Hurst v. City of Millersburg

294 S.W. 788, 220 Ky. 108, 1927 Ky. LEXIS 469
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedMay 17, 1927
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 294 S.W. 788 (Hurst v. City of Millersburg) 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
Hurst v. City of Millersburg, 294 S.W. 788, 220 Ky. 108, 1927 Ky. LEXIS 469 (Ky. 1927).

Opinions

OpiNxon op the Court by

Judge McCandless

Reversing.

Millershurg is a town of thé fifth class. It has a population of 1,100 and an assessed valuation of property, approximating $500.000. Under the provisions of section 158 of -the State Constitution it cannot incur a bonded indebtedness in excess of 3 pen cent, of the assessed valuation'or $15,000, “unless in case of emergency the public health or safety should so require.”

Proceeding on the assumption that an emergency existed within the meaning of the constitutional provision, supra, at the November, 1926, election, by a vote of 345 to 44, the town authorized an issue of $50,000 of bonds for the construction of a waterworks system. 'Certain citizens and taxpayers filed suit in the Bourbon circuit court to enjoin the municipal authorities from issuing these 'bonds. On final hearing, the circuit court denied the injunction, and plaintiffs appeal.

In addition to- the facts above stated, it appears that Millersburg is an educational center; that the Millers-burg Female College has handsome, commodious build *109 ings, embracing almost a block in the center of the city, with an av'erage attendance of something over 100 pupils;, that the Bourbon county high school, with an enrollment of 340 pupils, is just outside the city limits as is the Mil-' lersburg Military Institute, a military school for boys with an attendance around 100'; that all of the buildings mentioned are on high ground, much of which has a natural drainage through the city limits. It is also a high-class residential town, with many handsome homes and a fine citizenship. There are no sewers in the city, and the institutions named and many residences are provided with cesspools, while others use vaults and surface privies for their refuse. In rainy weather some of the cesspools overflow, causing much discomfort and annoyance. Sanitation experts testify that this condition i» not only unsanitary and a nuisance, but is a menace to the health of the city; also percolations from refuse fecal' matter reaches wells and cisterns and is calculated to produce a typhoid epidemic, though none such has occurred! in the history of the town. It is further stated that, owing to the lack of water supply, the growth of the town is retarded and the development of the schools impeded. There are few septic tanks in the town. The evidence indicates that the drainage is not favorable to such tanks, but does not show that their installation is impracticable or that such installation would not relieve the dangerous conditions complained of.

Appellee relies on Samuels v. City of Clinton, 184 Ky. 97, 211 S. W. 567, in which it was held that there was an emergency within the constitutional sense, and Harris v. City of Morganfield, 201 Ky. 588, 257 S. W. 1032, in which the same conclusion was reached. But- the facts in this case can easily be distinguished from the facts in those cases. In the Samuels case it appeared that a system of electric lights, waterworks, and sewerage had been operated by a private company in the city of Clinton for a period of 20 years-. The citizens had not only discarded all other means of procuring water and avoiding waste, but had spent large sums in equipping their buildings and homes with suitable fixtures for the disposal of sewage in connection with the waterworks. At the time mentioned, the franchise had expired, and the water and light company was unwilling to continue longer in business. It was willing to sell its water and light plant to the city, but otherwise was preparing to dismantle its plant and sell its machinery and fixtures, *110 and the insurance companies were threatening, in the event this was done, to cancel their policies and withdraw their business from the city; certainly a very strong case and one which the court necessarily denominated an emergency, saying:

“It is evident from the language of the court in that case (City of Marion v. Haynes) that it did not intend to hold that the necessity for a waterworks system could-not, under any state of facts, arise to the dignity of an emergency, justifying the municipality to increase its indebtedness the per centum prescribed to be of general application to such a municipality under ordinary circumstances. It is apparent- that the question of emergency must • be determined in each case from the particular facts of the case.”

A similar situation existed in the Morganfield case. The facts here are different from the facts in those two eases, and more similar to the facts appearing in City of Marion v. Haynes, 157 Ky. 687, 164 S. W. 79. In that case it appeared that the city of Marion had 1,100 people with an assessment of $743,000. It was proposing to Issue bonds that would create an indebtedness of $45,000. '.The facts as set out in the opinion in that case were even stronger from a sanitation standpoint than they are in this one. It also appeared that the fire protection was insufficient by reason of the absence of a waterworks system as it is in this case, and the ordinance submitting the bond issue recited all these facts, and declared that an emergency existed within the constitutional sense. This court said:

“And while we will not undertake to lay down a rule by which an emergency under section 158 of the ■Constitution is to be determined in every case, it is apparent that such an emergency is some sudden or unexpected occasion for action; some unforeseen occurrence, condition, or pressing necessity that requires immediate attention.
“In treating the subject of taxation, ‘the Federalist,’ in No. 36, said: ‘There are certain emergencies of nations, in which expedients, that in the ordinary state of things ought to be forborne, become essential to the public weal? This language no doubt expresses the idea of the framers of our Con *111 stitution, since they evidently meant that an emergency was some pressing necessity out of the ordinary state of things, which could only bé remedied by the use of unusual expedients.
“It will not do to say that a municipal waterworks or a system of sewerage rises to the dignity of an emergency. On the contrary, they are luxuries, or perhaps necessities, of which the people of a small community might deprive themselves without any unusual or extraordinary danger. It might be otherwise in a large city, where there is a great aggregation of people residing; it certainly would not, however, be a necéssity in the same sense to a. country village. While waterworks and a drainage-system may be very desirable, and no doubt are very-much desired by appellant, their absence no more*' creates an emergency now than it has done at anytime within the past ten or twenty years; and the declaration of the general council of the town in its ordinance, that an emergency existed,.did not make it so. It must exist as a fact, to be determined under the evidence like any other fact.
“A leading author says: ‘An exigency is an' occasion of urgency and suddenness, Where something helpful needs to be done at once; an emergency is more pressing, and naturally less common than an exigency; a crisis is an emergency, on the outcome of which everything depends. ’
“While the situation at Marion may give rise to an exigency, it does not amount to an emergency. ”

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Bluebook (online)
294 S.W. 788, 220 Ky. 108, 1927 Ky. LEXIS 469, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hurst-v-city-of-millersburg-kyctapphigh-1927.