Beauchamp, County Judge v. Silk

120 S.W.2d 765, 275 Ky. 91, 1938 Ky. LEXIS 370
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedOctober 21, 1938
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 120 S.W.2d 765 (Beauchamp, County Judge v. Silk) 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. Silk, 120 S.W.2d 765, 275 Ky. 91, 1938 Ky. LEXIS 370 (Ky. 1938).

Opinion

OPrnIoN OP THE CoURT by

JUDGE THoMAs

Affirming.

At the first extraordiiiiary session of the 1938 Gen *92 eral Assembly of this commonwealth, which convened March 2nd of that year, there was enacted chapter 37, which is found on page 1118 of the volume containing all the acts of that year at its regular and its two extraordinary sessions held therein. That chapter (37) will hereinafter be referred to as the £ £ amendatory act. ’ ’ It amended and reenacted section 331e-3 of Baldwin’s 1986 Eevision of Cari’oll’s Kentucky Statutes, it being a part of chapter 18 in the latter volume, relating to children; and dealing only with the appointment by various county courts of the commonwealth of county probation officers as a part of the machinery for the enforcement of the juvenile provisions of that chapter. The section before being so amended will hereafter be referred to as the “old act.’’’ The amendatory act preserved, in principle, all of the requirements and provisions of the old act with these two exceptions, (1) it increased the compensation of such juvenile officers and appointees for the administration of the act in counties containing cities of the first and second classes, and (2) it provided for what is referred to as the “Merit System” in counties containing cities of the first class. Exception (2) created a Merit Board to be composed of four members with prescribed qualifications, and the county judge, by virtue of his office was made its fifth member.

We are not concerned in the solution of the questions presented by this record with the way and- manner of bringing the “Merit Board” into existence, since that feature of the amendatory act is not embraced by the meritorious constitutional objection herein urged against the validity of the amendatory act. Another objection is the one urging forbidden classification and by reason thereof the contention is made that the amendatory act was and is special legislation in ■' still other respects, and which objection will be hereinafter disposed of. The chief attack upon the amendatory act made by appellee and plaintiff below, William Silk, in this action, is that it requires the county judge or county court, in counties containing a city of the first class to select such probation officers and other appointees from the list of eligibles whom the Merit Board has found to be qualified through examinations that it is required to conduct, thereby withholding from the county judge or the county court the right in the exercise of his *93 jurisdiction to select such probation officers and other appointees from the county at large — the same as is given to all other county judges and county courts in the remaining 119 counties of the commonwealth. It is, therefore, insisted that such restriction invades and is contrary to the express provisions of section 141 of our Constitution, saying: “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.”

This action was filed in the Jefferson circuit court against all of the public functionaries created by the old and the amendatory acts, in which plaintiff, as a citizen and tax payer of Jefferson county, for himself and for the benefit of all other similar taxpayers therein, sought a declaration of rights under our Declaratory Judgment Statute, Civil Code of Practice, section 639a-l et seq., and to enjoin defendants from carrying into effect the Merit System therein provided for, upon the two grounds that (a) the statute was special legislation and contrary to all sections of our Constitution inhibiting that class of legislation where a general statute could be made applicable, and (b) that the provisions of the statute whereby the county judge or county court is restricted in the selection of probation officers and employees to the list furnished him by the Merit Board and thereby deprived of making such selection from the entire citizenry of the county, which it is insisted is in direct violation of section 141, supra, of the Constitution.

The first defensive move made by defendants was an objection to the right of plaintiff to maintain the action. It was overruled by the learned trial judge, followed by an answer denying the grounds relied on by plaintiff in his petition. The cause was in due time submitted to the court for final determination and it adjudged that the attacked portion of the statute was— for the reasons stated, supra — in direct violation of section 141 of our Constitution, because it, as enacted, destroyed the uniformity of jurisdiction of the county courts “throughout the state” and which that section expressly inhibited. Questioning the propriety of that judgment defendants prosecute this appeal.

In support of the objection to plaintiff’s right to *94 maintain the action defendants’ counsel cite and rely on a number of cases wherein the particular plaintiff therein possessed no legal right to maintain the action and he was adjudged to be disqualified to make the contentions and to obtain the relief sought in and by his petition. But in each and every one of them the plaintiff exhibited no pecuniary or other interest in the subject matter of the litigation, and it was consequently held by this court that he had no standing in court as a contender for the relief he sought. However, we have uniformly held that in cases of this kind involving an attack upon a public expending measure — or contemplated act by some official and to carry out which involved the expenditure of public funds raised by taxation — a single tax payer within the affected territory might maintain an action questioning the validity of what the statute required, or what the official was threatening to do, upon the ground that the statute so attacked, or the step proposed to be taken by the officer was unauthorized and would involve the illegal and wrongful expenditure of public funds. See Stiglitz, County Clerk, v. Schardien, 239 Ky. 799, 40 S. W. (2d) 315, and cases therein cited. That (Stiglitz) case, perhaps involved more of a political than a pecuniary right of the plaintiff therein, but in upholding his right to maintain the action we said [page 317]: “If an act of the Legislature infringes the constitutional rights of a citizen, taxpayer, and voter, he may invoke the processes of the courts to prevent the performance of a duty attempted to be imposed by such void act. Hager v. Robinson, 154 Ky. 489, 157 S. W. 1138; Schardein v. Harrison, 230 Ky. 1, 18 S. W. (2d) 316; Ragland v. Anderson, 125 Ky. 141, 100 S. W. 865, 30 Ky. Law Rep., 1199, 128 Am. St. Rep. 242; Yates, Clerk, v. Collins, 118 Ky. 682, 82 S. W. 282, 973, 26 Ky. Law Rep. 558, 930.” (Our emphasis.)

It therefore will be seen that the infringement of a pecuniary right is as effectual for the maintenance of an action by a tax payer as is the protection of a political right (which latter appears to have been the only one involved in the Stiglitz Case) and which is so declared in the list of cases embodied in the excerpt from that opinion. This objection, therefore, questioning the right of plaintiff to maintain the action, was properly overruled, since the expenses of the Merit Board created by the amendatory act are required to be paid out *95

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Bluebook (online)
120 S.W.2d 765, 275 Ky. 91, 1938 Ky. LEXIS 370, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/beauchamp-county-judge-v-silk-kyctapphigh-1938.