Reversing.
The sufficiency of the petition as amended when tested by a demurrer is presented by this appeal. It is conceded that a county cannot contract except through the fiscal court acting in a body and speaking through its records (Holbrook v. Letcher County,
"Special Term Bullitt Fiscal Court held 15th day of May 1911. Adjourned over from May 1st, 1911. Present Leroy Daniel, Judge.
"Moved by Coakley, seconded by Bell that the contract between Bullitt County and the L. N. R. R. Company, concerning the bridge over the railroad at The Gap in Knob be and is approved and ordered to be recorded."
Immediately below this was copied a contract and an attestation, signed by the clerk of the county court. This contract purports to have been signed by the Louisville Nashville Railroad Company on May 2, 1911. It is recited in the contract that the railroad company and the county agreed to relocate a certain county highway, grade and macadamize it, and erect a bridge of certain dimensions, with designated material; the railroad company to furnish creosoted form bents, resting upon concrete pedestals, superstructure to have iron stringers on which wooden floor joists were to rest, and floor and handrails to be erected, the county to accept it, and to assume the responsibility and expense of maintaining the floor of the bridge; all other parts to be maintained by the railroad company. The contract contains this clause: *Page 491
"This contract is accepted by the party of the second part by attaching its signature hereto, and by the party of the second part by having same entered of record on the orders of the fiscal court of the county."
The above order of the fiscal court and contract constitute the foundation of the plaintiff's cause of action. It is argued by the county that the exhibit contradicts the averments of the pleading, and, under the prevailing rule, the exhibit must control. Ky. Mut. Sec. Fund Co. v. Logan's Adm'r,
It is earnestly and vigorously insisted by the county that the copy of the order and of the contract upon which the railroad company relies, as the foundation of its cause of action, contradicts the allegations of the petition as amended, and therefore it is bad on demurrer. Durham v. Elliott,
This rule of practice is not disputed. It is stated in briefs that the trial court interpreted the order of court, which is part of the exhibit, as merely showing that a motion was entered to accept the contract, but not acted upon by the fiscal court, and upon this ground the demurrer was sustained to the petition. The language of the order neither authorizes nor justifies such interpretation. Not only does the language of the order connote that the motion was made and seconded to approve the contract, but it expressly states that "it is approved and ordered to be recorded." In Carter v. Krueger
Son,
"Moved and seconded that Jas. P. Bailey be and he is hereby authorized to see P.M. McRoberts and secure him as one of the arbitrators in a settlement between Lincoln county and F. Krueger Son."
In the Danville, Dix River, etc., Co. Case, the order reads:
"Moved and seconded that this court accept the proposition of J.S. Robinson, president of the Danville, Dix River Lancaster Turnpike Road Company, at the price of twelve hundred and fifty ($1,250) dollars, for 3 3/4 miles of said road in Lincoln county, for the individual stock owned in said road, it being 51/92 part of the whole road, including one-half of two bridges — one across Dix river, and the other over Hanging Ford creek. The same to be paid for as follows: $312.50 to be paid out of the levy of 1898, $312.50, out of the levy of 1899, $312.50 out of the levy of 1900, and $312.50 out of the levy of 1901; all sums to bear interest at the rate of five per cent. until paid. The insurance on the bridges is to be transferred at once, there being $1,000 on each bridge."
Section 1842, Ky. Statutes, provides:
"Before every adjournment the minutes of the proceedings of said court shall be publicly read by the clerk of the court, and corrected, if necessary; and the same shall be signed by the county judge or presiding judge, with the approval of the justices of the peace present when the court was held."
Section 1843 reads:
"No minute or order of the fiscal court shall be valid until the same be read and signed as aforesaid, nor unless the record shows by whom the court was held."
These sections are mandatory (Meadors v. Williams,
"Each county now existing, or which may hereafter be created, in this state, shall be laid off into districts in such manner as the general assembly may direct; but no county shall have less than three nor more than eight districts, in each of which districts one justice of the peace shall be elected as provided in § 99."
Section 144 of the Constitution contains this language:
"Counties shall have a fiscal court, which may consist of the judge of the county court and the justices of the peace, in which court the judge of the county shall preside, if present. * * * A majority of the members of said court shall constitute a court for the transaction of business."
The county judge is a member of the fiscal court, and has the same power as the other members. Bath County v. Daugherty,
The exhibit, or the order of the fiscal court, does not purport to embrace the adjourning order, nor to show that the orders at the close of that session of the fiscal court were or were not signed by the county or the presiding judge.
It is a matter of general knowledge that orders of the county or fiscal court are not signed by the county or presiding judge at the end of each order. Indeed, the statutes prescribe no such requirement. As long ago as Dye v. Knox, 1 Bibb, 575, it was held by this court that "county (fiscal) courts have the power to adjourn from day to day, but they are not required to adjourn each day when they cease to transact business. They may, if they see proper, treat the entire time they are in session as one day, and make and sign but one adjourning order." The same rule was reiterated in Garrard County Court v. McKee, 11 Bush, 238, and in Com. v. Howard,
The law presumes the verity of official records (Middleton's Adm'r v. Hensley, 52 S.W. 974, 21 Ky. Law Rep. 703), and that public officials discharge their official duties. This presumption is controlling until the contrary is affirmatively charged and shown. Such has been the prevailing rule beginning with the case of Hickman v. Boffman (1808) Hardin (3 Ky.) 356; including Shanks, Auditor v. Northcutt, Ex-sheriff (1928)
As to whether the signature of the presiding judge of the fiscal court was affixed on the order book at the close of the session of the court at which the order which is a part of the exhibit was entered, the exhibit itself is silent. It cannot be regarded that the exhibit or copy of the order, because of its silence in this respect, is conflicting with the allegations of the petition *Page 495 as amended so as to bring the case within the general rule that, where the pleading is contradicted by an exhibit, it is bad on demurrer.
If the exhibit purported to be the entire record of the court made at that session, or if the petition as amended admitted it so to be, a different rule would prevail. The motion to require the filing of the order and contract did not include the adjourning order of the fiscal court, followed by the signature thereto. It was the duty of the county, if it desired the adjourning order to be included with the copy of the order and contract filed, to include it as a part of its motion. The absence of the adjourning order is not ground for sustaining a demurrer to the petition.
For the reasons indicated, the judgment is reversed for proceedings consistent herewith.