115 Ky. 651 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1903
Opinion of the court by
Reversing.
The appellee was arrested by the legal authorities of appellant, charged with violating an ordinance — a breach of the peace — and was taken before, the regular police judge. Appellee filed his affidavit, swearing him off the bench. Samuel Wylie, who had been designated, under qn ordinance of the town, as provided by section 3711 of the Kentucky Statutes of 1899, to preside in such cases, was called in to preside. The appellee objected to Wylie’s presiding, for the reason, as he claimed, that the ordinance designating him, and that part of section 3711 of the Kentucky Statutes of 1899 authorizing such an ordinance, were unconstitutional; and he filed his petition in the Carter circuit court, with the necessary allegations, and asked an injunction restraining him from so presiding. The. parties agreed upon the facts to be submitted to the court, and the lower court sustained the petition of appellee, and the case is. here on appeal.
The appellant is a town of the sixth class. The only-question necessary to be decided on this appeal is whether section 3711 of the Kentucky Statutes of 1899, or that part of it, to-wit, “The board of trustees shall, by ordinance, providfe who shall act in the place of the police judge when he is absent, or when, from any cause, he can not preside, or
We agree with appellee that no courts can be established, other than those named in the Constitution, for section 135 of the Constitution says, “No courts, save those provided for in this Constitution, shall be established.” Section 3711 of the statutes does not undertake to establish any other court — it is to be the same police court — but only authorizes, in the emergencies'therein named, another person to fill the position, which authorized him to exercise judicial powers in the particular cases. Appellee refers to the case in 109 Ky., 265, 22 R., 975, 58 S. W., 810, where Roberts sued Hackney for false imprisonment. Hackney was chairman of the board of trustees of London, a sixth-class town, and undertook, under authority of Or. Code, section 32, to summon witnesses to appear before him, to ascertain if an offense had been committed and Roberts was one of the witnesses summoned. He refused to answer questions, and Hackney committed him to jail for five hours for contempt. The court in the case referred to decided that Hackney was not a magistrate, and had no
It is agreed that Wylie possessed the qualifications of police judge, as required by the statutes; but appellee contends that, under section 1126 of the- statutes, when he filed his affidavit taking the regular judge off the bench he should have the right to take it to another court; that his affidavit ipso facto took it out of the police court; and that he was entitled to a trial before the county judge, or
We conclude that the Constitution authorized the General Assembly to enact section 3711, and that the board of trustees of appellant had the power thereunder to pass the ordinance under which they designated Wylie to take the place of the regular police judge, and he had tfle legal right to try appellee on the charge, and therefore the lower court erred in granting the injunction. For these reasons, the judgment of the lower court is reversed, and the cause remanded for further proceedings consistent herewith.
Petition for rehearing by appellee overruled.