Short v. Fiscal Court

215 S.W. 535, 185 Ky. 650, 1919 Ky. LEXIS 353
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedNovember 11, 1919
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 215 S.W. 535 (Short v. Fiscal Court) 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
Short v. Fiscal Court, 215 S.W. 535, 185 Ky. 650, 1919 Ky. LEXIS 353 (Ky. Ct. App. 1919).

Opinion

[651]*651Opinion of the Court by

Chief Justice Carroll

Affirming

In 1915 there was adopted by the voters of Ballard county a proposition authorizing the issual of $300,000.00 in bonds, the proceeds of which were to be used in constructing and reconstructing reads and bridges in the county under the direction of the fiscal court. After this the county entered into arrangements with the State to build roads under the state aid .plan provided for in sec-, tion 4356x of the Kentucky Statues. The roads built under this arrangement cost $300,000.00, all of which was put up by the county out of its bond issue as the state could not put up at the time its one-half ($150,000.00) of the $300,000.00, and thereupon the state under the statute became indebted to the county in the sum of $150,000.00 which was to be paid to the county each year by the state in installments equal to and representing Ballard county’s annual share of the state road fund until the amount due had been paid.

Pursuant to its obligation the state paid into the treasury of Ballard county the installment due by it in 1918, amounting to about $10,000.00.

In 1919 the appellants, Short and others, residents and taxpayers of Ballard county, brought this suit against the county judge and the members of the fiscal court of Ballard county seeking a mandamus to compel them as members of the fiscal court to construct with this $10,000.00 or so much of it as might be needed the unfinished part of one inter-county seat road described in the pleading.

In the petition, after setting out the adoption of the bond issue by Ballard county, the expenditure of the whole amount realized therefrom in the construction and reconstruction of roads and bridges, and the statutes under which the state became obligated to return each year to Ballard county its proportionate share of the state. road fund, it was further averred in substance that with the $300,000.00 raised by the bond issue the fiscal court had improved and constructed all the inter-county-seat roads leading from the county seat of Ballard county to the county seats of adjoining counties except a part of the inter-county seat road leading from the county seat of Ballard county to the county seat of Pulaski county, Illinois; that it had constructed and improved a part of this road but refused to complete it, although it had in [652]*652its treasury a sufficient road fund received from the state under the circumstances stated to finish it; that the fiscal court, although under a statutory duty to complete this road with the state road funds in its treasury, intended to and would unless otherwise compelled by the court expend the road fund then in the treasury as well as other like funds, that might come into it as a part of the state aid, in the maintenance of the inter-county seat roads already constructed and in the construction and improvement of other public roads in the county.

On the demurrer of the fiscal court to the petition it was dismissed, and on this appeal from the judgment dismissing the petition the only question we need consider is the correctness of the ruling of the lower court; that the fiscal court was not obliged to appropriate this state aid fund to the completion of the inter-county seat road mentioned, but had the right to place it in the general road fund and use it in the maintenance and construction of any roads in the county to which the fiscal court saw proper to apply it.

In Mitchell v. Knox County Fiscal Court, 165 Ky. 543, we had before us a case presenting a question quite similar to the one raised in this case. In that case the county of Knox voted a bond issue of $200,000.00 under section 4307 of the Kentucky Statutes for the purpose of building roads and bridges under section 4356x of the Kentucky Statutes. As the roads and bridges were to. be constructed under state supervision Knox county would become entitled to receive from the state road fund one-half of the amount of this $200,000.00 if the whole of it was used in the construction of the county roads under state supervision and direction.

The fiscal court having used the $200,000.00 bond issue in the construction of roads under state supervision and direction adopted a resolution providing that the money paid annually by the state to Knox county to reimburse it for the one-half of the $200,000.00 should be appropriated to paying the interest on and creating a sinking fund for the payment of the bonds issued to raise the $200,000.00.

The right of the fiscal court to do this was contested by Mitchell, and the question before us on the appeal was, as stated by the court in the opinion, “Can any part of the state aid fund received by the county be used to pay either the principal or interest of the county appropria[653]*653tion toward the building of roads and bridges'?” In considering this question the court, after quoting subsection 18 of section 4356k of the statute, reading that ‘ ‘ one-half of the cost of all roads built under the provisions of this act shall be paid out of the moneys set apart in the treasury of the state to the credit of the state road fund and not otherwise appropriated. It is the purpose of this act that the state shall pay one-half and the county one-half of the cost of all construction or reconstruction of all roads in which state funds are used.”

And subsection 19 of section 4356x reading that “The state commissioner of public roads shall certify from time to time to the state auditor when a road is completed to the satisfaction of the commissioner of public roads, the amount to be paid the county, and the state auditor shall draw his warrant for the amount so certified on the state treasurer in favor of the treasurer of the county, and the state treasurer shall thereupon pay the same to the treasurer, who shall be the custodian thereof and shall be accountable therefor to the fiscal court of the county, ’ ’ proceeded to say:

“From these controlling provisions of the statute, it -will be seen that the plan of constructing public roads thereunder plainly contemplates .that the state shall pay one-half and the county the other half, of the cost of all public roads constructed or - reconstructed under the statute, and that the county is not entitled to receive its appropriation from the state road fund until after it shall have completed the road for which it has asked state aid, to the satisfaction of the state commissioner of public roads, and he shall have certified that fact to the state auditor, accompanied by a statement of the amount due the county. When that has been done, and not until then, the state auditor is required to draw his warrant for the amount so certified, in favor of the county treasurer who is to receive, it and be accountable therefor to the fiscal court of the county. Subsection 19.
“It will thus be seen that the state pays no part of its State road fund to the county in aid of its public roads until after the particular road for which it is entitled to contribution has been constructed by the county; but, when the road has been completed under the supervision of the state commissioner of public roads, the county is then entitled to receive from the state road fund one-half of the cost, which it turns into its treasury. The money [654]*654so received thus becomes the money of the county, and may be appropriated and used as other county funds.

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Bluebook (online)
215 S.W. 535, 185 Ky. 650, 1919 Ky. LEXIS 353, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/short-v-fiscal-court-kyctapp-1919.