Opinion op the Court by
Judge LassikgAffirming.
Appellant, H. T. Duncan, a resident of Lexington, Ky., suing for himself and all other citizens of the city of Lexington, instituted two suits in the Fayette circuit court‘against the appellees, T. A. Combs, etc., wherein he sought to hold them personally liable for certain sums of money amounting, in the aggregate, to about $60,000, which he alleged that they, as mayor, auditor, and members of the general council of the city of Lexington, had misappropriated and misapplied. General demurrers having been sustained to each petition and the several amendments thereto, and, the plaintiff declining to plead further, the petitions were dismissed. To test the correctness of this ruling he appeals, and, by agreement of parties, these two cases are heard together; practically the same questions being involved in each:
The petitions, in substance, allege that the taxes for the years covered by this litigation were levied for specific purposes, and that one of those purposes was the cieation of a sinking fund for the ultimate redemption of certain of the city bonds, and that the mayor and auditor and members of the general council, in violation of section 3175 of the Kentucky Statutes of 1903, failed and neglected to apply the money *334collected under the tax levy, for the purpose of creating a sinking fund, to the redemption of the bonds as they should have done, but appropriated it to other uses in the conduct of the city’s affairs. There is no charge that they, or any of them, appropriated any of the money to their own use, but simply that they expended it for governmental purposes other than that for which it was levied and collected, and for these acts it is sought to hold them, as officers of the city, and the bondsmen of such as were required to give bond, personally liable.
That plaintiff, in instituting these suits, was proceeding under the section of the Kentucky Statutes above referred to there qan be no doubt. In fact, his counsel in brief states that his right to sue is given by this section of the statutes, and the greater part of his brief is devoted to argument tending to show that under a fair construction of this statute appellees may be held personally liable for the acts complained of in the pleadings. While other sections of the statutes and certain provisions of the Constitution are cited to show that public funds should be applied to the purpose for which they are collected, still no statute is cited in support of the contention that appellees may be held personally liable for such misapplication other than section 3175. This statute is as follows: “All taxes and license fees shall be levied or imposed by ordinance, and the purpose or purposes, for which the same are levied or imposed shall be specified therein, and the revenue therefrom shall be expended for no other purpose than that for which it is collected. Ordinances levying taxes or imposing license fees shall distinctly specify the purpose or several purposes for which the same are levied; failure to do so shall render the ordinance *335invalid, and if it shall, the officer or officers, agents or employes, who could, by a refusal to act, have prevented the expenditure, and the members of the general council who voted for the expenditure, shall ,be jointly and severally responsible and bound to the city for the amount of such expenditure. And it may be recovered of them in an action upon the bonds of those having them, or personally against any or all of them; and it shall be the duty of the city solicitor to institute and prosecute to recovery such actions; and if he fails to do so for six months after be shall have knowledge of the same, any person may institute the action, and shall have one-half of the recovery. A recovery hereunder shall not militate against the criminal prosecution herein elsewhere provided.”
For appellees, it is, at the outset, contended with much earnestness that appellant has not shown in himself the right to maintain these suits, inasmuch as lie does not, in the pleadings, state facts which show that he is a taxpayer, and that under the authority of Sparks v. Robinson, 115 Ky. 453, 23 Ky. Law Rep. 2336, 74 S. W. 176, it is absolutely essential that these facts should be alleged in order to authorize him to properly and fairly represent the taxpayers of the city, whom he is undertaking to represent in this litigation; the allegation that he is a taxpayer being a mere conclusion on the part of the pleader. The answer to this objection, however, is found in the statute under consideration. This statute, which is highly penal in its nature, authorizes the city solicitor to institute a suit for violation of its provisions, and, “if he fails to do so for six months after he shall have knowledge of the same, any person may institute the action, and shall have one-half of the recovery. ’ ’ The petition alleges that the city solicitor did have knowl*336edge of the existence of the condition of affairs set out in the pleading for a greater period than six months, and, having failed to act, appellant, as a citizen and as a taxpayer, instituted the suit. We are of opinion that these allegations authorized appellant to institute the suit without any allegation showing that he was in fact a taxpayer of the city of Lexington.
The real question, in fact the only question in these cases is: Are appellees personally liable for the acts complained of? For appellee it is insisted: That this statute has no application to the question under consideration; that this statute prohibits the passage of an ordinance levying a tax which does not specify the purpose for which it is to be expended. They admit that if the officers of the city and members of the general council had passed an ordinance levying a tax without specifying the purpose for which it is to be expended, and under sueh ordinance tax was collected and expended, the officers so participating in the passage of the ordinance and in the spending or paying out of the tax collected thereunder would be liable personally, but that under this statute no penalty is imposed upon the officers of a city or members of the general council thereof for applying taxes collected under a valid ordinance to one public or governmental use rather than to another.
