107 Ky. 41 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1899
delivered the opinion of the court.
The appellant sought in this action to enjoin the collection of a tax of 10 cents on the $100 levied by the commissioners for the court-house district in Campbell county for the year 1897, for lack of authority on the part of the commissioners to make the assessment or to authorize the levy.
By a special act of the Legislature approved April 17, 1882, a certain designated portion of Campbell county was laid off into a separate district, and called the “Court House District.” By the third section of this act, the
It is insisted by counsel for appellant that the effect of the act of April 18, 1892, vesting in the fiscal court of the
A tax of 12 cents on each $100 of taxable property was authorized by the act of 1882, to pay the interest and bonds issued to provide funds with which to build the court house and keep it in repair, and this is a separate and distinct charge upon the court-house district, with which the county at large and the fiscal court have no concern, and whilst under the provisions of the act of 1892, the fiscal court is charged with the duty of levying and collecting a tax sufficient to defray the current and necessary expenses of the county, it did not in any wise affect the powers or duties imposed upon the commissioners of the court-house district, for the purposes named in the original act.
There is no averment in the petition that the tax sought to be enjoined in this action was assessed for any other purpose than to provide a fund to pay off the bonds and interest and keep the court house and offices therein in repair, as provided by the act of 1882.
In the recent case of Joyes v. Jefferson County Fiscal Court, 21 Ky. L. R., 199, [51 S. W., 435], it was held, in substance, that, under the provisions of the Constitution, and the act of 1892, relating to fiscal courts, the
In the case of Campbell County v. The Commissioners of the Court House District, 19 Ky. L. R., 860, [42 S. W., 111], it appeared that the fiscal court had made no levy upon the court-house district for the years 1895 and 1896 for county purposes, relying upon the commissioners to pay their proportion of such funds in accordance with the custom which had prevailed since the passage of the amendment of 1886. It was shown that the tax had been assessed and collected by the commissioners for the purpose of paying the district’s proportion of the county expenses, and it was held that the county was entitled to have these funds in the hands of the commissioners applied for the purposes for which they had been collected.
For reasons indicated, the judgment is affirmed.