County Board of Education v. Liter

13 S.W.2d 516, 227 Ky. 493, 1929 Ky. LEXIS 910
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedJanuary 25, 1929
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 13 S.W.2d 516 (County Board of Education v. Liter) 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
County Board of Education v. Liter, 13 S.W.2d 516, 227 Ky. 493, 1929 Ky. LEXIS 910 (Ky. 1929).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Thomas

— Reversing.

Appellee and plaintiff below, W. W. Liter, is a farmer residing in Jefferson comity. He filed this action in the Jefferson circuit court against appellants and defendants, Fred O. Nuetzel, clerk of the Jefferson county court, and Ray Kirchdorfer, treasurer of Jefferson county, to obtain a mandatory injunction against the clerk requiring him to draw an order on defendant Kirchdorfer, as treasurer of the county, in payment of two claims for alleged damages sustained by plaintiff, growing out of the killing and injury to his sheep by dogs whose owners were unknown to Man, and which claims were tendered to, and later filed with, the clerk pursuant to the provisions of section 68b-27 of the 1922 edition of Carroll’s 'Statutes. The prayer of the petition as amended also asked that the county clerk be enjoined from issuing his order on the county treasurer for the payment of similar claims subsequently accruing, and to enjoin the treasurer from paying any such subsequently accruing claims until plaintiff’s two claims were satisfied in the manner provided by the statute.

Plaintiff’s pleading set up two claims for damages produced by dogs, whose owners were unknown, oue of which was sustained by him on February 9, 1926, and amounted, according to his contention, to the sum of $415, one item of which was “$300.00 damage to flock.” The remainder represented the value of killed and destroyed sheep and lambs. The other claim was for alleged losses sustained on September 29, 1926, and was for the total amount of $380, $150 of which was “damage to flock.” The board of education of Jefferson county intervened in the cause upon the ground that it was entitled to any surplus of the fund, out of which the claim must be paid, under the statute commonly known as the “Dog Tax Law, ’ ’ and being chapter 112, page 483, Acts of 1918, and now sections 68b-l to and including 68b-37 of the 1922 edition of the 'Statutes. In its intervening pleading.it opposed all relief to plaintiff based upon either of his *495 claims upon various grounds, among which was the insufficiency of the two claims, as and when presented to the county court clerk with the request to issue his order on the county treasurer as is required of him by section 68b-27 of the Statutes, supra. The two officers made the same defenses, and another one of which was that one of the appraisers of the alleged September loss was not a “landowner” of the county, and for that additional reason the appraisement and certification of that claim was invalid. The court sustained a demurrer to the pleading seeking payment of the February claim of plaintiff, and dismissed it, and, upon trial before a jury on issues of fact submitted to it, the court sustained plaintiff’s motion for a peremptory instruction upon his second or September claim, having first overruled defendants’ motion for a similar one, and from the judgment so allowing that claim defendants moved for and obtained an appeal in this court, and plaintiff has prosecuted a cross-appeal from the judgment disallowing his February claim and refusing injunctive relief sought by him with reference thereto in his original and amended petitions.

A great many questions are argued and discussed in briefs of counsel for both sides, but we deem it unnecessary to consider but two of them, (1), The insufficiency of the certification of the two claims; and (2), the urged disqualification of one of the appraisers who were appointed and acted in the making out of plaintiff’s second or September claim.

The last literary paragraph or sentence of section 68b-27, supra, was before this court for interpretation in the case of Nichols, County Court Clerk, v. Logan, 184 Ky. 711, 213 S. W. 181, as were also other questions with reference to the involved statute, and a most painstaking consideration by the whole court resulted in the conclusions expressed in that opinion, in which it was conceded that some parts of the statute were loosely drawn and considerably confused; particularly that part composing the paragraph above referred to of section 68b-27, supra. After elaborate discussion, it was interpreted so as to read: “No person shall receive any order for any claim (for) assessment of damages until the county judge (or) justice of the peace, before whom the claim was made has certified that within twenty-four hours after the carcasses of the live stock or property *496 killed (were) located due diligence was made to ascertain whose dog or dogs did the damage. ’ ’ After first discussing cases and authorities authorizing the transportation and 'sometimes substitution of words in order to arrive at the intention of the Legislature in the enactment of statuaies, we endeavored therein to point out the intention of the Legislature in the enactment of the ambiguous clause, supra, as a basis for the adopted reformed one, and all in accord with permissible rules for interpretation, and in doing so we said: “What, then, did the Legislature intend to express by the language now being considered? Under the old (1906) act it was provided that a claim for damages should be made within twenty-four hours after the claimant discovered the injury to his stock. The new act provides in the latter part of section 25 that ‘ any owner or keeper of such dog or dogs shall be liable to the county in which 'the damages occurred to such live stock or poultry in a civil action for all damages and costs,’ etc. The language under consideration required the county judge or justice of the peace before whom the claim was made to certify that due diligence was made to ascertain whose dog or dogs did the damage and such certification was made a prerequisite to the claimant receiving a warrant from the county court clerk. Manifestly it was not intended that the county judge or justice of the peace should only be required to give the certificate as to diligence in ascertaining whose dog or dogs did the damage within twenty-four hours after the assessment of the damage, and which assessment might be made at any time after the injury was done to the stock. This would not only be an abandonment of the purpose expressed in the old act (and plainly inferable from the terms employed in the new one), but would likewise militate against affording the county an opportunity to recover the damage from the owner of the dog or dogs that inflicted it. Every one knows that the evidence leading to a discovery of whose dog or dogs did the damage is much fresher and more .easily obtained within twenty-four hours after the infliction of the damage than at a period more removed from that time, and it was the evident purpose of the Legislature that the ‘due diligence’ provided for should be exercised as near to the time of the infliction of the injury ;as possible and that the fact should be certified on the .report of the appraisers.”

It will thus be seen that the opinion in that case interpreted the phrase “within twenty-four hours” as *497

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Bluebook (online)
13 S.W.2d 516, 227 Ky. 493, 1929 Ky. LEXIS 910, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/county-board-of-education-v-liter-kyctapphigh-1929.