An analysis of so much of this statute as need be considered shows that it is separable into three parts: First, it provides that all ordinances levying taxes shall distinctly specify the purposes for which the taxes are levied; second, that a failure to specify the purpose for which the levy is made shall render the ordinance invalid; and, third, that if the officers of a city collect taxes under such an ordinance, and expend *337same, those who participated in the passage of the ordinance and those who conld have prevented the expenditure of the taxes so collected thereunder shall be jointly responsible to the city for the amount of such expenditure. In other words, the whole purpose of this statute is to prevent officers of a city from collecting from the citizens and taxpayers thereof money under a void ordinance, and the penalty imposed is both upon those who participated in the passage of such an ordinance and those who suffered the expenditure of money collected thereunder. This is the plain, unambiguous meaning of the statute. It is susceptible of no other construction. It has no other meaning. Appellant practically admits this to be so, but insists that the statute, as enrolled and as it appears in the authorized published copies of the Kentucky Statutes, differs from the statute, as passed by the General Assembly, and we are cited to the .journals of the House and Senate for the session of the General Assembly for the year 1894, as establishing this fact. It may be conceded that this act, as it appears upon the journals of the House and Senate, differs from the enrolled bill, and that, as it appears upon the journals of the House and Senate, it would support the contention of appellant, and under its provisions appellees would be liable personally for the misapplication of funds legally levied and collected, and yet appellant’s contention must fail, for the enrolled bill can not be impeached by the journals. As said by this court in the case of Lafferty v. Huffman, 99 Ky. 80, 18 Ky. Law Rep. 17, 35 S. W. 123, 32 L. R. A. 203: “We know that the enrollment of bills receives careful attention at the hands of special committees for that purpose. It is the final act of the body, the climax of the work before the finishing hand *338of the presiding’ officer sets his approval thereto. It receives and merits attention for that reason, and there is small reason for imposition or fraud. The enrolled act is well-nigh necessarily the very act passed by the body; but the chances of mistake are very great in the make-up of the journals, as they are ordinarily kept, and if it be understood that the enrolled bill may be impeached by them the chances of fraud are likewise great. They are usually read from loose sheets or .hurriedly made memoranda, and are approved with slight attention, are then passed to the journal clerk or some copyist, to be transcribed formally into the journal. They receive usually no further consideration at the hands of the body. * * * From every point of reason therefore we are convinced that the enrolled bill, when attested by the presiding officers as the law requires, must be accepted by the courts as the very bill adopted by the Legislature, and that its mode of enactment was in conformity to all constitutional requirements. When SO' authenticated it imports absolute verity and is unimpeachable by the journals.” In the cases of Commonwealth v. Shelton, 99 Ky. 120, 35 S. W. 128, Commonwealth v. Hardin County Court, 99 Ky. 190, 35 S. W. 275, Wilson v. Hines, 99 Ky. 228, 17 Ky. Law Rep. 157, 35 S. W. 627, 37 S. W. 148, and O. & N. Railway Co. v. Barclay’s Admr., 102 Ky. 20, 43 S. W. 177, 19 Ky. Law Rep. 997, the principle announced in Lafferty v. Huffman was approved, and in the later case of Taylor v. Beckham, 108 Ky. 300, 56 S. W. 177, 21 Ky. Law Rep. 1735, 49 L. R. A. 258, 94 Am. St. Rep. 357, and Waller v. Murray, 53 S. W. 25, 21 Ky. Law Rep. 783, and Stone, Auditor, v. Dispatch Publishing Co., 55 S. W. 725, 21 Ky. Law Rep. 1475, the case of Lafferty v. Huffman was refered to, and the *339principle therein announced reaffirmed. Hence, without regard to the rule that obtains in other jurisdictions, it may be said that now no principle is better established by the decisions of this court than that the enrolled bill may not be impeached by the journals of the respective houses.
The statute, as enrolled, must be accepted as the law, and, where it is plain and unambiguous in its terms and not uncertain in its meaning, no necessity arises, in construing same, for calling in aid the journals of the respective houses, or other extraneous matter. The journals might be used, as might other evidence, in construing an ambiguous statute, but not to give to a statute unambiguous in its terms á meaning other than that which its language plainly imports. Accepting this statute, then, as it is enrolled and promulgated, it imposes no liability upon any of the appellees for the acts complained of in the petitions, and the trial court did not err in so holding.
Judgment in each case is affirmed.