This аppeal involves a declaratory judgment and order of the Franklin Circuit Court declaring that all citations issued, convictions obtained, and fines collected for violation of the Kentucky “Tarp Law,” KRS 189.150, between October 27, 1982, and January 11, 1983, are illegal and invalid. All persons cited, convicted or fined during this period are adjudged by the same order to be entitled to refunds of fines collected.
Events resulting in the above judgment and order began October 27, 1982, when Southeast Kentucky Truckers and Coal Operators Association, Inc. (Southeast Truckers), filed a class action in Franklin Circuit Court claiming that various sections of Chapter 203 of the Acts of 1982 were unconstitutional. At the time suit was instituted, Southeast Truckers filed a motion pursuant to CR 65.03 for an ex partе order to restrain the defendant-appellants, the Transportation and Revenue Cabinets and the Commonwealth of Kentucky, “from administering and enforcing the provision of Chapter 203, Sections 10-18, excluding Section 14, as enacted by the 1982 General Assembly of the Commonwealth of Kentucky (Senate Bill 144, Sections 10-18, excluding Section 14).” On October 27, 1982, the circuit court signed the ex рarte order accompanying the motion, apparently without being aware that the restraining order failed to exclude Section 14. After dis
During the interim, however, Walter Bartrum, a member of Mountain Truckers Association, Inc. (Mountain Truckers), an independent coal haulers association, was сited by the Kentucky State Police in Floyd County, Kentucky, for violating the Tarp Law on December 27 and 28, 1982. The law, KRS 189.150, requires vehicles carrying loads susceptible of spillage on public roads for a distance of more than one mile to be covered. Bartrum appeared in Floyd County District Court on January 12, 1983, the day after entry of the amended order, and pleaded guilty tо both charges, paying a modest fine for each violation. At the time the citations were issued and the fine imposed, neither the citing officers nor the district court were aware оf the original restraining order including Section 14, KRS 189.150. Three months later, Bartrum and Mountain Truckers brought this action in Franklin Circuit Court seeking a refund of those fines based upon the error contained in the оriginal restraining order. The declaratory judgment and order mentioned at the outset of this opinion followed.
In essence, the appellants’ argument for reversal is that the original rеstraining order issued in Southeast Truckers had no effect on the judicial proceedings to enforce the Tarp Law as neither the state police involved nor the Floyd District Court were parties or privy to the action involving Southeast Truckers, nor did they have actual knowledge of the restraining order. Citing CR 65.03, it is reasoned that an ex parte restraining order is the equivalent of an injunction pendente lite restraining persons against whom it is directed from engaging in specified conduct during the pendency of an action. As such, the order binds only those parties served or informed or persons possessing actual knowledge. Therefore, while the Commonwealth was nominally a party, the only state agencies involved are the Transportation and Revenue Cabinets. Since neither the state police nor the district court are officers, agents or attorneys for either of these parties, they were not bound by the original order in Southeast Truckers. Naming the Commonwealth simply as the Commonwealth did not make the restraining order effective in a universal manner so as to suspend the statute or strip a court of otherwise competent jurisdiction of its power.
Mountain Truckers and Bartrum disagree, responding thаt since the Commonwealth was a party to Southeastern Truckers’ action, the circuit court’s original restraining order enjoined the state’s officers, agents and attorneys regardless of actual notice. As support for their interpretation of CR 65.02, appellees point to Shakman v. Democratic Organization of Cook County,
Where parties and subject matter are the same once a court of concurrent jurisdiction has begun to exercise jurisdiction over a case, its authority to deal with the action is exclusive and no other court of concurrent jurisdiction may interfere with the pending proceedings. Id. at 706.
Akers aside, policy considerаtions also supposedly favor affirmation, as upholding the validity of the fine would create jurisdictional conflicts doing serious harm to the spirit of Kentucky’s unified judicial system. We disagree and accordingly reverse the declaratory judgment and order of the Franklin Circuit Court.
To prevent abuse by the “strong arm of equity,” as injunctions have been referred to, Wunderlich, supra at 484,
Yet the appellees’ interpretation of the Franklin Cirсuit Court’s order would set both CR 65.02 and the ancient proscription “on their ear.” To bind the entire legislative and executive branches from enforcing KRS 189.150 due to the nominal participatiоn of the Commonwealth in Southeast Truckers runs directly contrary to the restrictions against broad and overly vague injunctive orders. Moreover, such an application of CR 65 in actions challenging the constitutionality of a state statute ignores the in personam nature of injunc-tive relief. A restraining order granting injunctive relief against the enforcement of a statute or ordinance is tо be directed against the acts of those specific public officials charged with enforcing the statute to enjoin their threatened enforcement. Akers v. Floyd County Fiscal Court, Ky.,
Nor may all the courts of Kentucky, other than the Franklin Circuit Court, be automatically divested of their jurisdiction to hear matters involving KRS 189.150 simply by issuance of a restraining order including the Commonwealth as a party.
An injunction decree or order restraining actions or proceedings in another court is directed only to the parties. It is not addressed to the court and is in no sense a prohibition on it in the exercise of its jurisdiction. 42 Am.Jur.2d Injunctions, § 201 (1969).
What the appellee describes as the judicial effect of the circuit cоurt’s original restraining order is actually a novel form of “blanket” writ of prohibition. A writ of prohibition is itself a drastic and extraordinary form of equitable remedy exercised by a court of higher аuthority against an inferior court where that court is acting without jurisdiction, or within jurisdiction but erroneously such that irreparable injury will result. Jones v. Tartar,
The declaratory judgment and order of the Franklin Circuit Court is reversed.
All concur.
