Milliken v. Harrod, Constable

122 S.W.2d 148, 275 Ky. 597, 1938 Ky. LEXIS 471
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedNovember 25, 1938
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 122 S.W.2d 148 (Milliken v. Harrod, Constable) 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
Milliken v. Harrod, Constable, 122 S.W.2d 148, 275 Ky. 597, 1938 Ky. LEXIS 471 (Ky. 1938).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Ratliff

Affirming.

*599 Appellee, "William Harrod, suing individually as a taxpayer and resident of Warren County, Kentucky, and as constable for magisterial district No. 2, instituted this suit in the Warren circuit court against the appellants, G-. D. Milliken, Jr., Judge of the Warren County Court, and the eight magistrates of Warran County, namely, L. E. White, J. C. Davenport, Will Anderson, Emmett Smith, J. W. Van Meter, Neil Comfort, Eugene Murray and Tom Wilson, together with the county judge composing the fiscal court of Warren county, Raymond Gr. Stahl, County Treasurer for Warren County, and Webb A. Howard, Samuel P. Martin,-Fred Gr. Vail, and Edwin Topmiller, county patrolmen for Warren county, seeking to enjoin the said county judge and. magistrates from paying out of the public funds of Warren county the salaries of said county patrolmen, and further to enjoin the said county patrolmen from acting as deputy constables in magisterial district No. 2 of Warren county. We will refer to appellee as plaintiff and to appellants as defendants according to their status in the lower court.

The plaintiff alleged in his petition, in substance, that he was elected constable for magisterial district No. 2 in Warren county at the November 1937 election and qualified on the first Monday in January, 1938, and entered upon the duties of the office; that on January 3, 1938, the defendant county judge called a special term of the Warren county court and pursuant to the call the defendants, magistrates and county judge, convened together and undertook to divide Warren county into four patrol districts; that district No. 1 embraces magisterial district No. 2, in which the plaintiff was elected constable as aforesaid, and that at the same meeting the defendant members of the fiscal court further undertook to appoint the defendants Howard, Vail, Martin and Topmiller as_ county patrolmen for the various respective patrol districts, for a period of one year, and further undertook to provide that the patrolmen be paid a salary for their services payable out of the county treasury. It is further alleged that at a later meeting the defendants county judge and magistrates, composing the fiscal court, undertook to appoint patrolmen Howard, Martin, Vail and Topmiller deputy constables for magisterial district No. 2 and that they are acting or attempting to act as deputy constables in plaintifPs magisterial district and that their purported appointments *600 were made solely by tbe defendant county judge and that plaintiff did not designate or appoint any of said defendants as constables and that their appointments purported to have been made by the county judge alone was without plaintiff’s co-operation and consent, and that said patrolmen have been undertaking and attempting to function and act both as county patrolmen and deputy constables and have been and are exercising the powers and duties of deputy constables as well as county patrolmen and undertaking to receive and collect compensation and remuneration therefor provided for by the orders of the fiscal court. It is further alleged that the defendant members of the fiscal court have no right or authority of law to appoint county patrolmen and that the county judge had no right to appoint deputy constables in and for magisterial district No. 2 and all orders or purported orders attempting to create and establish patrol districts in Warren county and purporting to appoint patrolmen and deputy constables in the manner aforesaid and the attempted appropriation of the public funds of the county to pay the patrolmen are void and of no effect. He prayed for an order of injunction in accordance with the allegations of the petition.

The court entered an order granting a temporary injunction according to the prayer of the petition and appellants entered motion before a member of this court to dissolve the temporary injunction, which motion was overruled, and upon a return of the case to the Warren circuit court the case was further prepared and tried on the merits and the court entered a final judgment making the temporary injunction permanent and granted the plaintiff the relief prayed. To reverse that judgment the defendants have prosecuted this appeal.

A number of questions are raised in brief of defendants pertaining to the court’s ruling on demurrers, special demurrers, motion to strike and to paragraph. But since questions of law only are involved, and the court as indicated in the written opinion made part of the record, considered all issues and questions of law raised and determined the case upon its merits, we do not think the questions of practice are of any importance as affecting the merits of the case.

It is insisted for defendants that the allegations of plaintiff’s petition to the effect that the defendants pa *601 trolmen were illegally appointed and unlawfully holding the office of patrolmen and deputy constables, in effect charge the defendants with being usurpers of such offices, and, therefore, plaintiff has no right to maintain this action, that function being vested in the Attorney General and Commonwealth’s Attorney, and rely on sections 480-485, of the Civil Code of Practice which provides that an ordinary action may be brought by a person entitled to the office against usurpers and if no person is entitled to the office, then an ordinary action may be brought by the Attorney General or Commonwealth’s Attorney. We are unable to agree with defendants as to the nature and purpose of the action. In the chancellor’s opinion he clearly points out the distinction between such actions provided for by the Code, supra, and an action by a taxpayer, not to contest the right of a person to hold an office, but to enjoin the payment of salaries not authorized by law, and the right of an officer to enjoin another person from unlawful interference with his possession of his office.

After stating the purpose and nature of the litigation, as we have indicated, the chancellor wrote:

“Defendants file a special demurrer challenging plaintiff’s authority to maintain this action and the case is now before the court on this special demurrer. The court is not concerned with the exigencies of the appointment of Howard, Yale, and Topmiller as deputy constables by the county judge, or with the exigencies with their appointment as county patrolmen. At this stage of the proceeding the sole questions to be determined are: First, can the plaintiff as constable maintain this suit to prevent the three named deputy constables from performing the duties of the office to which he was legally elected, qualified and is now acting? Second, can the plaintiff as a citizen and taxpayer maintain this action to challenge the authority of the fiscal court to expend public funds to pay these three patrolmen?
“Sections 480-485 of the Civil Code provide an ordinary action may be brought by the person entitled to the office against usurpers; and if no person is entitled to the office, then an ordinary action may be brought by the Attorney General or Commonwealth Attorney. It is well settled in Kentucky *602

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
122 S.W.2d 148, 275 Ky. 597, 1938 Ky. LEXIS 471, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/milliken-v-harrod-constable-kyctapphigh-1938.