206 S.W.2d 59 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1947
Affirming.
Appellants, J.W. Settle and Forest Moore, as citizens, taxpayers, users of water and electricity, as well as members of the common council of the City of Frankfort, instituted this declaratory judgment action against the other members of that body, the Mayor and the members of the electric and water plant board of the city (hereinafter referred to as the Board) wherein they attacked the constitutionality of Senate Bill 172, Chapter 212, Acts of 1946, now KRS
In 1946 the city acquired by purchase from the Associated Gas Electric Company the combined water and electric plant which served the citizens of Frankfort. In Cawood v. Coleman,
This 1946 Act is closely patterned after the TVA Act and provides that any third class city by enacting an ordinance may elect to operate its combined utilities under the provision of the Act. The mayor or chief executive of the city may appoint a board of public utilities, subject to the approval of the governing body of the municipality. No person shall be appointed a member of the Board who has within two years next before appointment held any public office, or who is related within the third degree to the mayor or any member of the governing body of the municipality. The salary of each member of the Board shall be fixed by it at not exceeding $1000 per annum, and the Board shall employ a Superintendent, qualified by education, training and experience to operate the plant, at a salary of not exceeding $5000 per annum; such salaries shall constitute a cost of operation and maintenance of the plant. The Superintendent, subject to the approval of the Board, shall appoint all employees and fix their duties and compensation. All power of the municipality to operate, maintain, improve and extend electric and water service, as well as to fix rates, shall be exercised on its behalf by the Board. Any member of the Board may be removed from office for inefficiency, misfeasance, malfeasance or neglect of duty by the governing body of the municipality; but that body may only terminate the operation and management of the plant by the Board after submitting the question to a vote of the people.
The ordinance creating the Board was adopted by the favorable vote of seven of the twelve members of the city council. It is contended by appellants that as the salaries of the Board members and of the Superintendent were indirectly fixed by the ordinance adopting the terms of the statute, the same was not duly passed by the council, since KRS 85.110 (2) provides that all ordinances fixing salaries in third class cities shall be passed by a vote of two-thirds of the members of the council. The answer to this contention is that the statute relates to salaries payable out of the general fund of the city and does not apply to salaries of members of the Board and of the Superintendent, which are paid out *12 of the proceeds from the operation of the electric and water plant, a project financed from revenues received from the plant for which the credit of the city is not pledged.
Appellants urge that the 1946 Act relates only to Frankfort, since they say it is the only third class city which operates a unified electric and water plant, therefore it violates subsection 29 of sec. 59 and sec. 60 of our Constitution. If it were true that Frankfort is the only third class municipality which now maintains a combined electric and water plant, that fact would not prevent the Act from applying to all third class municipalities operating such plants. We held that a statute authorizing first class cities to construct, maintain and operate toll bridges across navigable streams so as to connect such cities with adjoining states was not special legislation, although Louisville is the only first class city in the State. Klein v. City of Louisville,
Nor are appellants correct in their contention that the statute under which the Board was created confers legislative powers upon the Board, thereby bringing it in conflict with sec. 160 of our Constitution. The Board here has about the same powers that an Act of 1928 conferred upon the Bridge Commission, which Act was before us in the Klein case,
Lastly, appellants insist that the statute places absolute and arbitrary power in the Board and grants its members exclusive privileges, in violation of secs. 2 and 3 of our Bill of Rights. The same argument was made in the Covington Bridge case,
Nor is there a violation of sec. 3 of the Bill of Rights (forbidding the grant of exclusive privileges) by the fact that the statute forbids an appointment to the Board of one who has within two years held public office, or who is related within the third degree to the mayor or any Member of the governing body of the city, and further forbids the Board or Superintendent from appointing to any subordinate office or from employing in any capacity any person so related to any member of the Board or to the Superintendent. We have held in a long line of cases that this section does not prevent a statute from making reasonable classifications, and it is only where classifications are arbitrary and unreasonable, so as to exclude one or more of a class without a reasonable basis, that the Act is void. Burrow v. Kapfhammer,
The judgment is affirmed.