54 Ky. 11 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1854
delivered the opinion of the Court.
By an act approved January 1st, 1852, it is enacted that from and after its passage “the county line between Shelby and Oldham counties shall be so changed as to include within the county of Oldham all that part of the county of Shelby lying between the present line of said counties and the following described line, to-wit: beginning at a point in said line, at the mouth of Caney run, on the land of W. W. Taylor, and running thence on a straight line to a point on the Shelbyville and Bedford road, on the land of J. W. Berry, including said Berry in Oldham county; and running thence to a point where the present line between said counties crosses said road; and said territory, so taken from Shelby county, shall belong to that district in Oldham county to which it is immediately contiguous.”
But not only is the act not precisely definite in the particular just noticed, but there is in fact no point upon the road from Shelbyville to Bedford at which the lines of the counties of Shelby and Oldham cross said road. There is therefore an entire defect or mistake in the act in describing the point at which the second line (if its beginning be fixed,) is to terminate. It is only by construction that the boundary line from the point in J. W. Berry’s land is to be located. And although we are of opinion that, by construing the act with reference to the objects existing on the ground, and also with reference to its own manifest purposes, the entire boundary may be located with reasonable certainty, whereby the act will be rendered effectual, it seems to have been considered by some that the line could not be run without such a departure from the statutory description as would make it void, and that the statute itself was of no effect on account of its uncertainty and impracticability, and of course that the two counties remained as they were before its passage. Such seems to have been the opinion of commissioners appointed by the County Court of Shelby county to run the line
The two cases named at the head of this opinion grew out of the state of things which has been described. The case of Taylor vs. the Commonwealth is an appeal from the County Court of Shelby county, imposing a fine and triple tax upon Taylor for refusing to give a list of his taxable property, in the year 1853, to the assessor of Shelby county; and the case of Gathright vs. the Commonwealth is an appeal from a similar judgment of the Oldham County Court, against Gathright, for refusing to give the list of his taxable property for the same year to the assessor of Oldham county. In each of the cases the facts, as above stated, were substantially proved. And with respect to Taylor, it was further proved that, according. to the line actually run by the commissioners of the Oldham county court, and according to any straight line which could be run from the beginning designated in the statute to a point in the Bedford and Shelbyville road, upon the land of J. W. Berry, and in Shelby county, (as it was,) Taylor would be in-
Then recurring to the statute, we find that its only object is to add a definite portion of the county of Shelby to the adjoining county of Oldham. In defining this territory, it of course intends that the original line between the two counties should form a part of the boundary, and that the residue should meet that line at two points, so as to make a perfect figure or tract of territory within the county to be diminished; and this boundary should be run without taking in the territory of any other county, unless it is so expressly described as to include such territory.
With regard to the first line, the words of the statute, in reference to J. W. Berry, might b.e satisfied by its merely including his house, or by its including his farm, or by its including his whole tract, which, upon the words alone, might be most proper. But if it merely included his house it would not run to the Bedford and Shelbyville road. It should therefore include his farm, or so much of it as is on the nearer side of the road and within the county of Shelby, which is done by the line of the Oldham commissioners, which includes both Taylor and Gathright in Oldham county.
We are of opinion, therefore, that each of these parties should have given in his tax list in the county of Oldham. And as Taylor did so, he is clearly not liable to the fine and triple tax, and the judgment against him is therefore reversed, and indeed was rendered without jurisdiction.
It might seem to follow, from the position which we have given to the new boundary between these (Counties, that the fine and triple tax were properly adjudged against Gathright, who is included in the
Wherefore, each- of the causes is remanded for a. new trial according, to the principles of this- opinion,, if the prosecutions are persisted in.