111 Ky. 163 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1901
Opinion op the court by
Reversing.
The appellee was sheriff of Laurel county in 1899, and at the October term of the fiscal court of said county the appellant Reams was appointed commissioner to settle with the said sheriff for the year 1899. Thereupon the commissioner proceeded to make a settlement, from which it appears that the sheriff was charged with the sum of $11,546.45, and credited by various sums, amounting in the aggregate to $10,555.06, showing a balance due from said sheriff of $927.27; and this settlement was filed in t'he clerk’s office of said county on the 1st of May, 1900. On May 5, 1900, -appellee filed exceptions to said' settlement because the commissioner failed to- give him credit for a duplicate list of $17,813.12, at 40 cents per $100, amounting to $71.25; also for 66 duplicate polls, including women and non-residents, at one dollar each, amounting to sixty-six dollars; also for five polls, of one dollar each, which were released by order of the fiscal court aforesaid; also because he failed to credit him with $14.68 listed for the purpose- of taxation as belonging to people in Laurel county,-when in fact said persons- did not reside in: Laurel county, nor have any property in said county;
It is contended for appellee that the evidence introduced in the court below is not properly before this court, and that the presumption must be that the judgment below is sustained by the evidence, and hence ought to be affirmed. We do not concur in this contention. We think this case is, to all intents, a proceeding in equity; and, the evidence being actually copied and certified to by the clerk, we think the entire record is before this court. But, even if this was not so, the settlement and1 exceptions filed by the appellee himself are necessarily before the
It is very earnestly argued for appellee that the 937 lists offered by him should be allowed; it being claimed, and to some extent proven, that a large number of the delinquents are housekeepers and have not more than $250 worth of personal property, and that such property, under Constitution, section 170, is exempt from taxation; and from that it is further argued that there is exempt from
The question whether the Laurel county court may yet receive and allow the delinquent list and such other exoneration as the sheriff might have been entitled to is not before this court for decision, and hence no opinion in