Bigham v. State Ex Rel. Ocala Brick & Tile Co.

156 So. 246, 115 Fla. 852
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedJuly 27, 1934
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 156 So. 246 (Bigham v. State Ex Rel. Ocala Brick & Tile Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bigham v. State Ex Rel. Ocala Brick & Tile Co., 156 So. 246, 115 Fla. 852 (Fla. 1934).

Opinion

Campbell, Circuit Judge.

In a mandamus proceeding instituted in the court below, the defendant in error, State ex rel. Ocala Brick & Tile Company, sought to compel the respondents in the court below, as members of ■ the Board of County Commissioners of Sumter County, *855 Florida, and the Clerk of said Board, to pay certain due bills or certificates of indebtedness of Sumter County, Florida, from certain moneys held by the Board of County Commissioners and alleged to be applicable to the payment of such items. The relator alleged that it was the assignee and owner of each of said due bills or evidence of indebtedness. From an order of the court below, overruling the demurrer to the amended alternative writ of mandamus, as further amended on May 27, 1932, and sustaining the demurrer to the answer or return to the said amended alternative writ of mandamus, and entering final judgment granting a peremptory writ, a writ of error was taken to this court.

There are eight errors complained of in the assignment of errors filed in this court. These may be summarized under three heads:

1st. The court erred in overruling the demurrer to the amended alternative writ of mandamus as further amended on May 27, 1932.

2nd. The court erred in sustaining the demurrer to the answer or return to such amended alternative writ, and

3rd. The court erred in entering judgment granting peremptory writ of mandamus.

• The transcript of record discloses that there was an amended alternative writ filed, to which a demurrer was interposed, and that subsequently an answer or return was filed, subject to the ruling on the demurrer to the amended alternative writ. Later, on May 27, 1932, by leave of the court the amended alternative writ of mandamus was further .amended, by adding paragraph 12, and by amending the prayer for mandatory relief. By stipulation between counsel, endorsed on the démurrer to the alternative writ as first amended, it was made to apply to the writ *856 as further amended. By like stipulation,- the return or answer to the first amended alternative writ was agreed to be considered as the return or answer to the further amended alternative writ, and the relator’s demurrer made to apply thereto. The pleadings having been thus submitted to the court below, the orders and judgment were made and entered as already referred to.

The amended alternative writ'of mandamus as further amended, with the exhibits thereto, and the demurrers, and return or answer are too voluminous to quote in full. We shall therefore state the,-substance of pertinent allegations, quoting only such portions as may be necessary to-an intelligent understanding of the questions to be determined.

The amended alternative writ' alleges in substance that in the year 1930 the Board of County Commissioners of Sumter County, Florida, in order that the State Road Department take over certain of the'public roads of the county,as state roads, determined to secure rights of way for such roads, and employed S. W. Getzen, an attorney at law, to procure such rights of way by-condemnation proceedings, or otherwise. It is also alleged that certain of these rights of way were procured through condemnation proceedings, and others by securing deeds therefor from the land owners. After the rights of way had been thus secured, the compensation of the said attorney, aggregating the sum of $9400.00, is alleged to have been fixed and agreed upon between the Board of County Commissioners and the said S. W. Getzen, and the accounts of said attorney for the sum stated were approved, and ordered paid by the said Board.

It is then stated in said amended alternative writ that one J. C. Getzen, Jr.,, an attorney at law, appeared for and *857 represented certain owners of land involved in such condemnation proceedings, and that the firm of McCollum and' Howell also represented certain other owners of the lands condemned. It is alleged that the said J. C. Getzen, Jr., “earned and was allowed certain fees, which were in law chargeable against, and payable by Sumter County, as a part of the.costs and expenses of said condemnation proceedings to be borne by it, in the sum of $1450.00.” And that for like work and under the same circumstances, McCollum & Howell, as attorneys for other owners of land have earned and are entitled to certain fees- amounting to $1050.00.

The amended alternative writ further shows that in such condemnation proceedings, and other proceedings to procure such rights of way, it was necessary that the Board of County Commissioners of ■ Sumter County have abstracts of title, and searches made of the records, of the title to-lands included in the rights of way sought, and that one Lloyd Talley, owner of Talley Abstract & Title Co., was employed to furnish such abstracts of title, and make such searches, and that the reasonable value of such services-aggregated $2425.00; that bills for such services aggregating said amount were agreed upon and approved by the. Board of County Commissioners of Sumter County.

It is also stated in the amended alternative writ that there were not available funds in hand to pay the compensation to the owners of the lands condemned for rights-of way, within the statutory time for paying such judgments, and also the accounts of said S. W. Getzen, J. C. Getzen, Jr., McCollum & Howell, and Talley Abstract & Title Company, but that by agreement between the Board of County Commissioners and said attorneys and abstract company, each of said creditors agreed to accept 66 2/3 per *858 cent cash payment on his account, and accept a due bill or certificate of indebtedness from the board, payable in one year, for the remaining 33 1 /3 per cent, of his account. It is alleged that such settlement was made, and that the county’s due bills or certificates of indebtedness, were given as follows: to S. W. Getzen for $3,222.26; to J. C. Getzen, Jr., for $485.75; to McCollum & Howell for $357.75, and to Talley Abstract & Title Company for $952.42. These due bills, or certificates of indebtedness, it is alleged were payable in one year after date, with interest at 5 % per annum, “out of the first available funds obtainable by the Board of County Commissioners of Sumter County, Florida, either in Road and Bridge funds or other funds pertaining to road and bridge construction or maintenance.”

These due bills are alleged to have been assigned to the relator for valuable consideration, by the respective owners and holders thereof.

The amended alternative writ further alleges that there had been certain funds aggregating about $20,000.00 belonging to Sumter County, Florida, and held for some years by the Board of Administration of the State of Florida; that this sum of about $20,000.00 was a sum of money collected by the Board of County Commissioners of Sumter County, Florida, from the surety of a road contractor v ho had defaulted under his contract to build certain roads in the county, and that upon the collection of same it had been turned over to the Bond Trustees of the county, and by them “inadvertently, improperly and wrongfully”, turned over to the Bpard of Administration of the State, as a part of the sinking fund for the retirement of road and bridge district bonds.

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Bluebook (online)
156 So. 246, 115 Fla. 852, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bigham-v-state-ex-rel-ocala-brick-tile-co-fla-1934.