28 S.W.2d 966 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1930
Affirming.
There are only two questions presented by these three appeals, which were heard together in the lower court. The cases were tried twice. On the first trial there was a judgment in each case for Webster county, and on the second trial there was a judgment in favor of each appellee for $500. One of the questions is the propriety of the ruling of the trial court on demurrers, and the other is whether the motion to substitute the judgments on the first trial for the judgments on the second trial should have been sustained.
A demurrer was filed to the petition, and counsel for the county insists that it should have been sustained for three reasons. One is that it did not allege that the claims had been presented to the fiscal court for payment before the actions were instituted. He cites and relies on the case of Hudgins v. Carter County,
The second ground of demurrer was that the petition did not allege that the fiscal court, by any order, *620
directed the building of the toilets, or that the court had ratified their building and maintenance. Counsel relies on the case of Arnold v. City of Stanford,
In the petition before us it is alleged that Webster county owns, controls, and manages a lot of ground in Dixon, Ky., on which the courthouse, public buildings, and public toilets are erected. The erection and maintenance of public toilets is admitted by the answer. The second ground urged against the petition is not, therefore, tenable.
The third ground relied on by appellant in its attack on the petitions is that it is not alleged that the acts complained of were not in the performance of a governmental function. Undoubtedly it is the general rule that a county is an arm of the state government and cannot be sued for its torts without its consent. But section 242 of the Constitution is controlling in these and similar cases. Private property may not be taken for a public use without the making of just compensation to the owner. The taking of property under that provision of the Constitution does not always mean the actual taking by the process of obtaining the physical possession of the property. When the use of property is interfered with to the prejudice of the owner and there is a diminution of the value of the use of the property, that is a taking within the meaning of the Constitution.
The case of Herr et al. v. Central Kentucky Lunatic Asylum,
In the case of Hauns v. Central Kentucky Lunatic Asylum,
The case of Herr v. Central Kentucky Asylum,
The case of Norwood v. Kentucky Confederate Home,
The case of Moore v. Lawrence County,
In the case of McDonald v. Powell County,
The case of Letcher County v. Hogg,
In the case of Black Mountain Corporation v. Houston,
In the case of Harlan County et al. v. Cole,
What has been said disposes of another ground relied on for reversal, and that is that the court erred in sustaining the demurrer to the second paragraph of the answer, which was, in effect, a plea of the nonsuability of the county because it is an arm of the state government.
The only other question is whether the motion to substitute the judgments entered as a result of the first trial for the judgments entered on the verdict of the jury in the last trial should have been sustained. The court has a wide discretion in granting new trials, and that discretion will not be interfered with by this court unless a manifest injustice has been done one of the parties. Strode, Executrix, v. Strode,
Judgment affirmed.