City of Louisville v. Commonwealth

39 Ky. 70, 9 Dana 70, 1839 Ky. LEXIS 85
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedOctober 31, 1839
StatusPublished

This text of 39 Ky. 70 (City of Louisville v. Commonwealth) 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 Louisville v. Commonwealth, 39 Ky. 70, 9 Dana 70, 1839 Ky. LEXIS 85 (Ky. Ct. App. 1839).

Opinion

The Chief Justice

delivered the Opinion of the Court.

By the fourth section of an act of 1830, the Legislature granted to the city of Louisville “all fines and pe-“nalties inflicted before the Jefferson Circuit Court, the “Mayor of the city of Louisville, or any Justice of the “Peace, for offences arising within” that city, to be appropriated to “the use and benefit of the public schools thereof”—Session acts 1829-30, p. 260.

An act of 1835 established a Chancery Court in and for the city of Louisville, fixed the Chancellor’s salary at fifteen hundred dollars, “ payable quarterly,” out of the public Treasury of the Commonwealth; and also provided that it should “be the duty of the Mayor and Coun"cil of the city of Louisville, to pay into the public “Treasury, annually on the first day of January, in each ‘‘year, the sum of five hundred dollars, out of the fines “assessed in the Mayor’s Court”—Session acts of 1835, p. 414.

By an act of 1836, the Mayor’s Court of the said city was abolished, and in lieu of it, a “Police Court” was established; to “be held by a single judge, to be ap “pointed as other judicial officers of the State,” and to be entitled to“ an annual salary of twelve hundred dollars, payable quarterly, out of the Treasury of this Commonwealth;” and it was also enacted, “that, in con ‘‘sideration of the fines and forfeitures recovered in favor “of the Commonwealth in said Court, which are hereby ‘‘granted to the city of Louisville, for the benefit of the “public schools of said city; it shall be the duty of said “ city, on the first day of December next, and on the first “day of December in each succeeding year, to pay into [71]*71"the Treasury of this Commonwealth, the sum of twelve hundred dollars, in addition to the sum heretofore di“rected to be paid; and, on failure to pay said sums, the Auditor shall proceed to coerce the same from the said “city, in the same manner as directed against the collec “tors of the public revenue.”—Session acts of 1836, p. 280-1.

In 1837, the Legislature increased the salary of the Circuit judge for the fifth judicial district, including Louisville, to two thousand dollars, and that of the Chancellor of that city, from fifteen hundred dollars to three thousand; and enacted that, ‘‘in consideration thereof, “the city of Louisville shall pay into the Treasury of “this Commonwealth, the sum of fifteen hundred dol “lars, in addition to the five hundred, which said city “pays under the act establishing the Louisville Chancery “ Court.”—Session acts of 1837, p. 238.

And by an act of 1838, it was enacted, “that the fines “and forfeitures accruing in the Police Court of Louis‘‘ville, after the payment of three thousand two hundred dol“lars, required to bepaid out of the same into the public “Treasury, shall be a fund to pay the grand and petit “jurors in said Court.”—Session acts of 1838, p. 242.

The city of Louisville having, for the year 1838, paid into the public Treasury, only the sum of twelve hundred dollars, as required by the act of 1836, and two hundred and fifty four dollars and twenty eight cents of the sum of five hundred dollars required by the act of 1835, a motion was made against the corporation, by the Auditor, for a judgment for the residue of the five hundred dollars, to wit: two hundred and forty six dollars and seventy-two cents; and also, for the whole fifteen hundred dollars required to be paid by the act of 1837.

The city appeared, and on the trial, insisted that there was no legal obligation to pay for the year 1838, a greater sum than had been collected out of the fines and forfeitures assessed for that year; and proved that the fines and forfeitures assessed for 1838, in the Police Court, amounted to only $8,622 44; that the Governor had remitted $3,055 50 of that amount; that of the residue, only $1,453 28 had been collected, and that not more [72]*72than four hundred and fifty dollars of the uncollected balance would be collectible.

But the General Court, in which the motion was made, rendered a judgment against the city of Louisville, for one thousand seven hundred and forty-six dollars and seventy-two cents, and eighteen per cent. interest, thereon, from the first of January, 1839, until paid, and that judgment is now to be revised.

The main question to be considered is whether, according to a proper interpretation of the foregoing enactments, the city is liable, annually, for the thirty-two hundred dollars, or any portion of it, independently of the amount that shall have been collected of the fines and forfeitures assessed in the Police Court; or, in other words, whether or not the city is the mere collector of the Commonwealth, and is required only to pay out of the amount which shall have been or may be collected.

The act of 1835, requiring the annual payment of five hundred dollars, literally imports that it shall be made out of the fines and forfeitures assessed in the Mayor's Court; and if that enactment should be construed as if it were the only one, we should perhaps decide that the city would not be liable for the five hundred dollars, unless as much as that amount of fines and forfeitures shall have been collected, or shall be collectible, even though a greater amount had been assessed. The same process of isolated construction would, in our opinion, lead to the conclusion that the enactment of 1836, requiring the annual payment of twelve hundred dollars, and that of 1837, requiring the annual payment of fifteen hundred dollars, subject the city to liability for these respective sums annually, whether as great an aggregate amount, or any amount, of the assessed fines and forfeitures had been collected or not.

The act of 1836, substituted a tribunal unquestionably constitutional, for one whose judicial authority had been seriously doubted, and the whole expense incident to which had been devolved on the city, because the Mayor’s Court was exclusively a municipal Court; and therefore, nothing appearing to the contrary, it would not be unreasonable to presume that, in requiring the city to [73]*73pay annually an amount equal to that given by the act, to the substituted city judge, the Legislature intended that the city should, indirectly and ultimately, pay his salary, as it had before paid, directly, that of its Mayor.

But this enactment, unlike that of 1835, as to a portion of the Chancellor’s salary, declared, not, as that did, that the prescribed sum should be paid “out of the fines,” &c., but “in consideration of the fines and forfeitures recovered,” and given to the city; from which alone we should infer, that the Legislature intended that the liability to pay the twelve hundred dollars annually, should not depend on the collection of that amount of fines and forfeitures.

The act of 1837, considered by itself, will allow no other interpretation than, that the annual payment of fifteen hundred dollars prescribed by it, is required in consequence only of the augmentation of the salary of the city Chancellor and Circuit Judge; and therefore, that this annual payment should be made by the city, without any reference or regard to the fines and forfeitures assessed in the Police Court.

If we consider the three several enactments in

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Bluebook (online)
39 Ky. 70, 9 Dana 70, 1839 Ky. LEXIS 85, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-louisville-v-commonwealth-kyctapp-1839.