Ferguson v. Landram

68 Ky. 230, 5 Bush 230, 1868 Ky. LEXIS 250
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedJune 4, 1868
StatusPublished
Cited by41 cases

This text of 68 Ky. 230 (Ferguson v. Landram) 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
Ferguson v. Landram, 68 Ky. 230, 5 Bush 230, 1868 Ky. LEXIS 250 (Ky. Ct. App. 1868).

Opinion

CHIEF JUSTICE WILLIAMS

delivered the opinion op the court:

This case has heretofore been before this court, and may be found reported in 1 Bush, 554, where a more detailed history will be found. It is sufficient now to state, that, in view of the impending draft ordered by the President of the United States in August, 1864, under authority of the several congressional acts, for Federal soldiers to serve three years, or until the close of the then exist[234]*234ing war, that portion of the male people of Gallatin county within military age were required to furnish one hundred and forty-seven soldiers as their quota. To avoid the draft, and to facilitate the raising of volunteer soldiers, a large portion of the people of the county met at their county seat August 29, 1864, and resolved to raise twenty thousand dollars as a military fund, to be distributed among those who should thereafter volunteer in addition to the bounty offered by the Federal Government, and appointed a committee to borrow the money and to obtain an act of the State Legislature authorizing a taxation to raise the means to reimburse the loan.

The money was borrowed; the volunteers obtained; the draft prevented, and the necessary enactments passed by the Legislature; and all seemed satisfactory until the close of the war in the spring of 1865; after which, a large number of the citizens of the county filed a petition praying an injunction from the levy and collection of the taxes on and from them.

When this case was previously here, this court decided that the Federal Government, having gone directly to the people as a Government, and not calling on the different States, as it might have done, to furnish their proper quota, that the State had no constitutional power to levy an involuntary tax on the citizens of the various counties to give to the Federal soldier an additional compensation, nor had it the power to levy an involuntary tax on those not subject to military duty, to aid those who were to escape-their responsibility by way of-inducing volunteers for such additional compensation.

But this court then held, that, so far as citizens had voluntarily authorized the raising of said sum, or had memorialized the Legislature to enact the law, and had received its benefits, and by their own actings and [235]*235doings had procured the enactments, had tacitly, or otherwise voluntarily, consented to it by receiving its benefits, or owed said military service, they should not be heard to assail its validity, or the taxes levied under it to raise the funds thus obtained at their own instance, or expended for their own use.

On the return of the cause, amended pleadings were filed, averring that the plaintiffs belonged to the classes which this court had said should not be permitted to assail said enactments; and the court having on final trial so adjudged as to a portion, they have brought up the case again for review; insisting, first, that they are not estopped from assailing the said statutes, even if they sought their enactments or were benefited thereby, because, as to unconstitutional enactments, there can be no estoppel; secondly, that they have done nothing as matters of fact to estop them, even under the ruling of the court.

Their counsel insisting that the only question before the court formerly being the invalidity of those statutes, no question of estoppel was involved, and, therefore, not res adjvdicata, but obiter dictum. If, however, the former, he respectfully asks a reconsideration of the question, as it was not presented and argued by the counsel on that trial. We have, therefore, duly considered it again on the able arguments and imposing lists of authorities presented.

It is insisted that not a case can be found wherein a party was estopped from urging the constitutional invalid^ of an enactment. Were this so, still it would not necessarily establish the affirmative of the proposition, but would only leave the question to be determined upon its own intrinsic merits from the peculiar facts developed.

[236]*236Whilst it may be justly conceded that there are many phases in which unconstitutional statutes might be assailed, perfectly consistent with strictly legal principles and the most rigid equity, yet this may not be universally true.

In Lee vs. Tillotson, 24 Wend., 337, it was held in New York that “a party may waive a constitutional as well as a statute provision made for his own benefit. The contrary argument would deprive a criminal of the power to plead guilty, on the ground that the Constitution had secured him a trial by jury.

