Beauchamp, County Judge v. Henning

166 S.W.2d 427, 292 Ky. 557, 1942 Ky. LEXIS 78
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedDecember 4, 1942
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 166 S.W.2d 427 (Beauchamp, County Judge v. Henning) 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
Beauchamp, County Judge v. Henning, 166 S.W.2d 427, 292 Ky. 557, 1942 Ky. LEXIS 78 (Ky. 1942).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Judge Thomas

Reversing.

By the enactment of Chapter 80 of the Session Acts of 1914, Page 338, the Legislature of this Commonwealth created the office of County Road Engineer. The parts of the chapter creating snch office begin with Section 39 of that Act and are contained in Section 4325 et seq., of *558 Baldwin’s 1936 Revision of Carroll’s Kentucky Statutes, and Section 179.020 et seq. of the 1942 Kentucky Revised Statutes. That Act, inter alia, provided that the tenure of the office should be for a period of two years, and that the county judge, subject to the approval of the fiscal court, should make such appointment. The Act was made applicable alike to all of the one hundred and twenty counties in the Commonwealth. By Chapter 119 of the Session Acts of the Legislature of 1918, Page 535, Section 43561-1 et seq., Baldwin’s 1936 Revision of Carroll’s Kentucky Statutes, and 179.030 et seq., of the 1942 Kentucky Revised Statutes, the 1914 Act was amended by increasing the tenure of office of county road engineers in counties having a city in excess of 200,000, from two years to four years, and it also enacted that the road engineer for such counties should be appointed by the fiscal court with the approval of the county judge.

The appellant and plaintiff below, Mark Beauchamp, as county judge of Jefferson County, filed this declaratory judgment action in the Jefferson Circuit Court against the other three commissioners of the county, as members of the Jefferson County Fiscal Court, and in his petition he averred the foregoing facts, and then attacked the validity of the 1918 amendment as violative of Sections 59, 60 and 141 of our Constitution. The first two dealing with special legislation, and the last one (141) prescribes that: “The jurisdiction of the County Court shall be uniform throughout the State, and shall be regulated by general law, and until changed, shall be the same as now vested in the County Courts of this State by law.” The answer of defendants admitted the facts constituting the controversy and joined in the prayer of a declaration of rights of the parties in the premises. The case was then submitted to the court for judgment and that tribunal upheld the validity of the 1918 amendment, thereby rejecting the contentions of appellant to its validity. Prom that judgment, plaintiff prosecutes this appeal.

It is argued by learned counsel for appellee that the amendment is not violative of Sections 59 and 60 of our Constitution as being special legislation inhibited by those sections, since the Legislature had the right of classification relating to the subject matter, and that legislation pursuant thereto was not inhibited by those sections, since the classification made by the 1918 amend *559 ment was and is sustainable upon grounds underlying the right of classification adopted by the Legislature in enacting the attacked amendment. The same counsel also argues that the 1918 amendment is not inhibited by Section 141 of the Constitution, since that section relates only to uniformity of jurisdiction of county courts throughout the State, and that the prescribed functions of the county judge with reference to the appointment of county road engineers, created by the 1914 Act, were not the exercise of functions pertaining to county courts within the contemplation of Section 141 of our Constitution. Therefore, the position is taken that the 1918 amendment was not inhibited by the section, and there being permissive classification for its enactment, it was not invalid for any of the reasons assigned in plaintiff’s petition.

Since we have concluded that the 1918 amendment was and is prohibited by Section 141 of our Constitution, it becomes unnecessary to pass upon its validity as being-in conflict with Sections 59 and 60 of the same Constitution, and the respective contentions of counsel for both sides upon that phase of the case will be passed without determination.

The argument of appellee’s counsel in support of their contention that Section 141 of our Constitution relates to only judicial functions of the county judge, and not to collateral duties imposed on him by law, is in direct conflict with our opinions in the cases of Fox v. Petty, 244 Ky. 385, 51 S. W. (2d) 260; Beauchamp v. Silk, 275 Ky. 91, 120 S. W. (2d) 765, the determinations in which we also inferentially approved in Neutzel v. Williams, 191 Ky. 351, 230 S. W. 942. In the case of Fox v. Petty, there was involved the validity of an Act of the G-eneral Assembly at its 1932 Session, made applicable only in counties containing a city of the first class, and providing for the creation of a Civil Service Board of four members for such counties with prescribed duties and the members to be appointed by the sheriff of the county. Such duties of the prescribed county Civil Service Board related to the appointment of members of the county patrol as well as creation of districts to be served by such appointees. It was contended that the 1932 Act involved in that opinion violated the provisions of Section 141 of our Constitution in that the duty of county patrols, and the division of the county into patrol *560 districts liad therefore been imposed on the county judge as prescribed in Section 3780 of our then Carroll’s Kentucky Statutes. Judge Clay, who wrote the opinion for this court, reviewed the history of county courts and their origin, and showed that at the time of the adoption of our present Constitution, county judges, who presided at and held county courts, possessed also jurisdiction of non-judicial duties imposed upon them by the Legislature, as well as presiding officer of county courts, and quarterly courts. Under Section 141 of our Constitution, county courts then exercised under general law all such non-judicial jurisdiction, which that section prescribed should continue “until changed” by the Legislature, and finally concluded that the special Act, there under consideration, being applicable only to counties containing a city of the first class, was invalid because in conflict with Section 141 of our Constitution. In sustaining that comprehensive definition of the word “jurisdiction” in that section, reference was made to the case of Pennington v. Woolfolk, 79 Ky. 13, wherein this court determined that non-judicial functions imposed upon county judges were embraced within their jurisdiction, which was not confined alone to the determination of disputed questions of law or fact coming strictly within the judicial functions of a court.

The final conclusion reached in the Petty opinion was thus expressed [244 Ky. 385, 51 S. W. (2d) 262]: “As the section of the Constitution in question provides that the jurisdiction of county courts shall be uniform throughout the state, and shall be regulated by general law, and until changed shall be the same as now vested in county courts, it cannot be doubted that the jurisdiction conferred by the above section of the statutes, which dealt principally with the legislative and ministerial powers of the county court, was of the kind that should be uniform and should be -the same until changed.”

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Bluebook (online)
166 S.W.2d 427, 292 Ky. 557, 1942 Ky. LEXIS 78, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/beauchamp-county-judge-v-henning-kyctapphigh-1942.