Talbott, Auditor Public Accts. v. Caudill

58 S.W.2d 385, 248 Ky. 146, 1933 Ky. LEXIS 206
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedMarch 14, 1933
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 58 S.W.2d 385 (Talbott, Auditor Public Accts. v. Caudill) 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
Talbott, Auditor Public Accts. v. Caudill, 58 S.W.2d 385, 248 Ky. 146, 1933 Ky. LEXIS 206 (Ky. 1933).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Stanley, Commissioner

—Affirming in part and Reversing in part.

Upon the rejection by the state auditor of certain items in their accounts, the jailers of Floyd, Fleming, Franklin and Oldham counties, respectively, joined in filing this suit for themselves and others similarly situated, seeking a declaration of their rights with respect to them. The accounts containing the items had been duly approved, certified, and presented for pavment. The jailers claimed, and the auditor denied, (1) that they were entitled to 75 cents a day for keeping and feeding prisoners regardless of whether they were given one, two, or three meals or none at all during their incarceration; and (2) that they were entitled to> *147 a sum not exceeding $2 a day for furnishing fuel, light, and water to the circuit courts regardless of whether they had personally paid for the supplies and of the fact that the courtrooms were warmed by a furnace heating the entire building.

On the first issue the disallowed items showed a prisoner had been given one meal, another two meals a day, and others that the prisoners had been received after supper on one day and released before breakfast the following day, for which two days’ allowance was claimed for each. There was one item where a prisoner had been released from the jail of one county and transferred and placed in the jail of another county on the same day and each jailer claimed compensation of 75 cents for that day. The circuit court adjudged that under subsection 1 of section 356 of the Statutes a jailer is entitled to 75 cents per day or for any part of one day for keeping and dieting a prisoner regardless of whether he was furnished with any food during the day.

The pertinent part of that statute is that providing that jailers shall be allowed “for keeping and dieting a prisoner under like charge (a felony or contempt), per day, seventy-five cents.” It is argued by the auditor that since section 2226 provides the jailer shall “furnish them (prisoners) with proper food and lodging during their confinement,” if he does not furnish a prisoner with food, as where he is admitted late at night and released early in the morning without being fed, or does not furnish three meals a day, the allowance should be proportionate to the number of meals furnished. If this argument should be sustained then the jailer would receive nothing for lodging and keeping the prisoner. Section 356 also provides a fee of 60 cents for imprisoning and releasing a prisoner. This, however, does not allow compensation for keeping him, with the accompanying responsibility, vigilance, and attention. We do not lose sight of section 1749 of the Statutes to the effect that no officer shall receive any other fee for his services than is allowed by law, or any fee for services rendered when the law has not fixed his compensation, nor for services not actually rendered. But we cannot see the applicability of that statute, for there is a service rendered in keeping the prisoner, though he be not fed, and section 356 of the *148 Statutes is the law allowing compensation therefor.

It is the common-law rule that judicially a day is the whole or any part of the period of twenty-four hours, from midnight to midnight. We have many cases in which a day is so defined and has been regarded under various circumstances and conditions. Thus in Stewart’s Lessee v. Stewart, 26 Ky. (3 J. J. Marsh.) 48, the right of a widow to dower in property for which a deed was executed by her husband on the day of their marriage but before the ceremony, was sustained. Said the court:

“The law will not cut days into pieces, for the purpose of inquiring whether the deed was executed by Thomas Stewart, to the plaintiff’s lessor, before the nuptial knot was tied by the parson, or not until after.”

In Fireman’s Insurance Company v. McGill, 164 Ky. 621, 176 S. W. 27, 28, it is said (quoting Blackstone) :

“In the space of a day all the twenty-four hours are usually reckoned; the law generally rejecting all fractions of a day, in order to avoid disputes.”

Instead of ignoring this universal and ancient rule, several reasons suggest themselves for applying it here. We have no doubt that this was the intention of the Legislature for no provision was made for splitting up the per diem as between the “keeping” and the “dieting” or according to the number of meals furnished the prisoner. The appellant cites in support of his contention an Indiania and a Tennessee case. The former one, Pressley, Sheriff, v. Board of Commissioners of Marion County, 80 Ind. 45, held that under the statute the sheriff (who was the jailer ex officio) was not entitled to charge for boarding a prisoner for a full day when he had in fact furnished board for a part of the day only. The difference here is in the statutes. The Indiana statute was, as stated in the opinion, “for boarding the prisoner alone and for nothing else.” The latter case, State v. Trotter, 142 Tenn. 160, 218 S. W. 230, 232, also held that the officer was entitled to receive pay only for meals actually furnished a prisoner on the basis of 50 cents for three meals. As stated in the opinion, the act “expressly provides, in substance, that this amount shall be paid only in the event that *149 three meals a day be furnished the prisoner; that it is further expressly provided ‘that no sheriff shall be allowed compensation for feeding prisoners unless after commitment he actually feeds said prisoners.” There is neither an express nor an implied provision such as that in our statute. Construing a former law providing compensation to the jailer for “boarding” prisoners, the term was held to include the locking in of each prisoner, keeping him locked in, and liberating him upon proper authority. Said the court:

“We can conceive of no reason why the jailer should be allowed for feeding, watering, and bedding a prisoner, and not so allowed for detaining him. Each is a distinct service, and each an element of expense to the jailer.”

State ex rel. v. Drummond, 128 Tenn. 271, 160 S. W. 1082, 1083.

The statute of Texas construed in Dallas County v. Reynolds (Tex. Civ. App.) 199 S. W. 702, 703, is much like ours. It provided per diem • compensation of not less than 40 cents nor more than 50 cents for each prisoner, to be fixed by the commissioner’s court “for safe-keeping, support, and maintenance of prisoners confined in the county jail.” Differentiating its case from the Indiana case, supra, and elaborately considering the meaning of the word “day” as used in legislative enactments, the court held that the officer was entitled to the full per diem allowance regardless of the number of hours in the day the prisoner was kept by the sheriff. This was followed in Harris County v. Hammond (Tex. Civ. App.) 203 S. W. 451.

It is our opinion that the judgment declaring that a jailer is entitled to 75 cents for keeping a prisoner each day regardless of whether he remains in jail the whole of the day or a part of a day, or is given any diet, is correct.

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58 S.W.2d 385, 248 Ky. 146, 1933 Ky. LEXIS 206, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/talbott-auditor-public-accts-v-caudill-kyctapphigh-1933.