Board of Public Instruction v. Cooey

175 So. 219, 128 Fla. 591, 1937 Fla. LEXIS 1295
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedJune 4, 1937
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 175 So. 219 (Board of Public Instruction v. Cooey) 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
Board of Public Instruction v. Cooey, 175 So. 219, 128 Fla. 591, 1937 Fla. LEXIS 1295 (Fla. 1937).

Opinion

Brown, J.

This case involves the right of an assignee of the lender to recover on a common count for money had and received the sum of ten thousand dollars with interest thereon which had been loaned to the Board of Public Instruction of Washington County for an authorized purpose but at a time when a similar loan made two years theretofore had not been paid.

This writ of error brings before us a judgment obtained by Mrs. W. M. Cooey, a widow, against the Board of Public Instruction of said County upon a second amended declaration consisting of two counts. The first count alleged that on October 5, 1925, there being no money in the County school fund applicable to the payment of outstanding school warrants issued by the defendant, or for paying legitimate expenses incurred in operating the public schools of said county, the defendant on said date obtained a loan of money from the plaintiff in the sum of fifteen thousand dollars for the purpose of paying outstanding school warrants and legitimate expenses incurred in operating the public schools of the county during the school year of 1925-1926, and as evidence of said loan secured and delivered its warrant payable June 30, 1926, for said sum, bearing interest at 7 per *593 cent, until paid. That said warrant was not paid at maturity and was surrendered to the Board and canceled, and a new warrant was issued July 5, 1926, payable June 30, 1926, for a like sum. That said warrant nor the interest thereon was ever paid, but was surrendered to said Board on July 5, 1927, in part exchange for a warrant of twenty-five thousand dollars, therein agreeing that, it was so indebted to the plaintiff and agreeing to pay the same on June 30, 1932, with interest at eight per cent., pursuant to a resolution adopted by the defendant Board. That said warrant is unenforceable on account of the inclusion therein of an additional loan of ten thousand dollars obtained by the defendant from the plaintiff contrary to the statute in such case made and provided. That defendant has paid the interest on said fifteen thousand dollar loan up to June 30, 1931. That there is now due plaintiff on said loan the sum of fifteen thousand dollars with interest from June 30, 1931.

The second count is a common count for money had and received in the sum of ten thousand dollars with interest thereon from July 7, 1930, at the legal rate. The bill of particulars attached to said count shows that it was based upon cash received by the defendant from the plaintiff’s assignor, Mr. W. M. Cooey, on July 5, 1927, which cash was used in the maintenance of the public schools of Washington County in the scholastic year of 1927-1928, the interest on which loan had been paid up to July 7, 1930. The suit was begun on June 17, 1933.

To the first count the defendant filed a plea of the general issue, but to the second count it filed a plea, not only of the general issue, but a special plea, alleging that on October 5, 1925, and during the school year ending June 30, 1926, at a time when there was no money in the county school fund of the county applicable to the payment of outstand *594 ing school warrants or legitimate expenses incurred in operating the public schools of said county the defendant borrowed the sum of .fifteen thousand dollars from W. M. Cooey for the purpose of paying outstanding school warrants and legitimate expenses incurred in -operating the-school, no part of which has ever been paid; and-that on or 'about. July 5, 1927, and during the school year ending June 30, 1928, while the said sum- of fifteen thousand dollars was owing by the defendant to the said W. M. Cooey and. was wholly unpaid, the said W. M. Cooey lent to the defendant the further sum of ten thousand dollars. That this alleged indebtedness of the defendant on account of said ten thousand dollar loan was by him assigned to the plaintiff and is the same indebtedness' sought to be recovered in and by the second count of said declaration.

Plaintiff demurred to defendant’s second plea to the- sec-; ond count of the amended declaration upon the ground that its allegations were insufficient in law to constitute -any de- - fense, and upon the further ground that the allegation that the defendant, being already indebted to said W. M. Cooey in the sum of fifteen thousand' dollars for borrowed money, borrowed the additional sum of ten thousand dollars declared on in the second count, was insufficient in law to relieve the defendant from liability for said money under a common count for money had and received.

' This demurrer to the defendant’s second plea to the second count was sustained by the court.

On March 23, 1935, the plaintiff filed an additional'or third count to her declaration, claiming interest at the legal rate upon the ten thousand dollars sued for in the second .count, alleging that the defendant had promised verbally and in writing to pay such rate and did pay interest at that rate until June 7, 1930. To this-count the defendant filed pleas similar to those filed to the second count of the *595 amended declaration, to which the defendant demurred,' which demurrer was sustained by the court.

Finally the case was submitted to the Judge for trial without the intervention of a jury upon the pleadings and the written stipulation of facts filed before him. This written stipulation of facts is not embraced in this record, so the case must be considered by us on the rulings of the court upon the pleadings, as above set forth. The Circuit Judge rendered a judgment in favor of the plaintiff on each count, assigning her damages at $20,136.70 for principal and interest under the second and third counts, and rendered judgment for the aggregate sum.

No assignment of error was taken’ to the- judgment of the court on the first count of the declaration, but error is assigned to the ruling of the court sustaining plaintiff’s demurrer to defendant’s second plea to the second count of the amended declaration, and to its order sustaining plaintiff’s demurrer to defendant’s plea to the third count, as well as to the court’s action in rendering final judgment for the plaintiff for any amount under the second and third counts of the amended declaration.

Said second count is a common count for the recovery of the sum of ten thousand dollars, money had and received by the School Board, for the use of Mrs. Cooey. The second plea to the second count in substance alleged that the ten thousand dollars sued for in said count cannot be recovered because it was borrowed by the School Board from Mrs. Cooey’s assignor in 1927 for current school expenses when the school board already owed the said W. M. Cooey fifteen thousand dollars that .it had borrowed from him in; 1925 for current school expenses which had never been-repaid. The theory upon which said second plea is based is that the ten thousand dollars borrowed by the School Board under such circumstances cannot be recovered be *596 cause it was borrowed by the defendant and lent by the plaintiff in violation of that part of Section 566 C. G. L. which reads as follows: “which said sum so borrowed shall be paid in full before the Board shall be authorized to borrow on the estimate for any succeeding year.”

It is not denied that this money which was borrowed from Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
175 So. 219, 128 Fla. 591, 1937 Fla. LEXIS 1295, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/board-of-public-instruction-v-cooey-fla-1937.