City of Corbin v. Board of Education

268 S.W. 560, 206 Ky. 787, 1925 Ky. LEXIS 1049
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedJanuary 23, 1925
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 268 S.W. 560 (City of Corbin v. Board of Education) 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
City of Corbin v. Board of Education, 268 S.W. 560, 206 Ky. 787, 1925 Ky. LEXIS 1049 (Ky. Ct. App. 1925).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Judge Thomas

Affirming.

’Corbin, Kentucky, is a city of -the third class. Its duly elected and qualified assessor listed in the regular way and at the proper time in 1924 the property therein subject to ad valorem taxes and which amounted to a total sum of $2,567,960.00. ¡In due time and in strict accordance with the provisions of the charter for cities of that class, its mayor appointed, with the approval of the council, three qualified persons as the board of tax supervisors for the city. The board met as directed by the charter and had 'before it the assessor’s list and un[788]*788dertook to supervise it and correct it within the limitations of the powers conferred upon it. One of the appointed members acted for only a few days, and the other two continued to act until the work was finished, and they properly certified the result of their work to the city clerk as they are required to do by section 3385 of the 1922 edition of Carroll’s Kentucky Statutes, being a part of the charter of cities of the third class, and he submitted the work to the city council, as prescribed in that section. The board deducted from the assessor’s list, for causes not shown in the x-ecord, property to the value of $15,975.00, and assessed property omitted from the assessor’s list to the amount of $180,610.00. It also increased the assessment of various lists in an aggregate amount of $1,875,216.00, making a net increase of taxable property in the city over that reported by the assessor of $2,039,851.00 • At the first meeting of the city-council after the clerk delivered to it the report of the board of supervisors, it, by a majority vote, rejected in toto the list as supervised by the board and adopted by the same vote the assessment returned by the assessor.

This equity action was instituted in the Whitley circuit court by the board of education of the city of Corbin and its individual members against the city council and the members composing it, as well as others of its officers, seeking to compel defendants 'by a mandatory injunction 'to set aside the ordex's of the council rejecting the report of the board of supervisors and adoptixig the assessment made by the assessor, and to compel defendants to recognize and adopt the supervised list as. made by the board with such changes only as the council, under the provisions of the section of the statute, supra, may make withixx its powers therein conferred relative to the subject.

The interests of plaintiffs en titling them to maintain the action as stated in the petition, were that the report of the board of supervisors was and is correct and its valuation of the assessable property within the limits of the city did not exceed the reasonable market value of the assessed property at a fair voluntary sale and that the limits of the rate ($1.50 per hundred ad valorem and $1.50 poll) on the enumeratioxx made by the assessor would not be sufficient to raise the amount of money necessary for the public schools of the city. It was also alleged ixx the petition that the school district had theretofore voted within the city limits bonds to the amount of [789]*789$75,000.00, and that all of them had not been issued, and it was necessary to issue another installment to raise funds with which to construct and repair school buildings, but that no additional amount of the bonds could be sold, under the provisions of section 158 of the Constitution, if the assessor’s list should prevail, since to do so would create a debt above the 2% limit fixed in that section, whereas if the enumeration made by the supervisors should prevail, such additional amount of bonds could be sold without conflicting with the provisions of that section.

Defendants demurred to the petition, which the court overruled, and they declined to answer or plead, and upon submission the court granted the prayer of the petition and perpetually enjoined defendants as ashed, and to reverse that judgment they prosecute this appeal.

Two grounds are urged as errors, which are: (1), That a quorum of the board of supervisors is not authorized to act because, as alleged, there is no provision in charters of cities of the third class with reference to such boards so authorizing, notwithstanding there are such provisions in cities' of other classes, notably the first and second ones; and that since provisions were made in charters of those cities for a quorum to act and none made in the charter of third class cities, it was the intention of the legislature to withhold such power in the latter class of cities; and (2), that, under the provisions of section 3385, supra, of the statute, power is conferred upon the city council to do what it did in this case, which, it is insisted, is granted by the words therein “to make such changes in the assessment or valuation of any list as may be just and equitable.” We will dispose of these two contentions in the order named.

1. If there was no other authority for so holding, we exceedingly doubt if the reasons urged in support of ground (1), are .sufficient for the purpose, since it does not necessarily follow that the right of a quorum of a board to act in third class cities is denied from the mere fact that it is not expressly contained in the charters for that class and is contained in charters of other classes. We have had similar questions supported by similar reasons before us in prior cases, and have construed charters which were silent upon the point under consideration as conferring certain powers upon the council which were expressly stated in charters of other class cities, [790]*790and we held therein that while the omission of such powers was a fact that might be looked to in determining their existence or nonexistence, yet it was not conclusive. A case in point is that of Town of Whitley v. Stephens, 184 Ky. 277. In that case the validity of an ordinance forbidding the running of stock at large within the city limits was involved. It was insisted that the town of Whitley, which was a city of the sixth class, possessed no authority to enact such an ordinance because there was no express power given it in its charter, although such power was expressly given in fifth class cities; and the charters of the former class also contained general language substantially the same as is found in subsection 10 of section 3637, which is a part of the charters of the fifth class cities. It was held that under the general language the board of council of sixth class cities was authorized to enact the ordinance, notwithstanding the power was not expressly conferred but was so conferred in cities of the fifth class, and that the latter fact did not serve to curtail or withhold the power in sixth class cities.

But, independently of the foregoing reasoning, section 448 of our present statutes says: “Words purporting to give authority to three or more public officers or other persons shall be construed as giving such authority to a majority of such officers or other persons;” and section 679 of the Civil Code says: “An authority conferred by law on three or more persons may be exercised by a majority of them concurring; and an act directed by law to be done by three or more persons may be done by a majority of them concurring.” In a note to both of these sections a number of cases from this court are cited, the latest of which is Carpenter v. Hale, 159 Ky.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
268 S.W. 560, 206 Ky. 787, 1925 Ky. LEXIS 1049, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-corbin-v-board-of-education-kyctapp-1925.