Association Collectors, Inc. v. King County

76 P.2d 998, 194 Wash. 25, 1938 Wash. LEXIS 663
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 3, 1938
DocketNo. 26438. En Banc.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 76 P.2d 998 (Association Collectors, Inc. v. King County) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Association Collectors, Inc. v. King County, 76 P.2d 998, 194 Wash. 25, 1938 Wash. LEXIS 663 (Wash. 1938).

Opinions

Robinson, J.

Three actions were instituted in the superior court of King county by Association Collectors, Inc., against all the other parties named in the above caption, and, the parties and issues being identical, were consolidated for trial. At the close of the trial, a separate judgment was entered in each case, and in each case separate appeals and cross-appeals have been brought to this court. The actions have again been consolidated for purposes of appeal upon a" statement of facts filed in cause No. 281870.

The Association Collectors, Inc., brought the actions as assignee of various merchants to recover the price of goods alleged to have been sold to King county at its request and at the request of the then sheriff of the county, its purchasing agent, and county commissioners, as its agents. These agents and officers were joined as defendants in their individual capacities, for, although the actions were principally directed against the county, the plaintiff was in doubt as to who might ultimately be held liable. The United Pacific Casualty Insurance Company was also made a defendant, it being surety upon the official bonds of the sheriff and the three county commissioners.

*28 The fourth paragraph in each of the complaints reads as follows:

“That all of said goods, wares and merchandise were for the necessary upkeep, maintenance and operation of the jail and the sheriff’s office of King county, Washington, and consisted principally of food and foodstuffs for the upkeep and maintenance of the prisoners and inmates of said King county jail.”

The court entered judgment against ex-Sheriff Ban-nick and the United Pacific Casualty Insurance Company as surety on his bond in cause No. 281870, for $3,846.56, made up of $942.33 for automobile repairs, gasoline, oil, and tires, and $2,904.23 for food supplies for the county jail; in cause Ño. 282161, for $745.88 for soap, chemicals, and sanitary supplies used in the county jail; in cause No. 284236, for $429.80 for food supplies for the county jail; and against plaintiff in all three actions in favor of the defendant county, its purchasing agent Angel, and its commissioners Messrs. Stevenson, Nash, and Brinton, and their surety.

Bannick and his surety have appealed from all three judgments. The plaintiff has cross-appealed from that part of the judgments dismissing its actions against King county, the county’s purchasing agent, and its commissioners, lest, in the event that the appeal of Bannick and his surety should be successful, it might be left without a recovery against any of the defendants.

For the most part, the claims sued upon originated in 1934. The evidence showed that, for the year 1934, the county commissioners, in fixing the budget of the sheriff, appropriated ten thousand dollars for food and clothing for the prisoners in the county jail. On December 24, 1934, the commissioners made an emergency appropriation for food and clothing for the prisoners of four thousand dollars. In addition thereto, *29 the sheriff received for feeding Federal prisoners, at seventy-five cents per prisoner per day, the sum of $7,191, which, as provided by law, he turned over to the general fund in the office of the county treasurer, and from this sum his jail budget received credits of $1,702.30 and $1,654.56, making a total received by him for the feeding of prisoners in the county jail during the year 1934, of $17,356.86.

The average number of prisoners daily confined in the county jail during that year was 222, and the number of prisoners’ board days was 80,986. The approximate cost of food and clothing for the prisoners was thirty cents per day; therefore, the total cost of those items was $24,295.80. Deducting from this amount the sum of $17,356.86, the aggregate of the budget allowance, the emergency allowance, and the amount credited to him for feeding Federal prisoners, leaves a shortage of $6,938.94 on this item of the jail budget.

There is no testimony whatever that thirty cents per day for feeding the prisoners is in any way excessive or unreasonable. It is, in fact, just one-half of the maximum allowable under the statute, Rem. Rev. Stat., § 10188 [P. C. § 3419],

There is also no evidence to the effect that the sanitary supplies were not required for the purpose of keeping the jail in a healthful and sanitary condition, and none that the automobile repairs and supplies were unnecessary. There is a great deal of evidence to the effect that ex-Sheriff Bannick, during his eight years of office, was quite indifferent to the budget law, and that the commissioners were in constant trouble with him on that account. While this evidence would be quite relevant were we engaged in allocating the moral blame for the condition of affairs which necessitated these actions, we think it is but little relevant to the *30 legal aspects of the matter, and these are, in themselves, sufficiently difficult to require our concentrated attention.

The original budget allowance for food and clothing for the county jail in 1934 was ten thousand dollars. Mr. Lewis, chief deputy sheriff, testified that, as early as the latter part of June or the first of July, he called the attention of the county commissioners to the fact that this would not be sufficient. Mr. Stevenson, who was chairman of the board of commissioners, corroborates this, and it appears that, in July, the commissioners sought the advice of the prosecuting attorney as to whether they could make an emergency appropriation for the sheriff’s office and were advised that they could.

In November, according to Lewis, the commissioners agreed that they would furnish a sum sufficient to carry the jail the balance of the year in food, and supplies, but not take care of any back bills. An emergency appropriation of four thousand dollars was made on December 24th. Mr. Stevenson testified that the board did not know of the back bills,’ and he understood, and the board understood, that the four thousand dollars would take care of all of the food bills for the year. The commissioners would not necessarily know of the condition of the food budget, for the auditor’s monthly report to the commissioners showed only bills which had been paid and not those outstanding, and it seems that many bills were not presented for one, two, or three months after they had been incurred.

It appears that all of the items in dispute were purchased upon requisition, signed by the purchasing agent, Mr. Angel, although emergency orders were sometimes filled before the requisitions were formally executed.

As we view it, the answer to the principal question *31 in this case will almost automatically dispose of all the others. That question is: Are ex-Sheriff Bannick and his surety legally liable for the claims sued upon? All of the other defendants sought to escape liability by answering that question in the affirmative, relying upon a literal application of the following language quoted from a section of the county budget law, Rem. Rev. Stat, § 3997-5 [P. C. § 1652-5]:

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
76 P.2d 998, 194 Wash. 25, 1938 Wash. LEXIS 663, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/association-collectors-inc-v-king-county-wash-1938.