Affirming.
At tbe regular November election in 1948, pursuant to an order of the fiscal court, the following question was submitted to the voters of Edmonson County: *72 “Shall Edmonson County, Kentucky, issue bonds to the amount of Sixty One Thousand Dollars ($61,000.00) for the purpose of constructing and furnishing a county public health clinic and hospital, in and for said county to be known as Edmonson County Clinic and Health Center.”
2,149 voters voted yes, and 209 voted no. T. H. Demunbrun, suing as county attorney of Edmonson County and as a citizen, resident and taxpayer of the County, brought this action against the members of the fiscal court to prevent the issuance of the bonds. The petition alleges that the fiscal court is without authority to issue the bonds since the obligation created thereby is prohibited by Chapter 216 of the Kentucky Revised Statutes, and is in violation of section 157 of the Kentucky Constitution. A demurrer to the petition was sustained, the petition was dismissed, and the court adjudged that “each and all of the orders entered by the Fiscal Court, referred to in the petition are regular, legal and valid orders, and that the defendant has the full right and authority to sell the bonds referred to in the petition, that the election referred to in the petition is legal and valid, and that defendant has full right to sell the bonds referred to in the petition, and use the proceeds derived therefrom to construct a public health clinic in Edmonson County, Kentucky, and adjudges, that in doing so, the defendant does not violate any section of the Constitution, nor Chapter 216 of KRS nor any other section of KRS.” Plaintiff has appealed.
It is first argued that Chapter 216 of the Kentucky Revised Statutes is the only authority fiscal courts have for establishing and erecting a hospital, clinic or health center; that this authority is conferred only upon fiscal courts in counties containing a second, third, fourth or fifth class city, and since Edmonson County does not have a city of any of these classes its fiscal court is without authority to construct a hospital. Section 216.010 of the Kentucky Revised Statutes is as follows: “Any county containing a city of the second, third, fourth or fifth class may, through its fiscal court, establish and erect a hospital for the use of its citizens, and for that purpose the fiscal court may acquire by gift, purchase, lease or condemnation any land or property situated wholly in the county where the hospital is to be located, *73 or any interest, franchise, easement, right or privilege therein that may be required for the purpose of constructing, furnishing, maintaining or operating the hospital. The method of condemnation of property shall be the same as that provided for the condemnation of property for public purposes.”
Was it the intention of the Legislature in enacting this section to prohibit a county which does not contain a city of the classes enumerated therein from constructing and maintaining a hospital? We think not when other statutes on the subject are considered, particularly KBS 67.080, which defines the powers of fiscal courts. Subsection 8 provides that the fiscal court may “make provision for the maintenance of the poor, provide a poorhouse and poor farm, appropriate county funds for the benefit of infirmaries for the sick located in the county, provide for the care, treatment and maintenance of the sick and poor and provide a hospital for that purpose, or contract with any hospital in the county to do so.” It is appellant’s contention that this section merely empowers the fiscal court to provide a hospital when it has suffcient funds on hand for that purpose, but does not authorize the construction of a hospital out of the proceeds of a voted bond issue, and Combs v. Center,
Under KBS 67.080 a county has broad powers in providing hospital facilities for the sick and the poor. State Bank and Trust Company v. Madison County,
There is no merit in the suggestion, and it is nothing more, that the issuance of the proposed bonds will violate section 157 of the Constitution. The procedure required by that section was followed, and the amount of the indebtedness is within the limits prescribed by section 158 of the Constitution.
The judgment is affirmed.
