Andrew County ex rel. Kirtley v. Schell

36 S.W. 206, 135 Mo. 31, 1896 Mo. LEXIS 230
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJune 16, 1896
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 36 S.W. 206 (Andrew County ex rel. Kirtley v. Schell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Andrew County ex rel. Kirtley v. Schell, 36 S.W. 206, 135 Mo. 31, 1896 Mo. LEXIS 230 (Mo. 1896).

Opinion

Burgess, J.

This is an action against the defendant Schell, as principal, and his codefendants as sureties, on his bond as treasurer of Andrew county for the penalty prescribed by section 3203, Revised Statutes, 1889, for failing and refusing to pay when presented to him by plaintiff for payment certain county warrants issued by the county court of that county, of which plaintiff is the holder. From a judgment for defendants plaintiff appealed.

There are seven counts in the petition, based on as many different warrants. The first count is on a county warrant issued December 31, 1890, for $200. Second count on a warrant issued December 2, 1889, for $133.20. Third count on a warrant issued November 6, 1889, for $100. Fourth count on a warrant issued December 2, 1889, for $25. Fifth count on a warrant issued January 7, 1890, for $158.80. The [35]*35warrants amount in the aggregate to $861.50 without interest.

The case was tried by the court on the following agreed statement of facts:

“That the several warrants described in the petition were issued against the funds described in said petition and named in said warrants respectively, for expenses incurred • by said county during the -'Several years iq which issued; that the amount of the warrants drawn in each of said years, prior to the time these warrants were severally issued added to the warrants issued in previous years, and which were, at the time these warrants were severally issued, outstanding and unpaid, was in excess of all the revenues provided for said county from all sources for the years in which said warrants in suit were issued, but that the warrants issued by- the county court of said county for the several fiscal years in which these warrants were issued were, if taken alone and separate from the unpaid warrants of previous years, not in excess of the revenue for the several years when issued.
“That the relator, Nicholas Kirtley, was county treasurer of said Andrew county from the ninth day of July, 1889, to the first day of January, 1891; that .during that time he paid county warrants in the order of their presentation, without regard to date of issue, and that during that time he paid off warrants drawn upon the several funds against which the warrants in ■suit are drawn, more than a sum sufficient to pay the several warrants here in suit and which warrants so paid by him were, when issued, within the revenue of the county for the respective year when issued, but when the outstanding and unpaid warrants of previous years were added to the warrants issued and unpaid during said several fiscal years, there had been, at the time the warrants so paid by him were issued, more [36]*36than enough to exhaust all the revenue provided for said fiscal year from all sources.
“That the warrants in suit were issued at the timé they respectively bear date, and were severally presented for payment at the times stated in the petition, and that payment was refused for want of funds, and said warrants were then and there registered by the treasurer, as stated in plaintiff’s petition, and that the relator is the legal owner and holder thereof.
‘■‘That, on the eighteenth day of January, 1894, the said warrants were presented to the treasurer, Jacob Schell, of Andrew county, at his office, and payment demanded, which was refused.
“That for each year during which the defendant, Jacob Schell, has been treasurer of Andrew county, the county court has in all things, according to law,, by an order of said court, entered of record, apportioned all the revenue of said county for the ensuing-fiscal year, and that the treasurer aforesaid, Jacob Schell, has, in accordance with and in obedience to such order of apportionment, set apart all funds coming into his hands belonging to the countj^ revenue to the several funds, and has adopted and adhered to the rule of paying out of such several funds so apportioned the warrants drawn on said several funds by the county court during such fiscal year, and that he has so applied all money coming into his hands for each year until the warrants issued against said several funds for such year were all paid. . That after such payment there was a surplus of about $4,000 at the end of the fiscal year in the spring of 1893, which was applied to the old warrants issued in previous years in the order of their registered presentation, on new warrants issued therefor under the act of 1893. That at the end of the fiscal year terminating in the spring of 1894 there was a surplus, after paying all warrants issued during the [37]*37prior fiscal year, of about $5,000, which was applied as was the surplus in 1893.
“That when the warrants in suit were presented to the defendant Jacob Schell, as stated above, there was: money enough in the several funds to pay the warrants, derived from the revenues of the county for the fiscal year ending in 1894, but that the treasurer had no funds of any kind in his hands, and never did have, derived from the revenues of the county for any of the years in which any of the warrants were issued.
“That at the time these warrants were presented to defendant Jacob Schell for payment there was money enough in the several funds to have paid these warrants and all unpaid warrants presented for payment, prior to the time these warrants were first presented for payment, if they had been paid in the order of their presentation without regard to warrants drawn for the fiscal year in which such warrants were so presented to defendant Schell in January, 1894.”

The court over the objection and exception of plaintiff declared the law to be that: “Under the pleadings and agreed statement of facts, the plaintiff is not entitled to recover, and the finding should be for the defendants.”

Plaintiff’s contention is, that although the warrants described in the petition represent past indebtedness, they must be paid in the order of their presentation, out of a levy made and which could only be made for current county expenses, and which had been appropriated and set apart as a fund to pay warrants issued in payment of expenses of the current year. Upon the other hand defendants contend that, under article 5, chapter 138, Revised Statutes, 1889, no levy can be made for other than current county expenses except by order of the circuit court, and that when such levy is made it creates a separate, distinct fund sacred to that [38]*38purpose only; it becomes a distinct fund in the hands of the treasurer applicable to that purpose alone. That taxes levied for current county expenses, appropriated and set apart to the several funds for current expenses as provided in article 5, chapter 138, are sacred to that purpose and can not be diverted by county court or treasurer to any other purpose until that purpose is fulfilled, and that the defendant treasurer did right in so applying such revenues, that the treasurer only pays out of funds provided, and if no fund applicable to the payment of these warrants has been provided then he. is not at fault, even though the warrants be legal and binding on the county.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
36 S.W. 206, 135 Mo. 31, 1896 Mo. LEXIS 230, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/andrew-county-ex-rel-kirtley-v-schell-mo-1896.