Coke v. Shanks, Auditor

291 S.W. 362, 218 Ky. 402, 1927 Ky. LEXIS 145
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedFebruary 18, 1927
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 291 S.W. 362 (Coke v. Shanks, Auditor) 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
Coke v. Shanks, Auditor, 291 S.W. 362, 218 Ky. 402, 1927 Ky. LEXIS 145 (Ky. 1927).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Dietzman

Dismissing appeal.

The appellants herein brought this action against the state highway commission, its members, the state auditor, and the state treasurer, seeking an injunction enjoining the highway commission from certifying various claims to the auditor; the auditor from issuing warrants.therefor, and the state treasurer from paying such warrants or stamping them “interest bearing,” and from paying warrants theretofore issued or stamped “interest bearing,” on such of those claims as had already ripened into such warrants. Their original petition alleged, in substance, that during the fiscal year beginning June 30, 1923, and ending June 30, 1924, the state highway commission had exceeded its income for that period 'by $3,-564,497.71, and to that extent its liabilities and contracts representing said alleged deficit were void; that the highway commission had carried this alleged deficit as a liability over into the fiscal period running from June 30, 1924, to June 30, 1925; that the highway commission had certified some, and would, unless enjoined, certify the rest of the various claims making up this alleged deficit to the auditor for payment; that he, unless enjoined, would issue his warrants therefor, and the state treasurer would, unless also enjoined, pay them or stamp them “interest bearing,” and would pay such warrants as had *404 already been issued for such claims and so stamped. The petition closed with a prayer we shall presently mention. By an amended petition the appellants undertook to make their original petition more specific by itemizing all the receipts and expenditures of the highway commission during the period in which the alleged deficit was incurred, by outlining their theory concerning which or what part of the expenditures or claims therefor were invalid, and by increasing the alleged deficit to $3,735,-646.69. The prayer to this amended petition was similar to the one in the original petition, except that it asked that the individual • partnerships and corporations to whom claims were yet due, and whose claims were alleged to be void, be made parties to the suit. Second and third amended petitions were filed, but they added nothing to the issues of the original petition as first amended.

The prayer to the original petition asked,, in substance, that the highway commission and its members be required to eliminate from the expenditures of the fiscal periods ending June 30,1922, and June 30,1923, all those incurred in excess of the income of the highway commission for those periods, and that the highway commission and its members be enjoined from certifying any part of such excess to the auditor for payment. The prayer also asked that the highway commission and its members be perpetually enjoined from "incurring any obligations in excess of the revenues accruing to the Commonwealth of Kentucky for the construction or maintenance of its state highway system for any biennial period ending June 30th;” (italics ours), although the petition as variously amended nowhere alleged any facts showing or even conclusions stating that the highway commission or its members had or, ever proposed to do any such thing except as alleged for the fiscal periods specifically mentioned. The prayer also asked that the auditor and treasurer be enjoined from issuing and paying any warrants for any of the claims certified to them by the highway commission and representing this alleged illegal deficit, and from issuing or paying any warrants representing any excess expenditures for amy biennial period. (Italics ours.) The petition as 'amended is just as silent regarding the purpose of these two officers to do any such thing except for the period specifically alleged, as it is with regard to similar action on the part of the highway commission as we have above noted. The appellants *405 never asked for, nor did they ever obtain, any temporary injunction, enjoining pendente lite the appellees from doing the things which appellants asked be enjoined on final hearing. The appellees filed their answers, to which appellants filed replies. To these replies, the appellees filed their demurrers. On submission in chief, the trial court dismissed the appellants’ petition as amended, and they have appealed, making as party appellees the state highway commission, the auditor, and the state treasurer.

While this appeal has been pending here, the appellants have sought no order of this court to preserve the status quo until their appeal could be decided. Pursuant to sections 757 and 758: of the Civil Code, the appellees have filed in this court their respective verified answers, in which they asked that this appeal be dismissed as now being a moot case. The sections of the Code referred to read:

Sec. 757:

“If it appear from the record that an appeal was improperly granted, or that the appellant’s rights to prosecute it further has ceased, the appellee may, upon stating the grounds in writing, move -the court to dismiss the appeal. The motion shall not be heard, without the appellant’s consent, before the day on which the case is set for trial on the’docket (except upon five days ’ notice served upon the appellant or upon his attorney of record.) (But when a party recovers judgment for only part of the demand or property he sues for, the enforcement of such judgment shall not prevent him from prosecuting an ap: peal therefrom as to so much of the demand or property sued for that he did not recover).”

Sec. 758:

“If the facts mentioned in section 757 be not shown by the record, the appellee may plead them by •a verified answer, to which the appellant may file a verified reply; and the questions of law or fact thereon shall be heard and determined by the court on or after the day on which the case is set for trial on the docket. ’ ’

Although the appellants had the right under the Code to reply to these verified answers of the appellees, they did not do so, but have contented themselves with *406 simply objecting to the appellees’ motion to dismiss this appeal. The allegations then of these verified answers filed in this court must in such a state of the record be taken as true. In brief, they are to the effect that, pending this litigation and. since this appeal was taken, all the claims whose ultimate payment it was the object of this suit to stop have been certified to the auditor, who has issued his warrants therefor, which warrants have all been paid by the state treasurer. It is obvious, in the light of such allegations, which, as stated, must be taken as true, that, in so far as the object of this suit was or is to enjoin the payment of these claims, it can no- longer be obtained, and this case is moot. In Winslow v. Gayle, 172 Ky. 126, 188 S. W. 1059, we defined a moot case as one—

“Which seeks to get a judgment on a pretended controversy when in reality there is none, or a decision in advance about a right before it has been actually asserted and contested, or a judgment upon some matter which, when rendered, for any reason can not have any practical legal effect upon a then existing controversy. ’ ’

In the case of Logan County Fiscal Court v. Childress, 196 Ky. 1, 243 S. W. 1038, we said:

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Bluebook (online)
291 S.W. 362, 218 Ky. 402, 1927 Ky. LEXIS 145, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/coke-v-shanks-auditor-kyctapphigh-1927.