184 Ky. 277 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1919
Opinion of the Court by
Reversing.'
This litigation, which was set in motion by the appellees (plaintiffs below), assails the validity of an ordinance passed by the board of trustees for the city of Whitley on August 25,1917, the purpose of which was to prevent the running of hogs at large within the cor
The ordinance reads: “An ordinance making it unlawful for hogs to run at large in the town of Whitley, and prescribing penalty therefor.
“Be it ordained by the board of trustees of the town of Whitley, Kentucky, as follows: That on and after the publication of this ordinance for 30 days from the date hereof it shall be unlawful for hogs, pigs or swine to run at large within the corporate limits of said town, and if any such hog or hogs, pig or pigs, be found running at large upon the streets, roads, alleys or public grounds of said town, or other officer upon behalf of said town by order of police judge of said town to do so to take such offending hog or hogs up, and place such in the stray pen, and immediately report same to the police judge of said town, and at once post up in three public places in said town the description of such hogs and make due inquiry to ascertain the name of the owner of such hog or hogs, and on and after such notice being given for five days, and no owner be found, it shall be reported to the police judge whose duty it shall be to issue and cause to be served upon (if found) the owner a process of an ordinary summons, warning him to appear within five days from the service of such summons, and claim such hog or hogs, and show cause, if any, why he should not be required to .pay to said town the sum of fifty cents per day for each hog over six months old, and twenty-five cents for each pig under that age, and one dollar for the taking such hog or hogs up and impounding same, as a penalty therefor as above provided, for all of which the said town shall have a prior lien on all such hog or hogs, pig or pigs so taken up, if upon taking any offending hog or hogs up as above provided, and no owner be found, or person claiming such stray hog or hogs, after notice thereof for five days being published by "order of the police judge as above provided, and it shall be lawful, and the duty of said court to enter up’ a judgment of his court enforcing the town’s lien for costs and upkeep of such hog or hogs, and to sell same to satisfy said lien and costs at the rate for upkeep and taking such hog or hogs up, as above provided, and order a public sale of such offending hog or hogs to satisfy such lien and costs.”
Before taking up any of these g'rounds it might be well to state (a fact which is glaringly apparent) that the ordinance is very inartificially drawn. But, while this is true, the language used is sufficient to manifest the intention of the board of trustees in its enactment. When this appears in either a statute or an ordinance ir will not be set aside as being invalid merely because the drafting was not done by skillful hands. Unless some other ground exists, the enactment will be upheld.
In support of (1), contention, that the town was without charter authority to enact the ordinance, it is insisted that the only provision in the charter of cities of the sixth class under which the authority to enact the ordinance is given, -if at all, is subsection 7 of section 3704 of the Kentucky Statutes, which says that the board of trustees shall have power “to do and perform any and all other acts and things necessary or proper to carry out the provisions of this chapter, and to enact and enforce within the limits of such town all other local, police, sanitary and other regulations as do not conflict with general laws.”
It is denied by plaintiffs that the quoted subsection confers upon the town any such authority. They argue that subsection ten of section 3637, being a part of the charter of cities of the fifth class, specifically confers upon cities of that class the power to enact ordinances of the character, of the one here involved, while subsection
“In several cases this court has held that under similar charter provisions the city council had authority to pass ordinances authorizing the sale of hogs impounded after a judicial determination by some court that they were running at large in violation of such ordinance. McKee v. McKee, 8 B. Mon. 433; Varden v. Mount, 78 Ky. 86. And in the case of Armstrong v. Brown, 50 S. W. 17 (106 Ky. 81) the question was very fully gone into and the conclusion reached that ordinances similar to those complained of in this action were valid.”
Briefly considering ground (2), we find nothing in charters of cities of the sixth class requiring an ordinance of this character to be enacted at a regular meeting, and the complaint that it was not enacted at a regular meeting place fixed by the board of trustees is made only in briefs of counsel. Nothing to sustain it is found in any pleading or in any other part of the record, so that we need give it no further consideration.
Ground (3) of complaint appears to have been abandoned, since it is not argued in appellants’ brief. The only support for it at all is that the ordinance when copied in the record of the proceedings of the board of trustees completely filled one page, leaving no room f'or the chairman- of the board or the clerk to sign their; names, and such signatures were written at the top of the next or following page, immediately after which followed other proceedings of that meeting. We think this was a sufficient compliance with the section of the statute (3700) requiring ordinances in cities of the sixth class to be signed by the chairman and attested by the clerk, and that this ground is also without merit.-
Ground (4) is really not presented by the record, since neither the proceeds nor any part of the proceeds of the sale of any hogs taken up under the ordinance is involved in the case. But we are not inclined to the opinion that the ordinance is void because it does not expressly provide what shall become of the proceeds of any sale made under the ordinance after the payment of cost and fees. If the ordinance went further and attempted to appropriate such excess proceeds, if any, in a way to deprive the owner of the hog from obtaining them, there might be .room for contesting such portion of the ordinance as being invalid, but in the absence of such attempted disposal of the excess proceeds, they would remain the property of the -owner of the hog sold, and if not voluntarily done he could -enforce payment by appropriate proceedings.
It will at once appear that ground (5) urged as rendering the ordinance invalid presents a question beyond
Another question not presented or urged, but which arises"on the face of the ordinance, is whether it sufficiently provides for a judicial forfeiture of the owner’* title to the hogs which might be apprehended under the ordinance. The fact that there is no penalty provided against the owner (the.only penalty .being certain fees and costs for apprehending, ordering' sold, selling and caring for the animals) cannot affect the case, since the validity of the ordinance is not dependent upon the mildness of the penalty which it provides.
It will be seen that the marshal of the town is authorized to apprehend any hog running at large in violation cf the ordinance only after being ordered to do so by the police judge of the town. Upon doing so it is made his duty to advertise by written notice in three public places of the town a description of the hogs, which
“If the unknown owner was treated as a non-resident, and a warning order made for sixty or ninety days, the costs of keeping would often equal, if not exceed, the value of the property. So, from the very nature of the case, it is necessary, in the interest of the owner and the city, that the property should he sold as early as may he done, giving a reasonable opportunity to the owner to he heard, or, as commonly said, ‘to have his day in court.’ ”
We therefore conclude that the. ordinance can not he assailed upon the ground that it fails to provide for a judicial forfeiture of the owner’s title to any animal found running at large contrary to its provisions. The cases referred to settle the questions involved and dispense with the necessity of further elaboration herein.
The judgment not conforming to the views herein expressed, is reversed, with directions to set it aside and to proceed in conformity to this opinion.