Buena Vista Water Storage District v. Shields

14 P.2d 559, 126 Cal. App. 241, 1932 Cal. App. LEXIS 466
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedSeptember 23, 1932
DocketDocket No. 1027.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 14 P.2d 559 (Buena Vista Water Storage District v. Shields) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Buena Vista Water Storage District v. Shields, 14 P.2d 559, 126 Cal. App. 241, 1932 Cal. App. LEXIS 466 (Cal. Ct. App. 1932).

Opinions

This is an application for a writ of mandate, an alternative writ having been issued by the Supreme Court and made returnable before this court. The purpose of the action is to compel the respondent county treasurer to pay from a fund asserted to be in the county treasury to the credit of the petitioner, a certain warrant issued by the petitioner district.

The petition alleges that the petitioner is a water storage district organized and existing under and by virtue of the California Water Storage District Act; that the respondent Shields is the county treasurer of Kern County; that in the year 1929 an assessment was levied upon the lands within the district in the sum of $942,731.11, the assessment being unpaid and bonds being issued and sold for that amount in accordance with the provisions of the Water Storage District Act; that pursuant to the provisions of the act named, the petitioner has from time to time called installments of accrued interest on said assessment and said installments have been paid to respondent and by him forthwith paid into the county treasury of Kern County to the credit of the bond fund of petitioner; that on June 28, 1932, and ever since that date, there has been and now is on deposit in said county treasury to the credit of said bond fund the sum of $31,861.81; that on June 28, 1932, pursuant to a resolution of its board of directors the petitioner *Page 243 made and issued its warrant, drawn on respondent, in the sum of $28,281.93, for the purpose of paying the bond interest due and payable on July 1, 1932; that said warrant was presented for payment to the respondent on June 30, 1932; and that said respondent refused and still refuses to pay the same.

In his return to the writ the respondent admits most of the allegations of the petition but justifies his refusal to pay the warrant upon two grounds. While admitting that the amounts alleged to have been paid to him by the land owners in the district were actually received by him as county treasurer and that they were by him paid into the county treasury, it is alleged that this was done by him without the authority of the auditor of that county, and that he has never received the authorization of said auditor to receive said assessments into the county treasury. As a second defense he alleges that he placed all of the moneys received on said assessments in a separate parcel; that at all times he kept said moneys segregated, separate and apart in said parcel from other moneys in the county treasury; that about noon on June 25, 1932, the parcel containing said moneys thus received on said assessments was feloniously and forcibly taken from the possession of a deputy county treasurer of said county; and that, by reason of said robbery, there are not sufficient funds in the county treasury of Kern County to the credit of the bond fund of the said water storage district with which to pay the warrant in question.

At the oral argument it was stipulated that there was at the time the warrant was presented sufficient money in the county treasury to pay the same. Testimony was introduced to the effect that the amounts paid in on the assessment in question were kept in the treasurer's office in a certain leather wallet, segregated from other funds, and that on June 25, 1932, at a time when the deputy treasurer had brought out the wallet for the purpose of exchanging certain bills therein for certain other bills, the wallet was taken from the deputy at the point of a gun. In the argument and in the briefs, the first defense interposed by the respondent has been enlarged by adding the contention that the treasurer may not, under the law, pay out any of *Page 244 these funds except upon a warrant drawn by the county auditor.

[1] The first point presented by respondent and by amicicuriae in his behalf is that such funds as are here involved may only be received by a county treasurer upon the certificate of the county auditor and may only be paid out upon a warrant drawn by the county auditor, for the reason that certain statutes relating to the duties of a county treasurer and a county auditor apply to the handling of the funds of such a district as this and that, as so applied and considered in connection with the provisions of the Water Storage District Act, these statutes are controlling. The statutes especially relied upon are sections 4093, 4101 and 4102 of the Political Code. Section 4102 provides that the treasurer must receive no money into the treasury or for deposit with him as treasurer unless accompanied by the certificate of the auditor, which is provided for in section 4093. Section 4093 reads as follows:

"Settlement with debtors of county. The auditor must examine and settle the accounts of all persons indebted to the county, or holding moneys payable into the county treasury, and must certify the amount to the treasurer, and upon the presentation and filing of the treasurer's receipt therefor, give to such persons a discharge, and charge the treasurer with the amount received by him, provided, that all persons, or officers, indebted to the county or holding moneys payable into the county treasury, must make oath, before the auditor, of the total amount of money payable by him to the county or into the county treasury, and on what account. Moneys payable into the county treasury, as the term is used in this section, shall include moneys belonging to estates of deceased persons and required by law to be paid to the county treasurer, taxes on inheritances and transfers, all moneys deposited by order of court, and all other moneys deposited with such treasurer by virtue of any official authority whatever."

Section 4101 provides in part that the treasurer must:

"2. File and keep the certificates of the auditor delivered to him when moneys are paid into the treasury.

. . . . . . . . . . . . .

"6. Disburse the county moneys and all other money placed in his custody by official authority only on county *Page 245 warrants issued by the county auditor, except on settlement with the state."

The claim of petitioner is based upon the Water Storage District Act (Stats. 1921, p. 1727), with its subsequent amendments. The provisions of this act are numerous and of considerable length, and it will only be necessary to call attention to certain portions thereof. After various provisions relating to the formation and control of such a district, and the levying of assessments for the purpose of carrying out the purposes thereof, section 19 of the act provides that two copies of the assessment-roll, as finally fixed, shall be certified and transmitted to the board of directors of the district, who shall file one copy in their records and transmit one copy to the county treasurer. It is then provided in section 20 that such assessment list must remain open for payment in the office of the county treasurer for a period of thirty days, during which time any person may pay the amount of the charge assessed against his land to the county treasurer. By section 21 it is provided, among other things, that at the end of thirty days the county treasurer must make a return to the board of directors of the district of all assessments paid, and that, "Thereafter all unpaid assessments and accrued interest shall be collected when and as called, and paid to the treasurer of the county or counties, who shall collect and hold such moneys to the credit of the district." This section has other provisions to the effect that moneys collected by the treasurer shall be deposited to the proper fund of the district and to the credit of the district. Section 24 of the act provides, among other things, for the issuance of bonds.

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Bluebook (online)
14 P.2d 559, 126 Cal. App. 241, 1932 Cal. App. LEXIS 466, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/buena-vista-water-storage-district-v-shields-calctapp-1932.