Amendments are discretionary with the court below, and are not
reviewable here.
In Kentucky, when the record of a county court, composed of the
county judge and a majority of the justices of the peace of the
county, shows affirmatively an adjudication of the necessity of a
construction contract; an appropriation for preliminary work upon
it, the appointment of an agent to make the contract, and the levy
of taxes to pay for work done under it, it is not necessary, in
order to fix liability on the county, that the record should
further show that the contract was reported to the court with the
name of the person making it, that it was filed in the court, or
that it was accepted by the county judge.
When a body like the county courts of Kentucky has judicial
powers, and also large administrative and executive powers, and is
by law authorized to employ agents in the execution of the latter
branch of powers, the acts of the agents are not in every case
required to appear of record.
Page 130 U. S. 143
When a county court in Kentucky, constituted as the law
requires, enters into a construction contract on behalf of the
county in the manner prescribed by law, and charges the county with
the amount specified therein, its jurisdiction in that special mode
of organization ceases, and it is then the legitimate province of
the county court, held by the county judge alone, to superintend
and control the erection of the structure.
As a general rule, in Kentucky, when any power is conferred or
duty imposed by statute upon a county court, the term is understood
to mean a court held by the presiding judge alone, and not in
conjunction with the justices, and should be held so to mean even
when used in connection with fiscal matters if it relates to mere
ministerial duties.
In contract. Verdict and judgment for the plaintiffs. The
defendant sued out this writ of error. The case is stated in the
opinion of the Court.
MR. JUSTICE LAMAR delivered the opinion of the Court.
On the 31st of December, 1879, W. T. Washer, Jacob Danenhauer,
and Peter Baecker commenced an action in the Circuit Court of the
United States for the District of Kentucky against Bullitt County
in that state to recover damages for breach of a certain contract
made between Washer and the county, and afterwards assigned by
Washer to Danenhauer and Baecker, for the construction by Washer of
a bridge over Pond Creek, between Bullitt and Jefferson
Counties.
A demurrer to their original petition having been sustained with
leave to amend, the defendants in error, on the 24th of March,
1880, filed an amended petition.
The original and amended petitions substantially aver that the
County of Bullitt, by its duly authorized commissioner, entered
into a written contract with plaintiff Washer for the erection by
him of a bridge across Pond Creek according to specifications at
prices stipulated therein; that in this contract the county
guaranteed payment for the entire work; that the County Court of
Bullitt County appointed commissioners, and
Page 130 U. S. 144
notified Jefferson County thereof, requesting it to appoint
commissioners to contract for the bridge; that beyond the
appointment of such commissioners, Jefferson County took no action
looking to any cooperation of the two in the work; that thereupon,
before the contract was made, the county court, the presiding judge
and a majority of the justices of the county being present, decided
that it was necessary to erect the bridge, and, having exhausted
all means provided by statute for securing the aid of Jefferson
County in building it, decided to erect it upon the responsibility
of Bullitt County alone; that thereafter, on the 16th of July,
1877, the Bullitt County court, composed as aforesaid, authorized
its commissioner, J. W. Ridgway, to report any bids that might be
offered, and the amount of the same, and authorized the county
judge, W. Carpenter, to receive bids, and to accept or reject the
same; that in pursuance of that order the county judge accepted the
bid of Washer; that thereafter Ridgway, being thereunto authorized
by an order of the county court, made and entered into the contract
with Washer for the construction of the bridge, which contract was
afterwards ratified by the county court, composed as aforesaid, and
said court, by an order duly entered of record, directed the levy
of taxes to pay for the work done under the contract, and the
application of the money raised to the payment of the contractors;
that Washer commenced work under that contract, and proceeded with
it until he and his assignees were notified by the county to stop
work upon the bridge, and that the defendant had failed to perform
its contract, and to pay for work done thereunder, to the damage of
plaintiffs in the sum of $5,325.14, for which sum they prayed
judgment.
A demurrer to this amended petition was sustained by the circuit
court, but upon writ of error from this Court, the judgment was
reversed and the case remanded.
Washer v. Bullitt County,
110 U. S. 558. The
question raised by the pleadings in that case was whether Bullitt
County had, under the statutes of Kentucky, authority to make the
contract sued on, by which, according to the averments of the
declaration, it undertook at its own cost to build across a
boundary stream a bridge, one end of which was within another
county.
