291 S.W. 721 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1927
Affirming
On July 6, 1926, the fiscal court of Mercer county by yea and nay vote of five to one appropriated for the maintenance and support of the A.D. Price Hospital located in Harrodsburg the sum of $150.00 a month for the balance of the fiscal year. At the request of the minority the county attorney was directed to appeal from the order making the appropriation. From a judgment of the Mercer circuit court holding the appropriation valid, this appeal is prosecuted.
Among the powers conferred on fiscal courts by section 1840, Kentucky Statutes, is the power "to appropriate county funds for the benefit of colleges and for infirmaries for the sick located in the county." Notwithstanding the broad power thus conferred, appellant insists that the fiscal court has no authority to appropriate a lump sum and leave its use and expenditure to the discretion of others. In the early case of Orphan Society of Lexington v. Fayette County, 6 Bush 413, the facts were *453 these: As the result of the cholera epidemic in 1833 many children were left destitute and in a state of orphanage. The Orphan Society of Lexington was incorporated for the purpose of acquiring a home and taking care of them. To this end a house and lot were purchased. Later on the building was found insufficient, and it was necessary to enlarge and remodel it. To accomplish this purpose the county court of claims of Fayette county appropriated $1,500.00 to the orphan society. At the instance of the county judge an action was brought to enjoin the payment of the appropriation. The injunction was granted by the circuit court. On appeal it was held that the county court's power "to make provision for the maintenance of the poor" was not exhausted by the erection of a poorhouse, but that it could use other agencies for the accomplishment of that purpose. In discussing the question the court said:
"While the county court has no authority to give away the money of the county, or to appropriate it even, to general charity, it certainly has power to apply it as necessary and proper means to the end of its enjoined duties; and, in so using it, its power is circumscribed only by a sound discretion within the scope of the limited range of taxation. According to this test it might have built and maintained the asylum for poor orphans, and consequently might rightfully contribute, as it did, a modicum to aid the institution in extending the building so as to accommodate a larger portion of the poor of the county, and who would not be otherwise eared for as well or at all.
"In that way and to that extent it makes the orphan society its agent, which it could do as certainly and lawfully without controlling or participating in the management of the institution; satisfied, as it should be, that the management will be as faithful and beneficent without its control as with it, and contribute as much to the welfare of the poor orphans of the county."
In Board Trustees House of Reform v. City of Lexington,
Judgment affirmed. *455