covered with a metal or slate roof,” within such boundary. After the passage of the second ordinance, the appellant, who is the defendant, applied to the city council for a permit to construct within the defined fire limits a building to be used as a garage. In the application he made specification of the building which, omitting dimensions, was to be a veneered brick building with a metal roof. This permit was given by a written order entered upon the minutes of the council proceedings. Both the application and the permit will be found copied in full, in the second opinion, supra. The building was constructed according to the dimensions specified in both the application and permit, but its outside was not covered with the non-combustible material mentioned in the application or permit. On the contrary, it was of wood, and, therefore, combustible material.

The ordinances provided the imposing of a fine of $100.00 upon any one who might violate them. The [246]*246city, desiring’ a more effectual remedy than a prosecution, filed this suit to force the defendant by proper process of law to remodel his building so as to comply with the permit, or, if he should fail within a reasonable time, to require him to remove it out of the fire limits.

A special demurrer was filed to the petition upon the ground that the circuit court had no jurisdiction, as this was possessed exclusively by the police court of the city. This position- was taken because, as was contended, the rights of the parties grew out of an ordinance of the city, the enforcement of which, and all rights growing out of it, is given exclusively to the jurisdiction of the police court. The special demurrer was sustained, and upon appeal that judgment was reversed by the first opinion from this court, supra.

Upon the return of the case the defendant filed an answer consisting of two paragraphs, the first of which was a denial that the ordinances were duly or at all passed, or that they had at any time been in force or effect. It was admitted in this paragraph that the building had been constructed in the manner complained of. In the second - paragraph it was attempted to be shown that since the passage of the ordinances, especially the one creating the fire limit, the city had on divers and sundry occasions and almost continually acquiesced in and permitted constant violations of said ordinances, and that to enforce them against the defendant would be an undue and unjust discrimination against him, and that the city by its alleged conduct was estopped from insisting upon an enforcement of the ordinances mentioned.

Later, and on December 3, 1915, an-amended answer was filed, in which the defendant alleged that by reason of the facts set up in the second paragraph of his original answer he was led to believe and did believe that the city would not attempt to enforce the ordinance against him and would not require him to erect his building in accordance with the provisions of the ordinences, and that he so believed and in good faith constructed the building as it is, and that the city is, therefore, estopped from insisting on an enforcement of the ordinances against him. A demurrer was filed to the answer as amended, which, upon motion of the defendant, was carried back to the petition, and being sus[247]*247tained, the petition was dismissed, from which judgment the second appeal Was prosecuted by the city, the opinion therein being the second case, supra.

After the return of the case following the second opinion the demurrer to the petition, in obedience to the mandate of this courtj was overruled, and the defendant filed his second amended answer on July 4, 1916, in which he attacks the validity of the two ordinances in this language:

“1st. That said ordinances were not published as required by law, in that they were not published at least once in a newspaper published in the city of Monticello or written or printed and posted in at least three public places therein.
“2nd. That said ordinances were not passed by the votes of three members of the city council.”

A third paragraph of this last amended answer attacked the constitutionality of the ordinances: “In that they undertook to deprive him of his property without due process of law by vesting in the said council the arbitrary arid unlimited power and authority to prevent the defendant from erecting on his own land any sort or character of building, however safely constructed and of whatever material built, without first securing the permission of the said council so to do.” A demurrer was then filed by the city to the answer and to all of the amendments, which was sustained by the court, and the defendant declining to plead further a judgment was entered requiring him to either complete the building so as to conform to the ordinance and permit given him to construct it, or to remove the building from the fire limits of the city on or before November 1, 1916, and to reverse that judgment the case is again before us on this appeal.

The trial court rendered no opinion, but we gather from, the briefs that his judgment sustaining the demurrer was because the validity of the ordinances had been adjudicated by the former opinions, and that they were no longer open to attack by the defendant. The error in this .position is that neither of the previous opinions of this court dealt with any of the facts presented by the answer, or any amendment thereto, except those shown by the petition and by the contents of the ordinances, both of which were copied into the petition and certified copies of them filed with it. Only [248]*248such facts as thus appeared, with the law arising therefrom, were adjudicated by the former opinions.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
190 S.W. 1074, 173 Ky. 244, 1917 Ky. LEXIS 440, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bates-v-city-of-monticello-kyctapp-1917.