Bank of Erin v. Houston County

6 Tenn. App. 638, 1928 Tenn. App. LEXIS 194
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedJanuary 28, 1928
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 6 Tenn. App. 638 (Bank of Erin v. Houston County) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bank of Erin v. Houston County, 6 Tenn. App. 638, 1928 Tenn. App. LEXIS 194 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1928).

Opinion

DeWITT, J.

The Bank of Erin has appealed from the decree of the Chancellor denying to it any r.elief in these causes, which were consolidated and heard together. The issues arose over the claim of the bank against the county of Houston upon warrants of the county alleged to be held by the bank, or for money had and received by the county.

The first bill was filed on December 15; 1922 by the Bank of Erin, a Tennessee banking corporation, in its own right and in the name of the State, of Tennessee on relation of the Bank of Erin seeking a writ of mandamus, requiring R. E. Roby, trustee of Houston county, to pay to the Bank of Erin out of county funds, the sum of $8189.92 in satisfaction of school warrants of Houston county, and the sum of $811.33 in satisfaction of road orders issued by road overseers of *640 Houston county, all alleged to have been transferred to the Bank of Erin for value in due course of trade; and also seeking a decree against Houston county for the sum of $9001.25, the aggregate amount of such warrants and orders, to be paid by proper school and road tax levies.

On April 16, 1923 Houston county filed a demurrer, which the court overruled, but leave was granted to the county to rely upon the demurrer in its answer and the bill was sustained, in so far as the demurrer was concerned, as a bill to recover on the warrants and orders.

On December 30, 1925, upon motion made and granted in open court, the Bank of Erin amended its original bill so as to show that it was suing individually and in its own right and in name of each of the several payees under the warrants and orders for its use; and so as to seek a decree, in behalf of the payees of such warrants and orders, for the use of the Bank of Erin, for the amount of the monies alleged to have been expended by the bank in the purchase of said warrants and orders.

In its answers to the original bill and to the bill as amended, the county denied that the appellant bank was the owner of said warrants and orders, and that it was entitled to recover anything from the county, upon three principal grounds, viz. (a) That these warrants and orders had been paid by cheeks drawn by the former trustee "W. R. Boone, upon funds of the county; (b) That the requirements of sections 523 et seq., and 5378 of Shannon’s Annotated Code were not observed; and (c) That the road orders showed on their face that they were not signed by the chairman of the county court and were therefore invalid.

On November .12, 1924 the county of Houston filed the other bill, seeking to enjoin the prosecution of a suit which had been instituted against it by the Bank of Erin on December 11, 1922 in the circuit court of Houston county, to recover judgment for the sum of $1460, and interest on a county warrant, originally for $2077, alleged by the bank to have been issued on October 1, 1919, but lost by the bank through theft and a duplicate thereof issued and delivered by the chairman and clerk of the county court — on which warrant two payments of $500 each had been made. This warrant was alleged by the bank to have been issued for money borrowed of it by the county.

On April 28, 1925 the Bank of Erin filed its answer and cross-bill in said cause denying the averments of the bill and the charges that the warrant was issued without authority, and that the county was not liable thereon; and seeking a decree against the county for the amount claimed to be due on the warrant as had been claimed in the suit in the circuit court. An answer to this cross-bill was filed by the county, against denying liability.

*641 W. R. Boone was trustee of Houston county for about twenty years prior to November 1, 1921, tbe day of bis death. For the last ten years he was a defaulter in large sums, but there is no evidence that this was known to any representative of the Bank of Erin. The transactions with the bank which gave rise to these suits had their origin in this situation. In October, 1919, the county had not sufficient money to meet its necessary expenses. This situation existed also during the.latter part of 1920 and much of 1921, when the school and road warrants were issued.

We will first deal with the question of liability upon the warrant of October 1, 1919 for borrowed money. It is clear that the sum of $2077 was loaned on this warrant by the bank to the county, and two payments thereon were made, of $500 each, on July 5, 1920 and September 6, 1920, respectively. The warrant sued on is numbered 978, but it recites that it is a duplicate of No. 781 allowed by the court at its October term, 1919, and was given “on account of borrowed money.” It is signed by J. R. Lee, chairman pro tern, and W. T. Pollard, clerk. The payee named in the warrant is the Bank of Erin. It purports to be a copy of an original warrant numbered 781. The cashier of the bank testified, without contradiction, that this original warrant was stolen when the bank was robbed and that he had the temporary chairman and the county court clerk to issue this as a duplicate. Houston county in its bill avers that the following' stub entry as to the issuance of the original ■ warrant 781 appears from the warrant books of the said trustee Boone:

“781. October 1, 1919.
“Pay to the Bank of Erin on account of borrowed money two thousand and seventy-seven dollars received by me.”

It further alleges that during this year and at the time this money was borrowed Boone was in default in the revenue which he had collected, and that at the time of said stub entry he was indebted to the Bank of Erin, and that the minutes of the county court contained no order authorizing the borrowing of the money mentioned in said stub entry and now sued for. It averred that the county court did not in quarterly session authorize the borrowing of said sum of money, to pay for a loan made by the said bank to the said Boone claiming the right as trustee to represent the county in making such loan. It insisted that had Boone in fact made such a loan for the county under such alleged authority, no liability would have been thereby created against the county. It. insisted that as a legal proposition the county court had no authority to borrow this money; that the county court has no authority to borrow money for any purpose whatever, unless specifically authorized by statute to do so — not even for the payment of appropriations which the court is authorized to make for county purposes under section 6045, and its sub *642 sections, of Shannon’s Annotated Code. The county further relied upon the requirements of the law as to warrants, contained in section 523, sub-sections 4 and 5 of said Code, requiring the trustee on presentation of warrants for payment to enter them in a book kept by him for the purpose, ruled in columns so as successively to show as to each warrant the number, payee or holder, date, day of presentation and amount of the same; and if there be any funds in the treasury not otherwise appropriated, immediately , to pay the demand and take up the warrant, otherwise to deliver it to the owner with the number endorsed, and afterwards to pay it in its numerical order. It averred that none of these requirements were complied with by the trustee, or any other county official, and this fact was well known to the Bank of Erin and its officials.

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Bluebook (online)
6 Tenn. App. 638, 1928 Tenn. App. LEXIS 194, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bank-of-erin-v-houston-county-tennctapp-1928.