Sizemore v. Commonwealth

147 S.W.2d 56, 285 Ky. 142, 1941 Ky. LEXIS 347
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedJanuary 17, 1941
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 147 S.W.2d 56 (Sizemore v. Commonwealth) 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
Sizemore v. Commonwealth, 147 S.W.2d 56, 285 Ky. 142, 1941 Ky. LEXIS 347 (Ky. 1941).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Judge Thomas

Reversing.

The legislature of Kentucky enacted chapter 47, page 286, of the Session Acts of 1938, the general title to which is: “An Act prohibiting the operation of roadhouses, tourist camps, places of public entertainment without a permit from the county court,” etc. Following that general statement in the title is a more or less detailed rehearsal of other provisions of the act relating to procedure, enforcement provisions, prosecutions, punishments, etc. The act is now Sections 1599Í-1 to and including Section 1599Í-15 of Baldwin’s 1939 Service Supplement to Carroll’s Kentucky Statutes. The first section of the act (Section 1599f-l in the Supplement referred to) says: “That no roadhouse or place offering for sale nonintoxicating, or intoxicating drinks, tourist camps or place of public entertainment at which people assemble to eat, drink, dance, bathe or engage in any game or entertainment, shall be permitted in the Commonwealth of Kentucky outside of the corporate limits of any incorporated city or town unless its owner or proprietor shall have a permit issued to him by the county court in the county in which it is located granting to him the privilege and license to operate said place of business in said county. ’ ’

The grand jury of Leslie county returned an indictment accusing the appellant and defendant therein of having violated the inserted section of the act and it averred that the place where defendant conducted her business was in territory outside of the limits of any incorporated city or town, since the forbidden operation is confined to only such outlying territory. However, the indictment did aver that the business of defendant, so claimed to have been unlawfully and illegally operated, was conducted in the town of Hyden, the county seat of Leslie county, and on premises adjoining the courthouse grounds. Her business purported to be that of a restaurant operator, at which she sold soft drinks, *145 cigars, cigarettes and furnished meals and food for customers. She had two daughters, who were in their teens, and who assisted her in conducting the business. There was a painted sign over the front, or entrance door, indicating that the restaurant was owned and operated by those two daughters; but defendant admitted on the stand that she was the owner and proprietor of the business. At her trial under a plea of not guilty she was convicted and fined $200, upon which the court pronounced judgment after overruling her motion for a new trial. From the verdict and the judgment so pronounced thereon she has filed a transcript of the record in this court with a motion for an appeal, which motion is now sustained and the appeal granted.

A number of grounds are argued in brief for appellant as sufficient reasons to authorize a reversal of the judgment, but, since we have concluded that one of them is all-sufficient for that purpose, we will devote neither time nor space to a consideration of the others, each of which, however, we conclude are immaterial, • and some of which are not preserved or presented in a manner authorizing our determination of them.

From a reading of the statute it will be seen that the location of the business to which the statute applies is an essential element of the offense with which defendant is accused. We have not access to the latest census reports as to the inhabitants of the town of Hyden, but we have seen the one of 1920 which gave it as five hundred. The county of Leslie was created in 1878 by an act of the legislature, and Hyden was then a town and it was made the county seat of the county by that act, and which has remained unchanged since then. By chapter 488, on page 891 of the Session Acts for 1881-82 tho town of Hyden was incorporated and provisions were made therein for its municipal officers, and the conduct of its local municipal government. The town has never been specifically designated as belonging to any of the six classes of municipalities of the commonwealth, but, of course, it is embraced in the general statement found in Section 2741 of our present statutes saying: “All other incorporated cities and towns not named in this bill shall belong to the sixth class,” etc. Under our present law relating to municipally incorporated towns not specifically classified by the statute which were incorporated at the time of the enactment of our present *146 statute dealing with, the subject — eo instanter became towns or cities of the sixth class, and any town having a population of as much as or more than one hundred and twenty-five inhabitants might become incorporated as a town of that class by following the provisions of the statute. Hyden having been incorporated prior to the adoption of our present Constitution, and prior to the enactment of our present statutes relating to municipalities, remained incorporated and was so at the time our present statute was enacted. By the express terms of the latter (inserted above) it then became a town of the sixth class and remained such thereafter, unless in some manner it abandoned or forfeited its corporate capacity.

In the case of Cincinnati, N. O. & T. P. Ry. Company v. Baughman, 116 Ky. 479, 76 S. W. 351, 352, 25 Ky. Law Rep. 705, we held that a town of the sixth class which had not for a continuous period of more than seventeen years elected municipal officers, or exercised any of the governmental functions of a municipality as authorized by its charter, thereby forfeited its.charter priviliges and ceased to be a municipality — the opinion saying: “We are of the opinion that it is conclusively shown that Tunnel City had for more than 17 years failed to exercise any of the governmental functions granted to it by the act of 1878, and that the magistrate in whose district the offense was committed had jurisdiction to try the offender. ’ ’

In the case of Hill v. Anderson, 122 Ky. 87, 90 S. W. 1071, 1072, 28 Ky. Law Rep. 1032, where the question of charter forfeiture was again presented to this court we, in our opinion, referred to and quoted with approval from Dillon on Municipal Corporations, Section 110, in which this statement appears: ‘ ‘ The officers are their [the people’s] agents or servants, but do not constitute an integral part of their corporation, the failure to elect whom may suspend the functions, but will not dissolve the corporation.” The opinion then continues by saying: “It is therefore immaterial that the town of Weston has not kept up its corporate organization, or that for 17 years it has been without corporate authorities.” Whatever contradiction, if any, that may be found in the holdine:s of these two opinions, they at least agree on one point, and which is that the abandonment of corporate privileges, or the exercise of munici *147 pal governmental functions must continuously exist without interruption for a period of more than seventeen years before forfeiture will be effected.

The only testimony introduced or offered at the trial, remotely or otherwise bearing on the question of forfeiture of charter privileges by the town of Hyden, was given by Carl Farmer, a witness introduced by the commonwealth, whose entire testimony on that point was and is:

“Q. Was there any kind of city officials in this town then? A. It was just like it is now.

“Q.

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Bluebook (online)
147 S.W.2d 56, 285 Ky. 142, 1941 Ky. LEXIS 347, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sizemore-v-commonwealth-kyctapphigh-1941.