In note b, 4 Kent's Com., 282, Comstock's edition, on s. p. 261, it is said, as to estoppels on matters in pais: “The sense of estoppels is, that a man, for the sake of good faith and fair dealing, ought to be estopped from saying that to be false Which, by his means, has once become accredited for truth, and, by his representations, has led others to act. The very definition of estoppel, said Mr. Justice Cowen, in 3 Hill, 219, is when an admission is intended to lead, and does lead, a man, with whom the party is dealing, into a line of conduct which must be prejudicial to his interest, unless the party estopped be cut off from the power of retraction.”

In the case under advisement, a very large class of the citizens of the county owed military duty to the Federal Government, which must be discharged by furnishing one hundred and forty-seven able-bodied soldiers for three years or during the war. If they were not furnished — as they had not been — by a given day, these soldiers were to be selected by draft from those who owed the service, and the draft was to be repeated until the requisite number of able-bodied soldiers were obtained.

Many who were not liable themselves had near and dear relatives who were; others owned slaves so liable. [237]*237This service was known to be arduous and hazardous; and, to many Kentuckians, peculiarly afflicting, because they had relatives on both sides. Many of those to whom Nature’s God had bound them by the tenderest ties of consanguinity were in the military service of the “ Confederate States;” and, therefore, in the discharge of this duty, they might necessarily run the risk of killing or being killed by those around whom twined the tenderest affections of the heart. That they should abhor and shrink from such a service was not unnatural.

With these peculiar interests, surroundings, and affections, without regard to political sentiment or the peculiar sympathies for the respective causes, it was but natural that a common feeling, founded in the deepest, delicate law of our own nature and of our own existence, appealing to the most affecting sympathies of the heart, should drive those so circumstanced into a common consultation, with a common desire to escape a common impending calamity; and having, by a unity of interest, of sympathies and desires, become united in action, in the procuring of this fund and these statutes, when the impending calamity had passed, and when no longer a common interest appealed to the same fears and affections, if a portion is permitted to escape responsibility, it would result in a stupendous fraud, either upon those who, at their instance and for their benefit, borrowed the money, or upon those who loaned the money; or upon that class who, like themselves, desired to be exonerated from the draft, and who are made to pay it.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Watkins v. State Property & Buildings Commission
342 S.W.2d 511 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 1960)
Stovall v. Gartrell
332 S.W.2d 256 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976), 1960)
City of Indianapolis v. Dillon
6 N.E.2d 966 (Indiana Supreme Court, 1937)
New York Central Rd. v. City of Bucyrus
186 N.E. 450 (Ohio Supreme Court, 1933)
Foley v. State Ex Rel. King
1932 OK 409 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1932)
Mills v. Peoples Gas Light & Coke Co.
158 N.E. 814 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1927)
Scaling v. Williams
284 S.W. 310 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1926)
Ohio Fuel Supply Co. v. Paxton
1 F.2d 662 (S.D. Ohio, 1924)
Sutter v. People's Gas Light & Coke Co.
120 N.E. 562 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1918)
Board of Levee Commissioners v. Johnson
199 S.W. 8 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 1917)
Greene County v. Lydy
172 S.W. 376 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1914)
City of Lebanon v. Humkey
170 S.W. 1172 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 1914)
Pueblo of Isleta v. Tondre
137 P. 86 (New Mexico Supreme Court, 1913)
Lauder v. Heley
141 N.W. 201 (North Dakota Supreme Court, 1913)
Hurley v. Motz
152 S.W. 248 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 1913)
Levy v. Kansas City
168 F. 524 (Eighth Circuit, 1909)
Hoertz v. Jefferson Southern Pond Draining Co.
84 S.W. 1141 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 1905)
City of Mt. Vernon v. State ex rel. Berry
71 Ohio St. (N.S.) 428 (Ohio Supreme Court, 1905)
City of Chicago v. Town of Cicero
210 Ill. 290 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1904)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
68 Ky. 230, 5 Bush 230, 1868 Ky. LEXIS 250, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ferguson-v-landram-kyctapp-1868.