138 Ky. 238 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1910
Opinion op the Court by
Tlie petitioners filed their respective petitions in this court against the respondent, asking that a writ issue prohibiting the respondent from hearing and determining proceedings against them pending in the Warren county court. The petitioners are merchants who have license under section 4203 of the Kentucky Statutes authorizing them to retail liquor in quantities of not less than a quart and respondent is the county judge of Warren county. Notice as provided in section 4208 of the Kentucky Statutes was executed upon each of the petitioners to appear before the respondent, sitting as the county court of Warren county, and show cause why the license should not be canceled for violating section 4204 (section 6146) of the Kentucky Statutes, making it unlawful for any person having such license “to furnish any liquor to any person who is drunk or who is a known inebriate, or who is under twenty-one years of age, or to sell any liquor on.
The statute, in section 4208, confers upon the county court ample authority to cancel the license of any merchant found guilty upon a hearing after due notice of violating the law; and so no question is made that the respondent, acting as the county court of Warren county, did not have jurisdiction of the petitioners as well as the subject-matter in controversy. But it is insisted that the affidavits filed set out sufficient reasons why the respondent should not hear or determine the matter before him, anc that when the affidavits were filed he should have vacated the bench. The affidavit set out that the respondent was elected county judge of Warren county in November, 1909, and that during his candi
We do not, however, put our conclusion as to the sufficiency of the affidavit upon the ground that the respondent was hostile to the liquor traffic. The fact that a judge is strongly opposed to the sale of liquor in any form is -not of itself sufficient reason why he should not preside in the trial.of cases involving infractions of the liquor laws of the state. But, when, a judge has publicly pledged and committed himself to revoke the license of every person arraigned before him having license to sell liquor, and is personally hostile to the licensees, it is certainly good reason why he should not try cases involving the revocation of the license. The respondent had virtually determined the cases against the petitioners prior to the time they came before him. It was only necessary that he should sit as the county court of Warren county to go through the form of putting into effect the judgment he had previously
But the failure of the respondent to do what it seems to us was his plain and unmistakable duty does
It is further argued on behalf of the petitioners that, although it should be held that the respondent
Section 4211 of the Kentucky Statutes (Russell’s St. section 6153) provides, that in a proceeding to cancel the license of a liquor dealer, “an appeal may. be prosecuted by the county attorney or the defend
But we think there is a sound distinction between the cases before us and one in which we might be
As courts are established to administer justice, why should not the highest court in the state, when there is no other adequate remedy, in the exercise of the ample and unquestioned power conferred upon it, lay its superintending hand upon any inferior juris, diction that is about to commit a judicial wrong and compel it to administer justice according to the right of the case? However, it is not necessary to further pursue this line of thought. In the case before us, the Legislature has given both to the commonwealth and the liquor dealer the right to appeal from the judgment of the county court to the circuit court, and from the circuit court to this court, thereby declaring that any decision entered by the county court should be subject to review and reversal by the circuit court, and any decision rendered by the circuit
Wherefore, the whole court sitting, it is ordered that a writ issue in behalf of each of the petitioners against the respondent, Denhardt, as judge of the county court of Warren county, prohibiting him from hearing or determining the proceedings pending in the Warren county court to revoke the license of the petitioners or any of them.