Western Oil Refining Co. v. Wells

201 S.W. 473, 180 Ky. 32
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedMarch 19, 1918
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 201 S.W. 473 (Western Oil Refining Co. v. Wells) 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
Western Oil Refining Co. v. Wells, 201 S.W. 473, 180 Ky. 32 (Ky. Ct. App. 1918).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court

by Judge Clarke

Denying the application for writ of prohibition and dismissing the petition.

This is an original proceeding filed in this court seeking a writ of prohibition to prevent the defendants, C. W. Wells, county judge of Daviess county, from trying, and IT. A. Birkhead, county attorney, from prosecuting, the plaintiff for the offense of selling to merchants in this state twenty-six barrels of oil without first having the oil inspected, and the barrels containing it branded or marked by the inspector, as is required by the provisions of section 2202 of the Kentucky Statutes, the penalty for the violation of which is prescribed by section 2208 of the same statutes.

It is alleged in the petition that the plaintiff has been arraigned before the defendant Wells as county judge of Daviess county on 26 warrants for an alleged sale of 26 barrels of oil without their having been inspected as required by the statute, and that unless the writ issues the defendant Wells constituting the court, and the defen[34]*34dant Birkhead as the prosecuting officer, will proceed to try the warrants, and that plaintiff: is not guilty because the sale of the oil was not effected in Kentucky, and the transaction therefore does not come within the purview of the statute.

The denial of the sales having been effected in Kentucky is based upon the fact that plaintiff is a foreign corporation engaged in the handling of oil, and is located and has its place of business in Indianapolis, Indiana; that the sales complained of were transacted through drummers or traveling soliciting agents in the employ of plaintiff who took orders for the oil from 'the merchants to whom it was afterward shipped, which orders were sent to the office of plaintiff at Indianapolis for acceptance or rejection, and that if accepted, which was done in each of the cases complained of, the oil was shipped by common carrier to the merchant who ordered it f. o. b. car at Indianapolis; that after the oil was loaded into the car at the latter place plaintiff had no further interest in it, and that the carrier was constituted the agent of the purchaser to transport the oil to the place of consignment.

Defendants having filed no pleading except a demurrer to the petition, requires us to accept as true the facts alleged therein.

It further appears in the petition (of which fact we would take judicial knowledge without such allegation) that the penalty for the offense charged is a fine of $20.00 for each barrel of oil illegally sold. The allegation is also made that the county court of Daviess county is without jurisdiction to try the offenses with which plaintiff is charged, but no force can be given to this averment since other parts of the petition, as well as facts within the judicial knowledge of the court, conclusively show that the county court has jurisdiction of the offense.

Subsection 5 of section 13 of the Criminal Code confers upon courts of a justice of the peace jurisdiction concurrent with city and police courts of prosecutions for offenses the punishment of which is limited to a fine of not exceeding $10.00, and concurrent jurisdiction with circuit courts in prosecutions for offenses the punishment of which is limited to a fine of $100.00 or imprisonment not exceeding fifty days, or both such fine and imprisonment. Subsection 6 of the same section confers the same jurisdiction on judges of the county courts as subsection [35]*355 confers upon a justice of the peace. It is therefore manifest that the county court of Daviess county over which the defendant Wells presides has jurisdiction to try the offenses here involved, since the fine is $20.00, no more, no less.

If it should be admitted, as is insisted for the plaintiff, that the transactions here involved did not constitute a sale of the oil in Kentucky, and that they constituted and were transactions in interstate commerce (questions which are not necessary to here determine) it would not follow that the county court of Daviess county was without jurisdiction to try the prosecutions, because if such facts constitute a defense, and the court has jurisdiction to try the offense, it would necessarily be a part of its duty in the exercise of its jurisdiction to give the plaintiff here (defendant in the warrants) the benefit of that defense. In other words, if that court has jurisdiction of the offense entitling it to hear and try the prosecution, it has jurisdiction to hear and try all questions which might lawfully be raised and presented both by the Commonwealth and the defendant. It is not even alleged in the petition that the defendant 'Wells as judge of the county court of Daviess county was threatening to or would decide any question adverse to the plaintiff here upon a trial under the warrants, although this would add nothing to the plaintiff’s case if the allegation had been made. This court in many recent cases has had before it for consideration the question of its supervisory power as conferred by section 110 of the constitution, and in every case where presented it has been held that the jurisdiction conferred by that section would not be exercised through the medium of the writ of prohibition unless (1) the court sought to be prohibited was proceeding or about to proceed in a matter over which it had no jurisdiction; or (2) if it did have jurisdiction that the action about to be taken would result in great injustice to the plaintiff in the prohibition proceeding, and great or irreparable injury to him, and that he had no other remedy by appeal or otherwise. Board of Prison Commissioners v. Crumbangh, 161 Ky. 540; Ohio River Contract Co. v. Gordon, 170 Ky. 412; Greene, Auditor v. Wolfe, 175 Ky. 58; Cohen v. Webb, idem 1; Rallihan v. Gordon, 176 Ky. 471, and Board of Commissioners v. Crumbaugh, idem, 720.

[36]*36In the first Crumbaugh case this court in discussing its power under the section of the constitution, supra, said:

“Under section 110 of the constitution this court has power to issue such writs as may be necessary to give it a general control of inferior jurisdiction, and it is well settled that a writ of prohibition may issue in a case like this whenever the inferior court is,proceeding out of its jurisdiction, or where it has jurisdiction, but an appeal will not furnish an adequate remedy or there is no other remedy. (Clark v. Warner, 116 Ky. 801; Renshaw v. Cook, 129 Ky. 347; Rush v. Denhart, 138 Ky. 238; I. C. R. R. Co. v. Rice, 154 Ky. 198).” In the Ohio River Contract case, considering the same question, the views of the court are thus expressed:

“In no instance has a writ of prohibition been allowed against a court proceeding out of its jurisdiction or erroneously within its jurisdiction when any other adequate remedy for the threatened wrong existed, which was adequate. If the right of appeal exists and it is an adequate remedy, the complaining party must be relegated to his remedy through appeal. A review of all the cases decided by this court upon application for writs of prohibition under section 110, supra, sustains the view, that the writ is granted as a matter of sound discretion, determined by the facts of the particular case, which must present an exceptional or unusual state of facts, which make it apparent that an injury or violation of one is rights is threatened, and against the results of which he has no adequate remedy, other than the writ of prohibition. Weaver v. Toney, Judge, 107 Ky. 419; L. & N. R. R. Co. v. Miller, 112 Ky. 464; Campbellsville Telephone Co. v. Patterson, 114 Ky. 52; Jenkins v.

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Bluebook (online)
201 S.W. 473, 180 Ky. 32, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/western-oil-refining-co-v-wells-kyctapp-1918.