Breathitt County v. Cockrell, Jailer

63 S.W.2d 920, 250 Ky. 743, 92 A.L.R. 626, 1933 Ky. LEXIS 764
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedOctober 17, 1933
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 63 S.W.2d 920 (Breathitt County v. Cockrell, Jailer) 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
Breathitt County v. Cockrell, Jailer, 63 S.W.2d 920, 250 Ky. 743, 92 A.L.R. 626, 1933 Ky. LEXIS 764 (Ky. 1933).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Richardson

Affirming in part and reversing in part.

This ease portrays the evil of the law’s mistake in authorizing and permitting a governmental unit to issue warrants as evidence of its floating obligations. It depicts the sequence of the General Assembly’s omission io provide by an enactment a method of reporting and accounting for, at stipulated periods, the fees and salaries collected by officials whose salaries are not fixed "by law, as contemplated by section 246 of the State Constitution. .

At the November election, 1929, S. J. Cockrell and Lee Combs were elected, and on the first Monday in January, 1930, qualified, respectively, as jailer, and sheriff of Breathitt county. At the April term, 1930, *745 of the fiscal court, John S. Hollon was appointed and. qualified as treasurer of the county.

For the keeping and dieting of county prisoners, during the year 1930, Cockrell, as jailer, was allowed . by the fiscal court $4,586.30, evidenced by two warrants, payable out of the general fund; for the year 1931, it allowed him $5,821.67, evidenced by two warrants to be-paid out of the same fund.

For superintending the courthouse, the jail, and other public buildings of-the county, and for keeping-them clean, comfortable, and in repair, the fiscal court allowed him $1,860 for each of the two years, payable-in installments of $155 a month. At or near the date-of each of the warrants he presented them to Hollon,. treasurer, and demanded their payment, which he refused, except $2,635, representing seventeen months’' allowance for keeping and caring for the public buildings. During the years 1930 and 1931, the heating apparatus furnished by the county'to heat the jail and the-courthouse was-out of repair, and insufficient to furnish heat either to the jail or the courthouse. To repair it he expended of his own funds $785.57, for which the fiscal court allowed him $456.96 in 1930, and $328.61,. April 11, 1931, and a warrant therefor was issued payable out of the general fund. This warrant was presented to the county treasurer, and its payment refused by him.

In the year 1930, the revenue levied and collected, by the county for the general fund was $34,014.30; for-the year. 1931, $30,168.08; and for the year 1932, approximately $34,000. The current expenses incurred, for the payment of such items as the law denominates governmental expenses for each of these years were-approximately $18,000. The warrants issued and delivered to Cockrell for the purposes indicated were repeatedly presented to the treasurer for payment, and,, as often as presented, payment was refused.

Lewis Combs, a brother of Lee Combs, and S. L., Combs, the father of Lee Combs, were deputies of the-sheriff, Lee Combs. They indulged in the practice, during each of these years, of buying the warrants issued to claimants in satisfaction of the obligations of the-cpunty, at a discount of 22 1/2 to 33 1/3 per cent. In the annual settlements of Lee Combs as sheriff, the ag~ *746 ;gregate of .the warrants pnr.ch.ased by them was de-..dncted by him from the total _ of the county taxes with which he was chargeable, and the balance paid by him to the treasurer.' In this way the treasury was con-istantly depleted. • •

Cockrell filed this action setting out these facts and ¡sought an injunction preventing the treasurer from first ■paying warrants not issued for governmental expenses, •and also requiring him to pay his warrants. He sought to enjoin.the sheriff- and his deputies from dealing and trafficking in county warrants-, and to compel the sheriff to pay to the treasurer the taxes collected and levied for the-general fund by the fiscal court into the general-fund: Hollon and Lee Combs defended, both making the'same defenses.

Following a traverse, their answers respectively •charged that during the years 1930 and 1931, Cockrell had kept and dieted a certain number of federal, state, city, and county prisoners, and had received therefor a ■definite'amount, which, when added to the annual salary •of $1,860 he had thereby received annually a salary in •exc'ess of the constitutional limit of $5,000, and that by reason thereof he should not' collect, and the county -should not be compelled to pay, the warrants described in the petition.

Breathitt county presented an intervening petition ■setting forth the same facts and figures contained in the answers of Hollon and Combs, and asked that it be ■permitted to become a party to the action; that its petition be taken as its answer, and that Hollon be enjoined from paying the warrants to Cockrell, and for an accounting by Cockrell, .showing the amounts received as .jailer of Breathitt county from all sources, as well as all necessary and legal expenses incurred by him; that the court determine the excess, if any, of $5,000 received by him from all sources during each of the years, and that the excess, if any, be deducted from the warrants, and if the amount received by him equaled the face of the warrants that they be canceled.

The county’s intervening petition was permitted to be filed. The court later was of the opinion that it had no more right to defend on the grounds set out therein than its treasurer and sheriff, and denied it the right to intervene, and also its right to have its subsequently in-stituted action for the same purpose consolidated with *747 this one. Oh final hearing the 'court granted Cockrell! the relief sought in his original and amended' petition.. The issues as presented by the pleadings, and to which: the evidence was directed, are here for review.

To .dispose of them properly, it is necessary to review certain sections of the statute.

Section 2224, Ky. Statutes, requires the jailer to take the oath of office and execute bond to the-commonwealth, on which an action may be brought from time to time by any person injured by the act or the omission of the jailer.

Section 2225' requires him to discharge and perform all the duties and acts prescribed by law.

Section 2226 enjoins upon him the duty of receiving and keeping all persons in jail, who shall be lawfully committed thereto, until they are lawfully discharged. To treat them with humanity, and to furnish them with proper food and lodging during their confinement, and to deliver such as die in jail to their friends, if requested, or have them decently buried at the county’s expense. -

Section 2227 provides that he shall receive and confine in jail persons committed under the federal laws,, or by cities or towns.

Section 2229 makes him the custodian of the jail,, and prescribes where he shall reside.

Section 2236 imposes upon him the duty of keeping-the jail clean and comfortably warm, and to provide the-prisoners confined therein with a sufficiency of bedcloth-ing to make them comfortable; the county paying for-same.

Section 1730 especially provides for the keeping- and dieting of prisoners, when confined in jail for other than a felony or contempt of court, $1 per day to be: paid out of the county levy to the jailer.

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Bluebook (online)
63 S.W.2d 920, 250 Ky. 743, 92 A.L.R. 626, 1933 Ky. LEXIS 764, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/breathitt-county-v-cockrell-jailer-kyctapphigh-1933.