Page 130 U. S. 145
This Court held that the power given by the Kentucky statutes to
adjoining counties to construct bridges across boundary streams at
joint expense did not take away the common law right of each of the
counties to construct such bridges at its sole cost.
It also held in effect that the allegations of the petition and
amended petition, being admitted to be true by the demurrer, the
contract sued on must be held to have been made under that section
of the statutes which confers upon the county court jurisdiction to
erect public buildings, bridges, and other structures, and not
under the section providing for the joint action of contiguous
counties, as was contended on behalf of the plaintiff in error, and
that therefore the averments of the petition disclosed a right of
action in the plaintiffs.
Upon the return of the case to the circuit court, Bullitt County
filed an answer specifically denying the truth of every material
allegation of the petition and amended petition, the chief and
controlling defense being that the contract sued on was not the
contract of Bullitt County. As a part of its answer, the county
filed a complete transcript of the orders of its county court.
Plaintiffs replied to the answer, and afterwards, with the leave of
the court and against the defendant's objection, filed a second
amended petition. Issue was joined, and the case was tried by a
jury, resulting in a verdict for the plaintiffs for the full amount
claimed by them, upon which judgment was rendered. A motion for a
new trial having been overruled, this writ of error was thereupon
sued out.
The first assignment of error, namely that the court erred in
allowing the second amended petition to be filed, has been so
frequently considered and declared unfounded by this Court that it
may be dismissed with the remark that amendments are discretionary
with the court below, and not reviewable here.
See the
opinion of the Court in the case of
Chapman v. Barney,
129 U. S. 667,
decided March 5, 1889, and the authorities there cited. The same
remark applies to the assignment that the court erred in overruling
a motion for a new trial.
Arkansas Valley Co. v. Mann,
ante, 130 U. S. 69,
decided March 5, 1889, and the cases there cited.
Page 130 U. S. 146
The leading assignments of error substantially present but one
proposition, to-wit: conceding that the county had the power to
build the bridge, as was determined by this Court on the former
writ of error, the averments of the plaintiffs' petitions were not
sustained by the evidence adduced at the trial, and the contract
sued on was not made by the county in the mode provided by law. The
statute law of Kentucky applicable to such contracts made by a
county is found in Art. 17, § 1
*, c. 28, of the
General Statutes of that state (Frankfort, 1873):
"§ 5. The county court is a court of record."
(Page 307.)
"§ 9. The records of the county court shall at all times,
show by whom the court is holden. When justices of the peace
compose a part of the court, the records must state the names of
those who take their seats, and when a member leaves the bench, his
absence must be noted."
"§ 1, Art. 3, c. 27. The county court, except for the
County of Jefferson, unless composed of a majority of the justices
of the peace of said county in commission, shall not have power to
make appropriation of the county revenue or levy, or to make any
charge thereon greater than fifty dollars for anyone object."
It is contended that the contract sued on was not made in
conformity with those requirements; that it was neither made nor
authorized by the county court, composed of the county judge and a
majority of the justices of the peace of the county, and that there
is no record of the county court so constituted, showing that the
contract was, as a matter of fact, authorized to be made.
In order to test the soundness of this position, it is necessary
to consider the entire record taken together. In the first
place,
Page 130 U. S. 147
it cannot be denied, indeed the plaintiff in error concedes,
that there are a number of orders which, even
quoad hoc,
come up to the requirements of "orders of record," and "of the
court properly constituted," having been made when a majority of
the justices were present. Among these are --
First, the order of June 18, 1877. This order
recognized Ridgway as commissioner; it adjudicated the necessity of
erecting the bridge; it adopted the Brawner site for that bridge,
and it appointed Ridgway a commissioner to confer with a
commissioner from Jefferson County concerning plans and
specifications, and cost.
Second. The order of July 16, 1877. This order
appropriated $600 for the building of the bridge at the Brawner
site; it directed the commissioner to report plans and
specifications, and the bids made; it authorized the county judge
(W. Carpenter) to receive bids and to accept or reject the same as
he might think proper, looking to the interest of the two
counties.
Third. The second order of November 19, 1877, which
appropriated $600 for the bridge.
