Hargadon v. Silk

129 S.W.2d 1039, 279 Ky. 69, 1939 Ky. LEXIS 239
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedJune 9, 1939
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 129 S.W.2d 1039 (Hargadon v. Silk) 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
Hargadon v. Silk, 129 S.W.2d 1039, 279 Ky. 69, 1939 Ky. LEXIS 239 (Ky. 1939).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Judge Thomas

Affirming on the appeal and' reversing on the cross appeal..

The City of Louisville is the only one of the first class in this commonwealth. On April 27, 1938 its legislative department passed an ordinance, known as No. 130, series 1938, the title to which was and is: “ An 0 rdinance to provide for and regulate the appointment, and define the powers, terms, and compensation of a Judge Pro Tem of the Police Court of the City of Louisville.”'

*70 Its first section authorized and empowered the mayor of the city to appoint a standing pro tern, judge of the police court for the city “to preside over said •court at any time when, from any cause, the Judge of said court shall fail to attend and hold court, and said Judge Pro Tern of the Police Court shall further be empowered to relieve and assist the regular Judge at any time throughout the term of his office and preside over said court in the dispatch of the business of said court.” The second section prescribed that such appointed pro tempore judge should hold office at the pleasure of the mayor; while the third section says: “The Judge Pro 'Tern shall have the same rights, powers and duties as the regular Judge, and shall receive from the City as compensation the sum of $3,000 per year, payable bimonthly.” Section IY says: “No part of the salary of the regular Judge shall be deducted by reason of the appointment of and compensation paid to the Judge Pro Tern. ’ ’

The appellant, Hargadon, was appointed as such pro tern, police judge pursuant to the terms of the ordinance and began functioning as such. On October 31, 1938, the appellee and plaintiff below, as a citizen and tax payer of the city, filed this action in the Jefferson Circuit Court against Hargadon — both individually and officially — and against the mayor of the city, and the city itself, seeking injunctive and other orders preventing the execution of the ordinance in any respect^ upon the ground that its enactment was illegal and void because in excess of the authority of the legislative department of the city to enact. The learned special trial judge to whom the cause was submitted held that the ordinance was invalid; but he sustained the right of the mayor of the city to appoint a standing pro tern, judge of the police court of the city, which he concluded was not in conflict with Sections 2925 and 2926 of Baldwin’s 1936 Revision of Carroll’s Kentucky Statutes, they being a part of the charter of cities of the first class. From that judgment defendants prosecute this appeal, and plaintiff has prayed for and obtained in this court a •cross appeal from that portion of the judgment upholding the right of the mayor under the statute to appoint a standing pro tern, judge.

Two fundamental principles of law applicable to municipalities are, (a) that they possess no power except that expressly conferred upon them, or that which' *71 is necessarily implied in order to carry ont the expressly conferred authority, and (b) that charters of municipal corporations, enacted by the legislature pursuant to constitutional authority, occupies the same relation to the municipality as does a constitution to a state. In other words, that a municipal charter is its constitution, and when that charter prescribes (expressly or by necessary implication) the power and authority of a municipality no ordinance may be enacted in conflict therewith. The two principles referred to are too well settled to require fortification by citation of either texts or opinion authority, and which counsel for both sides admit. With the law as so understood we will now proceed to-determine the issues involved insofar as may be necessary for a disposition of the case.

Section 160 of our Constitution prescribes, inter alia, for the election of police judges in cities of the commonwealth by the qualified voters of the city, but provides that the offices of mayor and police judges ‘ ‘ of the-towns of the fourth, fifth and sixth classes may be appointed or elected as provided by law.” It is further therein required that the office of police judge “shall be-four years,” and until a successor shall be elected or appointed and qualified. Under the provisions therein prescribed police judges of cities of the first class must be elected by the qualified voters of the city and for a term of four years. Section 2924 — which is a part of the charter of cities of the first class — prescribes that, “Said judge [police] shall devote his whole attention to-the duties of said court and shall be paid his salary at the same time and in the same manner as the salaries of other city officers are paid” — the prior Section 2923 authorizing the city council by ordinance to fix his salary.. Section 2925 of the same charter, in its entirety is:: “When, from any cause, the judge of said court shall fail to attend and to hold court, the mayor of the city shall select and designate some lawyer, who has no case-on the docket of said court, to act as judge pro tern, for said court, and the judge pro tern, shall have the same-rights, powers and duties as the regular judge has, and thé judge pro tern, shall receive from the city the same-pro rata compensation paid the judge of the court.”'

The following Section 2926 — also a part of the same charter- — confers the right upon the judge of the police court of the city to take a vacation of two months annually, during which time — whether the privilege is ex *72 ercised all at one time or in divided parts — a pro tern, police judge shall perform the duties of the office and receive the statutory compensation, which is the same pro rata of that received by the regular judge for the same period of services, and the same compensation is allowed the pro tern, judge when serving on any other emergency occasion.

Were we without any precedent to guide us in determining the questions involved in the appeal we would be compelled to conclude that the attacked ordinance was in direct violation of both Sections 2925 and 2926, ■supra, and undoubtedly so with reference to the uninterrupted and continuous duties, powers and authority it attempts to confer upon the pro ■ tern, judge, and in attempting to pay him a fixed annual salary. Correctly speaking, the pro tern, judge, authorized to be appointed by the ordinance, is in reality but a standing deputy judge, or a duplicate or second judge of the police court, ■when the Constitution and statute prescribes for only -one police judge who shall be elected by the legal voters in the city. In that phase - of the case the ordinance is violative of both our Constitution and the charter provisions of the city. But we are not without judicial determinations of the same involved principles of law, arising in analogous cases interpreting similar statutory provisions.

Prior to 1930, Section 1059 of Carroll’s Kentucky Statutes contained provisions authorizing the county .judge, when he was compelled to be absent “or unable from any cause to attend or hold the county court or ■preside at any trial or prosecution,” or when he for any reason could not function in any particular case or matter, to appoint a pro tern, judge to preside and function during the absence of the regular judge, or when for any reason he could not do so. In the case of Cox v. Allen, 188 Ky. 598, 222 S. W.

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Bluebook (online)
129 S.W.2d 1039, 279 Ky. 69, 1939 Ky. LEXIS 239, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hargadon-v-silk-kyctapphigh-1939.