Lexington-Fayette Urban County Detention Center v. Crockett

786 S.W.2d 869, 1990 Ky. LEXIS 16, 1990 WL 9632
CourtKentucky Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 8, 1990
DocketNo. 89-SC-75-DG
StatusPublished

This text of 786 S.W.2d 869 (Lexington-Fayette Urban County Detention Center v. Crockett) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Kentucky Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lexington-Fayette Urban County Detention Center v. Crockett, 786 S.W.2d 869, 1990 Ky. LEXIS 16, 1990 WL 9632 (Ky. 1990).

Opinion

LEIBSON, Justice.

This appeal is from two separate orders entered by Judge N. Mitchell Meade of Fayette Circuit Court addressing problems created by the overcrowded conditions in the Fayette County Detention Center.

The first order, dated June 16, 1987⅛ mandated that the “Fayette County Detention Center and the Kentucky Corrections Cabinet shall, within thirty days ... decrease the population of the Fayette County Detention Center by fifty-six inmates from the population level incarcerated at the time the Court toured said facility [May 29, 1987] to a maximum population level of five hundred inmates.” This order further directed the Detention Center to undertake to improve the plumbing system of the facility to provide adequate water pressure and hot water, likewise within thirty days.

The second order, dated July 2, 1987, followed a motion for modification filed on behalf of the Detention Center, and a hearing at which the Detention Center was permitted to introduce additional evidence. This supplemental order denied the motion for modification, and then extended the mandate against the Detention Center in the first order to specify that it shall “not accept any further federal prisoners until such time as the detention facility is able to comply with this Court’s order fixing a cap [‘five hundred inmates’] on the number of prisoners that can be incarcerated therein.”

The appellants, Fayette Urban County Detention Center, its Director and Assistant Director, (hereinafter referred to, collectively, as the “Detention Center”) appealed to the Court of Appeals, which affirmed. We have accepted discretionary review, and, for the reasons that follow, we reverse in part and remand for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.

At the outset we note that the orders presently appealed were entered while another case involving the overcrowded jail in Fayette County was on appeal. The prior case was an appeal from the decision made in another Division of Fayette Circuit Court, Judge James E. Keller, presiding, entered March 13, 1986, in which he held the Kentucky Corrections Cabinet in contempt of his previous order directing “the Cabinet to accept custody [of convicted felons] upon thirty days’ notification.” That order, and the fines assessed by Judge Keller for its violation, were affirmed in a case reported as Campbell Cty v. Ky. Corrections Cabinet, Ky., 762 S.W.2d 6 (1989), which was rendered September 8, 1988, rehearing denied January 19, 1989. The decision affirming Judge Keller was part of a decision on consolidated appeals of three cases from different counties, all involving the right of the Corrections Cabinet to refuse transfer from local jail facilities to state penal facilities of persons convicted of felonies and sentenced to imprisonment, as required by the Kentucky Constitution, Sections 253, 254, and KRS 532.100. The final decision in the Campbell Cty. case is controlling authority on a number of the issues presently before our court. Unfortunately, that case was still under appellate review when Judge Meade decided the present case and was not available to him to consider in rendering his decision.

Further, at the outset, we note that the Kentucky Corrections Cabinet has not appealed Judge Meade’s order against it in the present case. Therefore, the judgment is final as to the Corrections Cabinet with the caveat that those points covered by our decision in the Campbell Cty. case must be followed in applying Judge Meade’s directive to “decrease the population” of the confinement facility. Specifically, the Correction Cabinet’s available options do not include releasing convicted prisoners. As we stated in the Campbell Cty. case:

“Contempt proceedings, not release of prisoners, is the appropriate remedy if such an order is disobeyed.” Id. at 16.1

[871]*871The Detention Center does not contest the trial court’s decision that five hundred inmates is the maximum population level appropriate in the detention facility. The appellants concede, at least by implication, that the appellees, who represent prisoners of all classes presently incarcerated in the jail, are entitled to relief by court order from overcrowded conditions when the jail population exceeds this cap. The primary contention on behalf of the Detention Center is that the overcrowded condition is caused solely by the backup of state prisoners awaiting transfer to state control, transfers which the Corrections Cabinet has refused pursuant to its “controlled intake policy,” which was discussed at length in the Campbell Cty. case. See 762 S.W.2d at 7, et seq. This is “an internal policy to control the intake of prisoners into state custody,” which we have held in violation of the Kentucky Constitution and state statutory law insofar as it unreasonably delays the transfer of convicted felons, who are perforce state prisoners, to state facilities. Campbell Cty., supra. We stated the state “cannot, by statute or executive regulations, directly or indirectly, impose that constitutional responsibility [‘to house and care for state prisoners’] on the counties nor compel the counties to bear the expense attendant to such responsibility.” 762 S.W.2d at 15.

We then stated that the “point” at which “it becomes clearly unreasonable to refuse to accept convicted felons into the state system ... is a factual question which addresses itself first to the fact-finding of the circuit court where the litigation is pending.” Judge Keller’s order, affirmed in the Campbell Cty. case, decided that thirty days was a reasonable time.

The Detention Center’s argument has two prongs: (1) there is no evidence in the record to support a finding that the Lexington-Fayette Urban County Government in general, and the Detention Center in particular, did anything to cause the overcrowding problem that the trial court seeks to remedy by its order; and (2) that the effect of the portion of the order shifting part of the burden to relieve the overcrowding problem on the Detention Center, and through it on Urban County Government, is to diffuse responsibility for reducing the prison population so that it will be impossible to fix blame for failure to comply-

In support of this argument, Detention Center points to the uncontradicted evidence-that at the time of Judge Meade’s first hearing, on June 5, 1987, there were 570 persons housed in the Detention Center, 65 of whom were ready for transfer to state institutions, and 38 of whom were waiting in violation of Judge Keller’s Fay-ette Circuit Court order requiring removal by the Corrections Cabinet within thirty days. On June 29, 1987, the week of the July 2 hearing, the inmate population was only 529, but 71 were ready for transfer to state institutions with 47 of these prisoners backed up in violation of Judge Keller’s previous order. The statistics presented to us at oral argument, some two and a half years later, although not technically a matter appropriate for our consideration because obviously not part of the record, show that the same pattern continues, i.e., an impermissible number of prisoners, but only if those who are state prisoners and the undischarged responsibility of the Corrections Cabinet are included in the number.

As we have stated, the Corrections Cabinet has not challenged this evidence that overcrowding would not exist but for the controlled intake policy and the state’s [872]

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Related

§ 532.100
Kentucky § 532.100
§ 65.210
Kentucky § 65.210
§ 441.025
Kentucky § 441.025

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Bluebook (online)
786 S.W.2d 869, 1990 Ky. LEXIS 16, 1990 WL 9632, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lexington-fayette-urban-county-detention-center-v-crockett-ky-1990.