Fourth. The order of November 18, 1878. This order
showed a levy of a tax on the taxable property of the county for
the purpose of paying for the bridge; a recognition of Washer as
contractor for building the bridge, and of Danenhauer and Baecker
as his assignees, and an allowance to them, as such assignees, in
part payment of the bridge.
Fifth. The order of November 18, 1879. This order
appointed a committee to examine the work on the bridge and to
report.
Sixth. The order of January 19, 1880. This order
confirmed the committee's report, and discharged the committee.
Such is that portion of the record which is admitted to be the
record of the court "properly constituted." It is claimed that the
record is defective in the following particulars:
It gave neither the judge nor the commissioner power to
contract, although it is conceded that the power was given to the
county judge to accept bids. The alleged contract does not appear
to have been reported to the court; nor was there
Page 130 U. S. 148
any note of record that it was made by Ridgway; nor was the
contract ever filed; nor does it show that the county judge
accepted it. And lastly, while the record shows a knowledge of the
fact that a contract existed, and was with the defendants in error,
yet it does not show a knowledge of the fact that the contract
assumed to bind Bullitt County for the whole cost.
Now inasmuch as the record does show affirmatively an
adjudication of the necessity of the contract, an appropriation for
the preliminary work, the appointment of an agent (Carpenter) to
make the contract, and a recognition of the contract by directing
the levy of taxes to pay the contractor and his assignees for the
work done, we do not think it necessary, in order to fix a
liability upon the county, that the record should also show
affirmatively the existence of those outside incidents which, as
enumerated, it does not set out.
The case of
Mercer County Court v. Kentucky River Navigation
Co., 8 Bush 300, much relied on and quoted from by counsel for
plaintiff in error, is, as a brief analysis will show, inapplicable
to the controversy in the present case.
An act of the Kentucky Legislature, passed in 1865, to
incorporate the Kentucky River Navigation Company provided in one
of its sections
"That the county courts of the several counties bordering on the
Kentucky River . . . may on the application of the corporation
named, . . . a majority of all the justices of the peace being
present, subscribe stock in said company, and levy a tax on all
taxable property of said county sufficient to pay the whole amount
of said subscription in three years from the time it was made,
which tax shall be collected in all respects as taxes for state
revenue are now collected."
The Mercer County Court, a majority of the justices being
present, made an order "that the sum of seventy-five thousand
dollars be directed to be subscribed," and appointed one Joseph A.
Thompson a commissioner to subscribe the same in the Kentucky River
Navigation Company. The Gerrard County Court in like manner made an
order that the sum of $100,000 should be subscribed on the part of
Gerrard County, and also appointed an agent
Page 130 U. S. 149
to subscribe the same in said company. In pursuance of said
orders, the subscriptions were made by the persons appointed, on
the books of the company, for and on behalf of each of said
counties by its agent. The court held that the above orders and
subscriptions were not binding, and did not amount to contracts of
subscription, because the county court had no authority under the
statute to appoint a commissioner or agent to make the
subscription.
The decision was simply that where the county court, assuming to
act under a special statute whereby was delegated to that court the
extraordinary power of determining whether a county should
subscribe in aid of the navigation company and of making such
subscription, undertook to appoint an agent to make the
subscription, such appointment was void as being unauthorized by
law. The whole question was as to the power to appoint the agent,
and the court held that, as no such power to appoint existed, the
court could not bind the county except by an order which itself
amounted to a subscription, and which must be made, as evidenced by
the record alone, when a majority of the justices were present. The
court, however, clearly recognized the principle that it was
legally possible to imply a subscription from the subsequent
adoption and ratification by a full court of the act of
Thompson.
Now in the case at bar, the power to appoint an agent or
commissioner is undeniable, and is not challenged. On the contrary,
it is admitted. So also is it shown that the agent (Carpenter) was
appointed. And, as we have seen, one of the orders of the court
imports upon its face a knowledge of the contract made by its
commissioner, and amounts to a ratification of such contract.
The well settled maxim that a court of record can act only
through its orders made of record, when applied to judicial
proceedings, means that where the court must itself act, and act
directly, that action must always be evidenced by the record. But
in this instance, where a body has large administrative and
executive powers, and is by law authorized to appoint agents, the
principle cannot be so extended as to mean that all the acts of its
agents shall appear of record.
