198 Ky. 807 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1923
Opinion of the Court by
Reversing.
Appellee Canada was one of the regularly elected, qualified and acting magistrates of the county of Wayne on January 1, 1922, and as such, was ex-officio a member of the Wayne county fiscal court. On February 5, 1918, the fiscal court, over which the Honorable J. C. Denney, county judge, presided, entered the following* order: ‘ ‘ Ordered by the court that each magisterial district shall receive its pro rata part of the road funds of Wayne county for the year 1918, with the exception of ten per cent (10%) which will go into the general sinking fund.’' For each of the succeeding years during the term of appellee 'Canada a similar order was entered by the fiscal
Appellee Canada filed answer in which he averred that the county Judge of Wayne county, while acting- as supervisor of roads of the county, entered an order directing that each magisterial district of the county should “be paid back or receive for each year, out of the county road funds, all of the taxes for roads and bridge purposes levied, collected and paid each year by the respective magisterial districts and that the same should be expended on the public roads and bridges therein, and that the magistrate in each magisterial district should oversee the work and supervise the expenditure of the money ■expended yearly on the public road in the said magisterial district.” Pursuant to the foregoing plan, the answer further averred that for the four years he served as a member of the fiscal court, appellee Canada caused work to be done upon the roads of his district and thereafter
To this answer appellants filed a general demurrer which the court overruled. Appellants stood on their demurrer and declined to further plead, whereupon the court dismissed the cause, and they appeal.
The fiscal court is'one of a limited jurisdiction. Its powers are set forth in section 1840, Kentucky Statutes. By that section it has power to appropriate county funds, authorized by law to be appropriated. It has jurisdiction to provide for the good condition of the highways in the county and to appropriate county funds for that purpose. Neither the county judge, as such, nor the county court has authority or power to appropriate public funds, except in emergencies. It has also been held that the powers of a county judge are incompatible with that of road supervisor and that the county judge cannot lawfully act as and perform the duties of road supervisor. Daviess County v. Goodwin, 25 R. 1081.
The fiscal court can speak only through its record, and no matter what action the individual members of that court may take, or what their individual opinion or agreements may be upon any appropriation or order, no valid appropriation can be made except by a majority of the members of the court acting together as a court, at a meeting held for that purpose. McDonald’s Admr. v. Franklin County, 125 Ky. 205; Scoville v. Baugh, 27 Ky. L. Rep. 319. With the answer appellee Canada filed several orders of the fiscal court as exhibits. These orders do not sustain the averments of the answer to the effect, that the fiscal court had made appropriations of certain funds for the roads of the magisterial district of appellee Canada. On the contrary they contradict the averments of the answer. The order of the fiscal court, copied above, upon which appellee relies made no appropriation for the improvements of the roads of appellee’s district, and is in but a narrow sense an appropriation. It only
In the case of Clark, etc. v. Logan County, 138 Ky. 676, and in the case of Black, etc. v. Davenport, 189 Ky. 40, we held that a citizen and taxpayer may maintain an action to recover funds wrongfully paid out under the
The answer of appellee Canada did not present facts sufficient to constitute a defense to the petition, and the trial court erred in overruling the general demurrer to the answer and in dismissing appellant’s cause.
For the reasons indicated the judgment is reversed for proceedings not inconsistent herewith.
Judgment reversed.