197 Ky. 454 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1923
Opinion of ti-ie Court by
Reversing.
This is an action by the city of Maysville, a municipality of the third class, against James B. Key, cleric of the Mason circuit court, to recover the sum of $300.00 fine and $15.00 cost, which were assessed against one Wm. Edgar wTho was tried in the police court of said city on a charge of violating the prohibition laws of the Commonwealth and convicted and fined said sum of $300.00 and cost, and given a jail sentence and who later appealed from said judgment to the Mason circuit court where, upon the same charge, he was in a de novo trial again found guilty and his punishment fixed at a fine of $300.00 and cost and a term in the county jail, which fine and cost he later paid to appellee Key, as cleric of the Mason circuit court, and which money the said Key, cleric, holds pending this litigation.
The foregoing facts were made to appear in the petition of the city of Maysville against Key, to which a general demurrer was interposed and sustained by the trial court. From a judgment dismissing his petition when he failed to further plead after general demurrer had been sustained, this appeal is prosecuted.
Whether the city of Maysville was entitled to recover the said $300.00 depends upon the construction to be put
“All prosecutions in said court for violations of ordinances and bylaws shall be by warrant or summons in the name of the city, and all others in the name of the Commonwealth for the benefit of the city, and all fines and forfeitures recovered in said court shall, when collected, be paid into the treasury of the city for the use and benefit of the general revenue fund of the city, except thirty per cent of the same, which shall be for the benefit of the prosecuting attorney of the police court.”
It is insisted by the Commonwealth that this section of the statutes does not give the city, in a case like the one we have under consideration, the right to claim and have the fine collected from a judgment entered in the circuit court on appeal from a judgment of conviction had in the police court of such city; but only gives the municipality the right to such funds as arise from fines and forfeitures actually recovered in the police court, .not those which are recovered in the circuit court although the prosecution originated in the police court and after conviction in that court was appealed to the circuit court and was there again tried. In substantiation of this contention the Commonwealth cites section 3517, Kentucky Statutes, governing such matters in municipalities of the fourth class, where it is specially provided that “all fines and forfeitures recovered in any court the prosecution of which originated in the police court, in the name of or in favor of the Commonwealth of Kentucky for violation of penal laws committed within said city’s police jurisdiction, are hereby granted to the city without regard to which court the final judgment was rendered in, and when collected either in the police, the circuit court or the county in which said city is located, or in the court of appeals, after the payment of all.fees and costs, the proceeds of said judgment shall be paid to the treasurer of said city.” It is argued that in as much as this statute specifically directs that fines in cases originating in the'police court shall belong to the city, it by implication precludes a city of the third class from taking the fines under section 3360, Kentucky Statutes, ...where the provision is: “All fines and forfeitures recovered in said court shall, when collected, be paid into the
As a police court has, under the prohibition act of 1922, jurisdiction of offenses under that act where the punishment is not greater than a fine of $300.00 and a jail sentence of sixty days, the police court of Maysville had jurisdiction to enter the judgment under consideration, and as the Commonwealth’s attorney under the said act of 1922, section 43, is prohibited from receiving any part of the fines assessed in police courts of cities, or assessed on appeal, from a judgment of such police court where the city by-law was at the effective date of the act-given the benefit of fines assessed in prosecutions originating in such police court, it seems to us that these several acts taken and considered together must be construed to give to municipalities of the third class, such as Maysville, the exclusive right to all funds arising from fines and forfeitures in cases where the prosecution originated in police courts and a recovery was had in said court, even though the final judgment was entered on an appeal by a defendant to the circuit court from a judgment of the said police court. It, therefore, follows that the Mason circuit court erred to the prejudice of appel
The judgment is reversed for proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Judgment reversed.