Page 130 U. S. 150
The county court of Kentucky is, by the statute of that state,
constituted the executive body of the county, and invested with the
important and usual powers of a county to keep in repair public
buildings, bridges, and other structures and to superintend the
same, over highways and ferries, provision for the maintenance of
the poor, the laying and collecting of taxes, the appropriation of
the county revenue, the appointment of many county officers, and to
manage all the fiscal affairs of the county, with many other
powers, not less important, appertaining to the administration of
county government. The sole fact that its proceedings as a court of
law are of record cannot, in our opinion, deprive it of the power
to appoint, by record, agents to make contracts, and to transact
business not of record.
With regard to the contention that the commissioner exceeded the
authority given by binding Bullitt County to pay for the entire
work, an examination of the county record shows that while the
court sought to secure joint action with Jefferson County in
building the bridge, it determined to proceed without that county,
if necessary. Especially is this shown by the order of July 16,
1877, authorizing Carpenter alone to accept bids without the
cooperation of Jefferson County.
But this point is disposed of by this Court in its decision on
the demurrer above mentioned: "Nothing further," says the
Court,
"could be done under sections 36 and 37. Bullitt County
therefore fell back upon the power conferred by § 1 of article
16 of chapter 28,
and made a contract by which it became
responsible for the entire cost of the bridge. Its power to do
this, was, we think, clear."
110 U.S.
110 U. S.
566-567.
It is contended that the court erred in admitting, as evidence
of the breach of the contract by Bullitt County, the letter of the
presiding judge of the county court to Washer, notifying him to
stop all work upon the bridge immediately, or that proper
proceedings would be instituted to stop the same.
The ground upon which this objection rests is that the power to
direct the contractor to discontinue the work resided only in the
county court, composed of the county judge and a
Page 130 U. S. 151
majority of the justices, and that the court so composed could
authorize such notice only by an order to that effect entered of
record.
We do not concur in the proposition that such action of the
county court, evidenced by its record, was necessary to authorize
the presiding judge to direct the contractor to stop the work. When
that court, constituted as the law requires for such purpose and in
the manner prescribed, entered into the contract sued on and
charged the county with the amount specified therein, its
jurisdiction in that special mode of organization extended no
further. It then became the legitimate province of the county
court, held by the county judge alone, to superintend and control
the erection of the structure. According to the settled course of
decisions in the highest court of Kentucky, the justices of the
peace do not form a necessary part of the county court except when
sitting as a court of claims or when engaged in appropriating the
revenues of the county, levying taxes, laying charges upon the
county, submitting questions of taxation to a popular vote, and
making subscription to stock in railroads. Upon no other occasion,
and with reference to no other matters, is the concurrence of the
justices of the peace necessary. Gen.Stat.Ky. c. 27, art. 3, §
1;
id., 306, c. 28, art. 17, §§ 1, 2. All the
powers of the court which do not come within these enumerated
exceptions are exercised exclusively by the county court presided
over by the county judge alone. Gen.Stat.Ky. 304 to 307, inclusive.
And as a general rule, when any power is conferred or duty imposed
by statute upon the county court, the term is understood to mean a
court held by the presiding judge alone, and not in conjunction
with the justices, and should be held so to mean even when used in
connection with fiscal matters if it relates to mere ministerial
duties.
Bowling Green & Madisonville Railroad v. Warren
County, 10 Bush 711;
Meriwether v. Muhlenburg County
Court, 120 U. S. 354,
120 U. S. 357,
and cases there cited.
When, therefore, Washer received the formal and official notice
to stop work signed by the judge of the county court and the county
attorney, he was not bound, before obeying it,
Page 130 U. S. 152
to examine the records of that court to ascertain whether it was
authorized by an order made by the judge in conjunction with the
justices and duly entered of record, but he was justified in
stopping immediately, as directed, and in resorting to his action
upon the contract. We are of opinion that no principle of law or of
fair dealing is violated by holding a municipal corporation to a
contract thus made within its lawful powers and by its lawfully
constituted authority. For these reasons, the judgment of the
circuit court is
Affirmed.
*
"§ 1. The county judge in each county shall hold the county
court on the days prescribed by law, but at the Court of Claims,
which shall be held once in each year, the justices of the peace of
the county shall be associated with him and constitute the court, a
majority of whom shall constitute a quorum for the transaction of
business, which shall be confined to laying the county levy,
appropriating money, and transacting other financial business of
the county."