67 Ky. 154 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1868
delivered the opinion of the court:
The county court of Nicholas county chartered two turnpike roads, to run through the same neighborhood, from Carlisle to Jackstown, and the county judge having
Neither the policy nor the moral justice of the charters is cognizable by this court, and the Legislature, by a curing act, legalized the charters so far as it had power to do so.
We will, therefore, consider only the legality and-validity of the subscriptions by the county judge.
An act of February 9th, 1864, authorized a majority of all the justices of Nicholas county court to subscribe not exceeding seven hundred and fifty dollars a mile to any chartered turnpike in this county, “ provided, that such subscriptions shall not be made until said court shall be satisfied that an amount of stock sufficient, with the aid of said county subscription, to complete each mile of road to which such county subscriptions apply, has been taken by private subscription.”
The only unrevoked subscription applicable to this case was made by the county judge on the 13th of August, 1866, for one thousand dollars a mile, without any suggestion about individual subscriptions, or any apparent consideration of that indispensable prerequisite. Apparently, therefore, the subscription was unauthorized, and, consequently, void. But however the fact of any such private subscriptions, and the extent of them, might have actually stood out of the record, the petition charges that the aggregate of them, if all available, lacked at least five thousand dollars of the requisite amount for authorizing the county subscription. And this decisive fact was admitted by the demurrer, which, therefore, ought to have been overruled.
Consequently, the circuit court erred in sustaining the demurrer, and, without answer, dismissing the petition of the appellants, which, if true, entitles them to the relief sought by it.
Wherefore, the'judgment is reversed, and the cause remanded for further proceedings.