Breckinridge County v. Rhodes

105 S.W. 903, 127 Ky. 444, 1907 Ky. LEXIS 147
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedDecember 6, 1907
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 105 S.W. 903 (Breckinridge County v. Rhodes) 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
Breckinridge County v. Rhodes, 105 S.W. 903, 127 Ky. 444, 1907 Ky. LEXIS 147 (Ky. Ct. App. 1907).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Wm. Rogers Clay, Commissioner

Reversing.

Willis Green and others on the 30th day of April, 1907, filed in the county court of Breckinridge county their petition for the opening of a new road. By consent of the parties, a jury was waived and the question of -damages accruing to those over whose land the proposed road was to run was submitted to the county court. This court awarded appellee W. E. Rhodes the sum of $850. The county attorney of Breckinridge county, believing that the allowance of $850 was excessive, appealed on his own motion, and without any order from the county or fiscal court, to the circuit court of Breckinridge county from so much of the order as allowed appellee the sum of $850. [446]*446When the ease came on for hearing before the circuit court, appellee moved to dismiss the appeal on the ground that the county .attorney was not authorized by any order of the county or fiscal court to prosecute the appeal. Thereupon the circuit court entered an order dismissing the appeal, and, from that order, the county of Breckinridge is here on appeal.

Por the purpose of getting the question involved fairly before us, it will be necessary to set out the following sections of the Kentucky Statutes of 1903;

“Sec. 126. Each county attorney shall attend all county and fiscal courts held in his county and conduct all cases and business in said court touching the rights or interests of the county, and oppose the allowance of all claims not legally presented or unjust, and give the court and the several county officers legal advice concerning any county business within the jurisdiction of any of them.
“Sec. 127. He shall attend the prosecution of all eases in his county in which the Commonwealth or the county is interested; and, when so directed by the county or fiscal court, institute or defend and conduct actions, motions and proceedings of every description, before any of the courts of this Commonwealth in which the county is interested, and shall in no instance take a fee or act as counsel in any case ini opposition to the interests of the county. He shall also attend the circuit courts held in his county, and aid the Commonwealth in all prosecutions therein, and in the absence of an acting Commonwealth attorney, he shall attend to all Commonwealth’s business in said courts. ’ ’
“Sec. 129. He shall oppose the wrongful opening, alteration or discontinuance of any public road, and oppose the improper granting of tavern, merchant’s [447]*447and drug license, and may, if he thinks a license has been improperly granted, prosecute an appeal without security to the circuit court in the name of the Commonwealth. ’ ’
“Sec. 4303. No appeal shall lie to the Court of Appeals from the decision of a county court ordering a new road to be opened, or refusing such an order, or ordering an alteration in a road, or refusing the same, or discontinuing a road, or refusing such discontinuance, allowing gates to be erected across a road, or refusing to allow the same, or abolishing such gates. But in all such cases, the party aggrieved may prosecute an appeal within sixty days by executing bond as required in other cases to the circuit court of the county, and the appeal shall be tried de novo; and from the decision of the circuit court either party may prosecute an appeal to the Court of Appeals, and the latter court shall have jurisdiction only of matters of law arising on the record of such cases. ’ ’
“Sec. 978. Appeals may be taken to the circuit court from all orders and judgments of the fiscal or quarterly court in civil cases where the value in controversy is over fifty dollars, exclusive of interest and costs, * * * and in all other cases allowed by law.”

Prom the above sections of the Kentucky Statutes, it will appear that the county attorney must oppose illegal claims and unjust allowances of public money; that he must give legal advice to the county officials ; that he must prosecute all cases on behalf of the county; that he must oppose the wrongful opening, alteration, discontinuance of any public road, and the wrongful and improper granting of tavern, merchant’s,- or drug license, and may, if he thinks a [448]*448license lias been improperly granted, prosecute an, appeal to . the circuit court. It is the contention of counsel for appellee that the validity of the order opening the new road is not called in question; that the only question involved is the amount of damages allowed appellee; that, while the right of appeal is given by section 4303, that right is subject to the limitation prescribed under section 127, which gives authority to the county attorney to prosecute an appeal only in the event of an order from the county or fiscal court; that, as this appeal was prosecuted without any such order from either court, the circuit court properly dismissed the appeal. The county attorney is the legal representative of the county. He is also the chosen legal representative of the people to see that no illegal nor wrongful appropriation of the public funds of the county is made. For the purpose of carrying out the mandatory provisions of the Statutes, it is frequently necessary to call in question the action both of the county and fiscal courts. While these courts are separate, yet in a sense they are closely connected. The county judge, aside from constituting the county court, is a member of the fiscal court. The relations between the justices of the peace and the county judge, all of whom compose the fiscal court, are usually quite close, and the influence of each of these courts upon the other cannot be overlooked in determining this question. If appellee’s contention be correct, the county attorney, although he believed that unjust claims had been allowed, could not properly protect the interests of the county, for the reason that neither the county court nor the fiscal court would' authorize an appeal. Men in every public capacity desire their official acts to meet with public approval, and, for this reason, [449]*449they might he slow in directing any one to take steps that in all probability would east disapproval upon such acts. If, then, either the county or fiscal court acted upon a matter involving the interests of the county, and the county had no right of appeal, because neither of these courts would sanction an appeal, it would, necessarily follow that in those eases, where an appeal was most necessary, the county would be in a helpless condition.

In discussing this question, it is not our purpose in the least to reflect upon the men constituting our county and fiscal courts, for we are of the opinion that in by far the greater number of the counties of this Commonwealth these men are conscientious, faithful, and efficient officers. Now and then, however, there are officers who do not perform their duties as they should, or perform them in such a manner as to be subversive of the true interests of the people. For the purpose of meeting the latter condition, no limitation should be put upon the rights of the courts to review their action, unless it appears from the Statutes that the Legislature plainly intended it. To hold that the courts making the error are vested with the sole power of determining whether or not an appeal should be prosecuted from their judgment would virtually be to deny the. fight of appeal in the very eases where the interests of the county demand it.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
105 S.W. 903, 127 Ky. 444, 1907 Ky. LEXIS 147, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/breckinridge-county-v-rhodes-kyctapp-1907.