[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *Page 480 Affirming.
The plaintiff, and appellee, Walton-Verona Independent Graded School District, is a rural school unit duly established in which a graded school is conducted in Boone County with the power to demand and require ad valorem rates of taxation to be levied upon the property of the taxpayers of the district by the fiscal court of the county, which was done and the levy was made by the fiscal court for all the years involved in this action.
The appellant, and a defendant below, W.B. Cotton, was elected sheriff of the county in the year 1933 for the full term of four years from January 1, 1934. On December 22, 1933, he qualified as such incoming officer and executed the bond required by Section 1884 of Baldwin's 1936 Edition of Carroll's Kentucky Statutes (Sections
In none of them was the sheriff made the collector by virtue of his office or otherwise, except in the latter class of independent rural school districts of which plaintiff, and appellee, is one. So that at the time the sheriff undertook (which he was not compelled to do but only given the authority in the absence of a specially elected collector) to collect the taxes for plaintiff for the scholastic *Page 481 year beginning July 1, 1934, he was entitled to only one percent of the amount of taxes collected by him and the same was true throughout his term of four years. But instead of retaining only the one percent of his collections he retained four percent thereof for the school taxes collected by him for and on behalf of plaintiff throughout the four years of his incumbency. Plaintiff demanded of him the excess amount retained of three percent of his collections, aggregating throughout the four years $1,654.63 with interest from each period throughout the four years when he was required to make settlement.
Defendants answered, relying on the provisions of Chapter 20, page 55 of the 1934 Acts which amended Section 4134 of the 1930 Edition of Carroll's Kentucky Statutes (Sections
Plaintiff demurred to the answer which the court sustained upon the ground that the 1934 amendment referred to was special legislation in violation of Subsection 15 of Section 59 of our Constitution forbidding the enactment of any special act regulating "the levy, the assessment or the collection of taxes, or to give any indulgence or discharge to any assessor or collector of taxes, or to his sureties." The court was of the opinion that since the 1934 amendment to Section 4134, supra, applied only to sheriffs when they collected taxes (including *Page 482 school taxes where they were authorized to do so) and did not apply to other collectors of school taxes and their sureties, the attempted classification was unauthorized and invalid. Defendants declined to plead further and judgment was rendered in favor of plaintiff, from which this appeal is prosecuted.
In the case of Leslie County v. Maggard,
In the case of Mt. Vernon Independent Graded School Dist. v. Clark et al.,
It would seem, therefore, that we need discuss the question no further, except for the fact that it is argued by learned counsel for appellants that the requiring of notice as proscribed by the 1934 amendment affects only the remedy, and that the constitutional provisions forbidding legislation impairing the obligation of a contract do not apply to legislation altering or changing the remedy, provided, however, a reasonable remedy is substituted. But we do not agree with counsel in their contention that the provisions of the involved amendment were remedial, since neither of them (the one limiting the liability to the year in which the bond was executed nor the one requiring notice) in any manner affected the remedy of anyone having the right to recover on the bond. The same limitations of fifteen years as applied to the principal, and seven years as applied to the surety, were left untouched by the amendment. It, as we shall show, exclusively affected and impaired the obligations of the sureties on the bond they executed. When it was executed it covered the entire period, as we have seen, of the entire term of the sheriff. Also when the bond was executed the liability assumed by the sheriff and his sureties was absolute throughout that period, being conditioned in no respect whatever in order to preserve its continued obligatory force.
It is not insisted that the limiting of the liability to only one year did not impair the obligation of the sureties and principal who executed the bond which, no doubt, is due to the fact that counsel recognized that by cutting down the period over which it extends, and limiting the liability of the obligor to only such shortened period, clearly and obviously impaired the obligation. But it is equally apparent, and is obviously as true, that the imposition of the proviso in the amendment requiring notice to be given to the sureties of their principal's defalcation — within the time prescribed — as a prerequisite to their continued absolute liability, also impairs the obligation of the contract. It was so expressly held in the Mt. Vernon case and which is the effect of the opinion in the case of Board of Education, etc., v. Littrell,
Long before the rendition of the two cited domestic cases (Board of Education, etc., v. Litterell,
In the case of Henderson v. Phoenix Ins. Co.,
When the bond sued on in this case was executed all of the rights which it and the prevailing applicable law injected into it became vested in any member of the public having the right to resort to the bond for his protection. Such vested right was, as we have said, an absolute one subject to no conditions whatever, and when the Legislature after such rights became vested attempted to curtail them, or to impose conditions in order to keep alive the obligations assumed, it clearly impaired the terms of the contract contrary to the constitutional *Page 486 provisions referred to, and which made the amendment inapplicable to the bond upon which the action is based. We have been unable to find any case contrary to the conclusion above expressed. Although the court based its judgment on another ground it was nevertheless correct. In basing our conclusion upon a different ground from that upon which the trial court rested its judgment, we decline to determine the correctness of the court's conclusion as a basis for its judgment and which question is left open.
Wherefore, the judgment is affirmed.
The whole Court sitting.
