Boyd County v. Arthur

82 S.W. 613, 118 Ky. 932, 1904 Ky. LEXIS 121
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedNovember 4, 1904
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 82 S.W. 613 (Boyd County v. Arthur) 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
Boyd County v. Arthur, 82 S.W. 613, 118 Ky. 932, 1904 Ky. LEXIS 121 (Ky. Ct. App. 1904).

Opinion

Opinion of the coubt by

JUDGE HOBISON

Revebsing.

The fiscal court of Boyd county at a special term beld on June 12, 1903, made the following orders:

“On motion of Mr. Kirk it is ordered that the following appropriations he made and spent according to the directions of each magistrate: District No. one, $200.00; district No. two, $500.00; district No. three, $300.00; district No. four, $400.00. Esquires Arthur, Kirk, Handley, and Buckley voting for the adoption of the above order, and Judge William Poage voting against same, and orders that an appeal be taken to the Boyd circuit court to test the legality of same.”'

“On motion of J. L. Kirk, J. P., and seconded by F. M. Buckley, J. P., it is ordered that each of the five justices of thp peace of Boyd county, Kentucky, shall be allowed [935]*935three dollars a day for each day’s work done by them in •supervising and directing the work in their respective districts, in constructing and maintaining the county roads therein, not exceeding fifty days for the year 1903, and each year thereafter in lieu of this amount heretofore drawn by them.

“The foregoing order is excepted and objected to by William Poage, Judge of the Boyd county court, and ego officio member and presiding judge of the Boyd fiscal court. It is therefore ordered that an appeal be taken from said order, or that such other legal proceedings be instituted as may appear necessary to test the legality and validity of said order.

“John W. Woods, a regular practicing attorney at law of Boydi county, is hereby employed and appointed for and on behalf of Boyd county to take and prosecute said appeal, or such other necessary legal proceedings as may appear for the best interests of Boyd county in and to and through any court to which said cause may be carried. For which legal service so rendered he shall be paid by Boyd county a reasonable compensation.”

An appeal was taken to the circuit court as provided in the orders, and in that court a petition and an amended petition were filed setting out the proceedings in the fiscal court, alleging that the money was about to be drawn out under the above orders; that these orders were void and beyond the power of the fiscal court, and an injunction was obtained restraining the county treasurer from paying out any money under the orders. After this had been done, the defendants to the appeal moved the court, to require the appellant to elect whether it would prosecute its appeal from the first order or the second. The court sustained the motion, and, the appellant refusing to elect, the court thereupon [936]*936dismissed the appeal on account of appellant’s refusing to elect, and also because the appeals were prematurely taken. He also discharged the injunction. From this judgment appellant has appealed to this court.

There was no misjoinder of causes of action. The first order appropriated a certain scm of money to be spent according to the directions of each magistrate, and. the second order allowed each magistrate $3 a day for each day’s work done by him in supervising and directing the work in his respective district in constructing and maintaining the county •roads. The two orders so entered separately on the order book were made on the same day, and are part of the same plan. The money is to be spent by the magistrates under one order, and their compensation for spending the money and the way they are to spend it are determined by the other order. It would be impossible to carry out the second order without the first, and the first would be meaningless without the second; for without the second it can not be told in what way the money was to be spent which was appropriated by the first order. There was, therefore, no misjoinder in taking one appeal from the two orders. Nor can it be maintained that the orders are not final. They appropriate money, and direct how it shall be paid out. They are, in substance, contacts by the fiscal court with each of the magistrates by which they are employed to supervise and direct the work in their respective districts in constructing and maintaining the county,roads at $3 a day for not exceeding fifty days for the year 1903, and each year thereafter. If this was not a contract which the fiscal court could properly make, then appellant had a right to enjoin any payment of money under the orders, and had also a right to prosecute an appeal from the orders to have them vacated. In Daviess County v. Goodwin, 116 Ky., 891, 77 S. W., 185, 25 Ky. Law Rep., 1081, it was held that the fiscal [937]*937court is without authority to appoint the county judge the county supervisor of roads, and that, being a court of limited jurisdiction, its action in doing so is void. In Pulaski County v. Sears, 117 Ky., 249, 78 S. W., 123, 25 Ky. Law Rep., 1381, the magistrates had entered an order as a fiscal court investing the county judge with the general supervision of the road's of the county, and making the magistrate in each magisterial district his assistant. This was held unwarranted and void. These cases control the one before us.

Section 4313, Ky. St., 1903, authorizes the fiscal court to appoint a supervisor of roads in and for the county. By section 4315, the fiscal court is to see over the supervisor, and by section 4335 he is to report to the county judge or some magistrate. The duties required of the supervisor are to be exercised under the supervision of the fiscal court. The statute does not contemplate that a member of the fiscal court should be supervisor, much less that the county should have as many supervisors as there are magistrates, each being supervisor in his own district. By section 1844, Ky. St., 1903, no member of the fiscal court shall be. interested, directly or indirectly, or be concerned in any contract for work to be done or material to be furnished for the county, or any district thereof, nor purchase, nor be interested in any claim against the county or the State. The members of the fiscal court are the representatives of the county charged with the duty of protecting its interests. They are allowed to appoint a supervisor, and are required to see that the supervisor lives up to the law. The interests of the county might seriously suffer if the person Avho is by law required to protect its interests as between it and the supervisor was himself the supervisor.

There is no principle better settled than that a trus[938]*938tee will not be allowed to occupy a dual position, and that, where he is charged with the protection of his cestui que trust, he can not place himself in a position where his personal interests may be antagonistic to the interests of the cestui que trust. If he does this, it is a breach of his trust The statutes we have referred to have the same end in view when they forbid the members of the fiscal court being interested in any contract or work, and in providing that they may appoint one supervisor for the whole county and exercise supervision over him.

So much of the orders appealed from as appropriate $1,400 is unobjectionable, but in so far as they direct that this money is to be spent according to the directions of each magistrate they are void. In so far as the orders allow each magistrate $3 a day for each day’s work done by him in supervising and directing the work in his district in constructing and maintaining the county roads therein the order is beyond the authority of the fiscal court. By section 1815, Ky.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
82 S.W. 613, 118 Ky. 932, 1904 Ky. LEXIS 121, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/boyd-county-v-arthur-kyctapp-1904.