Commonwealth v. Jackson
Commonwealth v. Jackson
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion oe the court:
In July, 1856, tbe appellee, John T. Jackson, and N. C. Beckham, purchased at a decretal sale a small parcel of land, with saw and grist-mills thereon, situated on the north bank of Green river, at lock and dam No. 2. The mills had been erected many years before by John Calhoun, who owned the ground adjacent to the slackwater dam, Which was never condemned to the use of the State; and the water necessary to operate the mills was drawn from the river above the dam, by means of a canal constructed by Calhoun.
In September, 1857, some controversy having arisen between Beckham, who seems then to have been controlling the mill property, and the Board of Internal Improvement, in relation to the use of water power in running the mills, an agreement was entered into by Beckham and D. R. Haggard, as President of said Board, by which Haggard undertook for the State that the Board would keep said canal in good condition and repair; and would also “keep the head of the forebay and gates in like good order; and also to protect the point below the mills, and keep it from injuring the public works at that point.” And the parties further stipulated as follows: “ Said Beckham is not to pay for
Afterwards, in 1863, when said contract had been partially executed, the water passing through the canal having broken certain obstructions made by the State near the mills, the agent of the State caused the canal to be filled up, and thus deprived the owners of the mills entirely of the use of water power.
Jackson appears afterwards to have become the owner of Beckham’s interest in the mill property, by a conveyance made by Beckham on the 13th day of June, 1864; and afterwards Jackson obtained the passage of an act of the Legislature, which was approved March 9, 1867, authorizing him to sue the State, which is as follows:
“Sec. 1. That it shall be lawful for the said John T. Jackson to institute a suit, by proceedings in equity, against the Commonwealth of Kentucky, in the McLean circuit court, to recover from the Commonwealth
“Sec. 2. It shall be-the duty of the attorney for the Commonwealth, for the judicial district, to defend the said suit, and set forth and allege any fact controverting the claims that have existed, or may exist.
“Sec. 3. If the judgment of the circuit coui’t shall be in favor of the plaintiff, and no appeal be taken, or if any appeal be taken to the' court of appeals, and the judgment be affirmed, the Auditor shall draw his warrant in favor of the plaintiff, upon the Treasurer, for the amount of the judgment, and the Treasurer,is directed to pay the same.”
Under the provisions of this act, the appellee brought •this action against the State, which resulted in a judgment for the plaintiff for ten thousand dollars, from which this appeal is prosecuted.
In the argument for the Commonwealth, by the Attorney General, the correctness of the judgment is questioned on several grounds, which, so far as deemed important, will be separately stated and considered.
Waiving the question whether, as the act was not assailed as unconstitutional in the lower court for the reason now suggested, by either pleading or evidence, it is competent for this court, on its own judicial knowledge of the journal of the House, to inquire into the validity of the act; and the further question, whether said provision of the Constitution is, so far as applicable to this case, mandatory and imperative, or only directory, we are of the opinion that the act does not admit of the assumed construction, that it is not necessarily either for the appropriation of money, or the creation of a debt exceeding one hundred dollars. The first and second sections of the act, which authorize the suit and provide for the defense by the State, are clearly free from the objection.
And although, by the third section of the act, the auditor may be required, contingently and ultimately, to draw his wax-rant on the treasurer for a. sum exceeding one hundred dollars, yet, as this is dependent on the result of the litigation authorized by the act, and as, in the constructioxi of statutes, no doubtful interpretation should be indulged against the validity of a law, we must adjudge the enactment constitutional, whether the yeas and nays were entered on its passage or not.
This objection seems to us to be well taken, and must prove fatal to the judgment. The deed from Beckham to the appellee does not purport to transfer to him any claim of Beckham against the State, and the act of the Legislature does not provide for, or contemplate any litigation as to damages sustained by him. The proof of damages was not restricted to the injury sustained by the plaintiff, but embraced the entire injury to the property, and the judgment is correspondingly erroneous.
Wherefore, the judgment is reversed, and the cause remanded, for further proceedings not-inconsistent with this opinion. '
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