City of St. Matthews v. Voice of St. Matthews, Inc.

519 S.W.2d 811, 1974 Ky. LEXIS 12
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedNovember 22, 1974
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 519 S.W.2d 811 (City of St. Matthews v. Voice of St. Matthews, Inc.) 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 St. Matthews v. Voice of St. Matthews, Inc., 519 S.W.2d 811, 1974 Ky. LEXIS 12 (Ky. 1974).

Opinion

VANCE, Commissioner.

This is an appeal from a judgment which ordered the City of St. Matthews, a fourth-class city located in Jefferson County, Kentucky, hereinafter referred to as the city, to grant access to the Voice of St. Matthews, a newspaper published and circulated in the city, hereinafter referred to as the newspaper, to certain records kept by the city with the right to inspect and copy those records. The records to which the judgment is applicable are designated in the judgment as follows:

“1. All of the journals of the proceedings of the City Council and all records and papers required by law to be kept pertaining to all proceedings of the City Council. All City ordinances, resolutions and amendments thereto. Minutes of the City Council and minutes of any committee of the City Council or department or agency of City government. Petitions and official communications, as well as findings and orders, relating to zoning in said City.
“2. All of the dockets of the City Police Court and all records and papers required by law to be kept pertaining to all proceedings in the City Police Court, including without limitation, traffic accident reports; traffic arrest citations and general police arrest records.
“3. All records, papers and documents required to be kept and used for the purpose of ascertaining or discovering the true condition of the fiscal affairs of the City which are necessary for the purpose of making an audit of its accounts, including without limitation, payroll records, building permits; bills and invoices for all purchases and sales by the City; official communications and office memoranda to or from public officials and to and from employees of the City relating to financial or fiscal affairs of said City; invitations to and bids on all City projects and City works; contracts for all City projects and City works; budgets, ledgers, check books and financial records and statements of the City as well as any audits thereof.
“4. Tax records, including tax assessment records and records of tax bills and payments, cancellations and abate-ments thereof.
“5. Semi-annual statements made by the custodian of the sinking fund of the City to the City Legislative body and any separate fund of monies or securities belonging to the City.”

The city has pursued a policy of making available to the newspaper the minutes of the city council meetings, ordinances and resolutions adopted by the council, docket books of the city police court and any other record in which the newspaper has such a special interest as to enable it to maintain or defend an action for which the record sought would furnish evidence or necessary information which would aid it in maintaining or defending such an action in court.

Adherence to this policy by the city has effectively prevented the newspaper from having access to other records which it claims are public records and in which it has an interest, among which are: tax as *813 sessment records, records of tax bills and payments and cancellations or abatements thereof, payroll records, building permits, traffic accident reports, traffic arrest citations, general police arrest records, bills and invoices of the city, communications to and from public officials relating to official business of the city, invitations to bid and bids received for public projects, records of zoning authorities and financial records including check books and ledgers.

The city justifies its position by relying upon a common-law rule that every person is entitled to the inspection, either personally or by his agent, of public records only if he has an interest therein which is such as would enable him to maintain or defend an action for which the document or records sought can furnish evidence or necessary information.

This common-law rule is stated generally in 66 Am.Jur.2d, Records and Recording Laws, Section 15. 1

The city contends that this court adopted the common-law rule in Courier Journal and Louisville Times Company v. Curtis, Ky., 335 S.W.2d 934 (1960), and Fayette County v. Martin, 279 Ky. 387, 130 S.W.2d 838 (1939).

We do not construe our holding in Fay-ette County v. Martin, supra, as adopting the common-law rule. There is language in the opinion which concedes the common-law rule to be as stated, but the decision turns upon the fact that a valid statute prohibited the inspection of the document sought therein even though the necessary common-law interest to demand inspection may have been shown.

In Courier Journal and Louisville Times Company v. Curtis, supra, the issue was whether a newspaper was entitled to require a circuit judge to order a court reporter to transcribe from his notes a statement made to the judge in chambers by a defendant in a criminal proceeding. Without deciding whether the document sought was in fact a public record, this court held that the newspaper did not have the standing required by the common-law rule to demand that the statement be transcribed and be made available to it. The question of the advisability of the adoption by this state of the common-law rule was not considered in that opinion for it was assumed therein that the rule had already been adopted in Fayette County v. Martin, supra.

Even though Curtis was based squarely upon the common-law rule, the court en-grafted some new concepts upon that rule by its use of the following language:

“ * * * Generally the interests required under the rule must be alleged and proven. However, in order to effectuate the notice-giving purpose of various recording acts such interest shall *814 hereafter be presumed as to the following records:
“(1) Records of all papers, documents and instruments required or permitted by statute to be recorded, or noted of record, in books provided by public funds for that purpose.
“(2) All financial records required by statute to be kept in books so provided.
“The presumption shall govern where papers, documents and instruments are required or permitted by statute to be recorded in such books and have been lodged for that purpose but unrecorded.”

As a result of this amendment to the common-law rule a newspaper was entitled to inspect many recordable documents without demonstrating the interest otherwise required by the common-law rule.

Latching on to this pronouncement in Curtis the trial court in the instant case found statutory authority which was interpreted as requiring or permitting the recording of most of the records which the newspaper desired to inspect. Thus the judgment appealed from recognized the necessity of the interest required by the common-law rule but declined to require any actual showing of that interest upon the basis of the presumption stated in Curtis.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
519 S.W.2d 811, 1974 Ky. LEXIS 12, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-st-matthews-v-voice-of-st-matthews-inc-kyctapphigh-1974.