City of Louisville v. Kraft

297 S.W.2d 39
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedOctober 19, 1956
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 297 S.W.2d 39 (City of Louisville v. Kraft) 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
City of Louisville v. Kraft, 297 S.W.2d 39 (Ky. 1956).

Opinion

CULLEN, Commissioner.

This appeal represents another chapter in the long history of litigation involving-efforts to establish municipal jurisdiction over the large, heavily populated community known as St. Matthews, lying- immediately east of the City of Louisville. The main issue in the legal war has been whether the community shall be annexed to Louisville, or shall become a separate municipality. Over the past ten years a great many battles in that war have reached this Court.

The present controversy concerns the effort of the City of Louisville to annex that part of the St. Matthews community known as the “business district.” The ordinance proposing annexation was adopted in 1946. A petition of remonstrance was filed in the circuit court by a number of freeholders in the territory, thus requiring a trial of the question of annexation. KRS 81.110. For reasons which are explained in some of our previous opinions in the St. Matthews’ cases, the remonstrance suit was not tried until 1955. The jury returned a verdict against annexation, and judgment was entered upon the verdict. The City of Louisville has appealed, contending that the court erred in not sustaining- its motion for a directed verdict, and its subsequent motion for judgment notwithstanding- the verdict.

The territory proposed to be annexed consists of the lots abutting both sides of a street known as the Lexington Road, from the point where this street, running-in a northeast direction, leaves the city limits of Louisville to the point where it converges with Frankfort Avenue, running-east; also included are the lots abutting on the south side of the Shelbyville Road (Frankfort Avenue extended) for a short distance east of the point of convergence with the Lexington Road, and an area of several small blocks to the south of those abutting lots. A majority of the lots abutting on the Lexington Road and the Shelbyville 'Road are devoted to commercial uses, and they constitute the heart of the business district of the St. Matthews, community.

A few years before 1946, all of the St. Matthews area except the territory involved in the present annexation proceeding was incorporated as a sanitation district, to provide sewer facilities. The territory here involved was not included because the property owners in the territory previously had made their own sewer arrangements with the City of Louisville. In 1946, the sanitation district was attempted to be incorporated as a fourth-class city, under an Act of the 1946 General Assembly, but the Act later was held unconstitutional and the attempted incorporation therefore failed.

Thereafter the City of Louisville attempted in a number of proceedings to annex the areas embraced in the sanitation district, but for one reason or another these attempts failed. The final effort resulted in a jury verdict and judgment against annexation, which was not appealed.

*42 While the attempts of Louisville to annex the remainder of the St. Matthews area were being made, the instant remonstrance suit, concerning the business district, lay dormant. In the meantime, an area of a few residential blocks, north of the Shelbyville Road, was incorporated as the sixth-class City of St. Matthews. After one abortive effort at annexation had failed, this little city succeeded in annexing substantially all of the original sanitation district, which surrounds on three sides the territory involved in the instant action. Later the City of St. Matthews annexed the central part of the territory involved in the action. However, if the right of Louisville to annex this territory is upheld, the Louisville annexation, having first been initiated, will prevail over the St. Matthews annexation. Pfieffer v. City of Louisville, Ky., 240 S.W.2d 560; City of Lincolnshire v. Highbaugh Realty Co., Ky., 278 S.W.2d 636.

There is no suggestion in this case that the territory is not urban in nature, or is not adaptable to municipal use. The controversy revolves around the question of whether the municipal services and regulations which the territory clearly needs shall be supplied by the City of Louisville or by a separate St. Matthews municipality.

The governing statute is KRS 81.110, which provides that if less than 75 percent of the freeholders in the territory proposed to be annexed have remonstrated, the issues to be tried in court are whether the adding of the territory will be “for the interest of the city,” and will “cause no manifest injury to the persons owning real estate in the territory sought to be annexed”. (The number of remonstrating freeholders here is less than 75 percent.)

In approaching our discussion of the issues in this case, we think it is essential that careful consideration be given to the limitations that exist upon the functions of the court and jury in annexation cases. Of first consideration is the fact that the creation of municipalities, and the increase or reduction of their boundaries, are matters of legislative func-jtion. The political and economic advis- ! ability of annexation, and the policy ques-i tions involved in the problem of municipal ; expansion, are to be determined solely by I the legislative branch of government. It j it encumbent upon the legislature to pre- ] scribe the facts and conditions under which ; annexation may take place. The only function of the courts is to find whether the prescribed facts and conditions exist. Constitutionally, thé legislature cannot delegate to the courts its policy functions in this field, or leave to the courts to determine, as a matter of discretion or judgment, whether annexation should take place. 37 Am.Jur., Municipal Corporations, sec. 25, pp. 641, 642; Masonic Widows’ & Orphans’ Home v. City of Louisville, 309 Ky. 532, 217 S.W.2d 815; Chesapeake & O. Ry. Co. v. City of Silver Grove, Ky., 249 S.W.2d 520; Engle v. Miller, 303 Ky. 731, 199 S.W.2d 123; Lewis v. Town of Brandenburg, 105 Ky. 14, 47 S.W. 862, 48 S.W. 978; White v. City of Glasgow, 148 Ky. 13, 146 S.W. 19; Board of Trustees of Elkton v. Gill, 94 Ky. 138, 21 S.W. 579; Lenox Land Co. v. City of Oakdale, 137 Ky. 484, 125 S.W. 1089; Carrithers v. City of Shelbyville, 126 Ky. 769, 104 S.W. 744, 17 L.R.A.,N.S., 421; Cheaney v. Hooser, 9 B.Mon. 330; Jernigan v. City of Madisonville, 102 Ky. 313, 43 S.W. 448.

We find ourselves confronted with a statute in which the legislature has employed extremely broad language in attempting to prescribe the facts to be determined by the court and jury. The provision that the court and jury shall determine what is “for the interest of the city” appears on its face to be a blanket invitation for the judicial branch of government to consider all the economic, political and social aspects of municipal expansion. Although somewhat more narrow, the issue of “manifest injury” to the property owners likewise seems to offer a broad scope of policy determination.'

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Bluebook (online)
297 S.W.2d 39, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-louisville-v-kraft-kyctapphigh-1956.