Flowers v. Logan County

127 S.W. 512, 138 Ky. 59, 1910 Ky. LEXIS 41
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedApril 27, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by39 cases

This text of 127 S.W. 512 (Flowers v. Logan County) 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
Flowers v. Logan County, 127 S.W. 512, 138 Ky. 59, 1910 Ky. LEXIS 41 (Ky. Ct. App. 1910).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge O’Rear

Reversing.

[61]*61Appellant was a justice of the peace, and a member of the fiscal court of Logan county from January 1898, to January, 1906. During that time the county built a new courthouse, demolished the-old building and sold the material, and made other improvements upon the public square, by grading it, putting down concrete walks, setting out trees, and so forth. There was not a supervisor of roads or bridges during the period. The county poorhouse was managed by a committee appointed by the fiscal court. That body also levied a road and bridge tax, which was apportioned to the several magisterial districts for the maintenance of the public roads therein, including certain turnpikes. ’Squire Flowers was appointed a committee of the fiscal court to expend the money appropriated to the Eussellville district for repairing roads, and for building a bridge. He was also appointed a member of the committee to superintend the building of the new courthouse, and of the poor farm committee. He was appointed sole committee to sell the old material, in the abandoned courthouse building and to grade and have made the other named improvements upon the public square at the county seat.' The orders of the fiscal court making these appointments sometimes denominated the members as “commissioners,” and sometimes as “committee.” ’Squire Flowers sold the old material, and applied the proceeds to the county- purposes under the orders appointing him committee — either to roads, or to the poor farm. The fiscal court from time to time entered orders appropriating gross sums for the public work; that is, for such and such road districts, and for grading, and paving the public square, and the like, and for building bridges. The orders allowed the sums to the members of the committee, or to the [62]*62“commissioner” or “commissioners” as tliey were sometimes called. Some $13,000 were tlms placed in the hands of ’Squire Flowers to be expended for the purposes named. From time to time he reported his actions to the fiscal court showing how the money had been applied. The court by orders of record approved his conduct. The court also allowed him various sums by way of compensation for his extra services as road committtee, courthouse committee, and poor farm committee. These allowances in no instance exceeded three dollars a day, and sometimes were less. After . the change of administration, the county brought this action against appellant Flowers to recover from him all the money allowed to him as above stated. This action was based upon the notion that the appropriations to Flowers as commissioner or committee to be expended upon public improvements were unauthorized, and were void. Likewise, that the allowances to him for his services other than for those rendered in attending sessions of the court, were illegal and void as being in excess of the statutory regulation, as well as being in contravention of public policy.

The affairs of the county, whether honestly administered, had been, to say the least of it, loosely conducted; that is, there were not such records of accounts kept as would be a proper check upon the public expenditures, and in many instances no record at all was kept. The practice of letting individuals of the fiscal court expend the public money as they deemed necessary was irregular as well as dangerous. Confusion necessarily resulted. Opportunity was undeniably made for peculation and extravagances. Public accountants employed by’ the new administration made up a balance sheet of the county’s af[63]*63fairs covering the period in question. It did not show, nor is there proof here now to show, that any of the public money had been misspent. It merely pointed out what had been appropriated, what raised by taxation and otherwise, and how applied, so far as the records then disclosed. It included a well-grounded criticism of the loose methods of bookkeeping which had prevailed, as well as the irregular and illegal procedure by which the appropriations had been attempted to be applied.

Appellant by his testimony, and by what is a more satisfactory character of evidence, his passbooks kept by the bank where he deposited the money, shows satisfactorily that every dollar which had been placed in his hands by the fiscal court had been applied for the purposes designated by the court, and where none Avas designated, as in the instances where he sold the material in the old courthouse building, it was applied to other county purposes, all of which was reported to the fiscal court, and approved by that body by entries of record. Logan county contends in this suit, that notwithstanding such application, it ought to recover the money, because the manner of its appropriation by the fiscal court was contrary to the statute, and was therefore void. The opinion in Boyd County v. Arthur et al., 118 Ky. 932, 82 S. W. 613, 26 Ky. Law Rep. 906, is relied on by appellee as controlling authority. In that case the Boyd county fiscal court had done, so far as appropriating public money for public road purposes, apportioning it among the magisterial districts, and appointing the magistrates commissioners to expend it, just what had been done by Logan county here. But the proceeding in the B'oyd County Case was radically different from the nature of this action. We held in [64]*64Boyd County v. Arthur that the attempted delegation of power of the court and jurisdiction over the public roads by the fiscal court to its several members was contrary to the statute, and on appeal by the county judge we held that the orders should be reversed and set aside; furthermore, we held that injunction would lie to prevent the irregular application of the public money. We are yet as firmly of the opinion there expressed as when it was written. Further observation has confirmed the unwisdom, the impolicy,, the illegality of the course pursued by those fiscal courts. But where the fiscal court and the taxpayers have stood by for many years and allowed the public money to be expended by that kind of proceeding, and it has actually been applied to the purposes for which it was raised and appropriated, it is quite a different question whether the county will be permitted to recover the money. The vice in the proceeding was not in doing something not authorized by, or forbidden by, the law, but was doing that which was allowed in a manner not authorized by law. If the thing done had been illegal, or not warranted by law, however beneficial it might have been, the public ought not- to be estopped to deny the validity of the expenditure; or, where the thing is authorized, but it is proposed to do it in an unauthorized manner, upon seasonable complaint those charged with doing the thing will be compelled to execute it as the law directs, and prohibited from doing it otherwise. But where the thing is authorized' to be done, and is done by the party charged with doing it, but done in a manner contrary to that directed by the statute, the court will not compel the official to pay back the money and let the public continue to enjoy the benefits of its expenditure. If it [65]*65is made to appear that the expenditure was in good faith, and the public has got that which it was entitled to, good conscience forbids the recovery. The law, therefore, denies it.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
127 S.W. 512, 138 Ky. 59, 1910 Ky. LEXIS 41, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/flowers-v-logan-county-kyctapp-1910.