192 S.W.2d 185 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1946
Affirming.
There are more than 500 election precincts in Jefferson County. Voting machines are now in use in only a few precincts, but the Fiscal Court has provided for the installation of 275 additional machines and this necessitates a change of boundaries of practically all the election precincts of the County by the County Court. In KRS
Appellant's argument for reversal of the judgment is based principally on the well-recognized rule that the fiscal court of a county is a tribunal possessing only limited powers and has no authority to appropriate county funds unless such authority has been delegated to it, expressly or impliedly, by some provision of law. This rule has been applied in numerous cases by this court, including Jefferson County v. Jefferson County Fiscal Court,
"Whenever the public convenience or the public good requires it, the county court of any county may change the boundaries of any election precinct in the county, or divide any precinct into two or more precincts, or consolidate two or more precincts into one, but no change, division or consolidation shall be made after the June term of the court next preceding an election. No change, division or consolidation shall be valid unless due notice is given, at least one month before any election, by one publication in the newspaper published in the county that has the largest circulation therein, or by posters put up in four of the most public places in the precinct."
It is argued that there is no provision in this section of the Statutes which allows or authorizes the County to pay the County Judge or anyone selected by the County Judge to assist him for services rendered *408
in changing the boundary lines of the precincts. There is no express authority for an appropriation by the Fiscal Court to pay for the newspaper publication or for putting up the posters, but this is necessarily implied. We think that authority is likewise necessarily implied to appropriate funds to pay commissioners appointed by the County Court to make a survey, gather data, and make a report showing the facts in order to enable the Court to act intelligently. When the Legislature, by Chapter 181 of the Acts of 1942, KRS
"The power to appoint necessary attendants upon the court is inherent in the court in order to enable it to perform properly the duties delegated to it by the Constitution, and it cannot be doubted that judicial *409 power includes the authority to select persons whose services may be required in judicial proceedings or who may be required to act as the assistants of the judges in the performance of their judicial functions, whether they are referees, receivers, attorneys, masters, commissioners, or judges and clerks of elections."
We think that th judgment appealed from correctly declared the rights of the parties, and it is affirmed.