C. M. Barnes v. Turner and Kirkwood

1904 OK 59, 78 P. 108, 14 Okla. 284, 1904 Okla. LEXIS 80
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedSeptember 1, 1904
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 1904 OK 59 (C. M. Barnes v. Turner and Kirkwood) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
C. M. Barnes v. Turner and Kirkwood, 1904 OK 59, 78 P. 108, 14 Okla. 284, 1904 Okla. LEXIS 80 (Okla. 1904).

Opinion

Opinion of the court by

Irwin, J.:

The instruments in controversy are all time warrants, dated July 1, 1893. A copy of one of the warrants, of which the others are similar, is as follows:

*287 “Warrant of the City of Guthrie, Oklahoma Territory.
“$554.15 No. 6.
“Treasurer of the City of Guthrie.
“One year after date pay to the order of Harper S. Cunningham, receiver National Bank, Guthrie, the sum of five hundred and fifty-four and 15-100 dollars, with interest thereon at the rate of six per centum per annum, from June 3rd, 1891, from any moneys which shall arise from special levy for the payment of city warrants issued under the provisions of chapter No. 14, of the Statutes of Oklahoma, providing for the payment of indebtedness of the provisional governments of the' cities of Guthrie, East Guthrie, West Guthrie, and Capitol Hill, upon the subdivision of Guthrie known as East Guthrie.
“By order of the citjr council July 1, 1893.
“A. M. MoElhiNNey, Mayor.
“Attest:
“E. G. MílliKáN, City Clerk.”

The second assignment urged by plaintiffs in error for a reversal of this case, is that the action in mandamus to compel the mayor and councilmen of the city of Guthrie to levy a tax to create a fund to pay these warrants, accrued on the 9th day of September, 1895, the day W. H. Gray, receiver, commenced his action in mandamus to compel the then mayor and council of the city of Guthrie to levy this same tax for the payment of these same warrants, and that consequently, at the time of the commencement of this action it was barred by the statute of limitations. With this contention we cannot agree. The statute of limitations is what is known in law as a statute of repose. It is a statute enacted as a matter of public policy to fix a limit in which an action must be brought, or the obligation will be presumed to have been paid. The statute is intended to run *288 only against those who are neglectful of their rights, and fail to use reasonable and proper diligence in the enforcement thereof. They are based upon tire presumption of law that from the lapse of time it is fair to presume that the debt has been paid. In this case the warrants show upon their face that they were issued by what purports to be the city'council, and signed by what purports to be the mayor,’ and attested by what purports to be the clerk; that they are evidence of indebtedness, and are entitled to be accepted as evidence of indebtedness; that they are to be paid from a special levy for the payment of city warrants under the provisions of chapter 14, of the Statutes of Oklahoma providing for the payment of indebtedness of the provisional government of the cities of Guthrie, East Guthrie, West Guthrie, and Capitol Hill. Now when did, under these warrants, the right to demand payment thereof, accrue ? Was it immediately upon the issuing of the warrants,-or was it when the fund from which said warrants were to be paid was in the hands of the proper officer for payment thereof. The payment of these warrants did not depend entirely upon the action of -the holders thereof, but depended upon some affirmative action on the part of the officers of the city. The issuing of these warrants, making them payable out of a certain fund to be raised by a certain levy, indicates that a duty devolved upon the officers of the city to make the necessary orders and take the necessary steps which are prerequisite to the levying and collecting of that tax. Now can the officers of the city, when steps are taken which are necessary preliminaries to the collection of these warrants, be heard to take advantage of their own neglect of duty, by *289 saying that because we have not performed the duty as the law required of us and made the necessary levy to provide the fund for the payment of these warrants, that consequently, on account of our neglect, the statute of limitations has run against the holders of these warrants so as to prevent their collection? We think this case comes clearly within the decision of this court in the Greer county ease. That is, the Board of Commissioners of Greer County v. Clarke & Courts, reported in the 70th Pacific, beginning at page 206. There, this court said:

“Where a warrant is issued by the officers of a municipal corporation, or a quasi municipal corporation, and the creditor accepts the same relying on the ordinary modes of taxation to pay said obligation, the corporation cannot be heard to say, upon an action to enforce the payment thereof, that it is barred by the statute of limitations, without first pleading and proving that it has provided a fund for the payment of such indebtedness. Hence a. county cannot plead the statute of limitations to an action against it to enforce an obligation payable from a particular fund, without first showing that it has provided such fund.”

In Robertson v. Blaine county, 32 C. C. A. 512, 90 Fed. 63, 47 L. E. A. 459, it was held that a county cannot plead limitation to an action against it to enforce an obligation payable from a particular fund, without first showing that it has provided such fund.

In the case of Hubbell v. City of South Hutchinson, 68 Pac. 52, the Kansas supreme court held that the statute of limitations will not start to run in favor of a city on its outstanding warrants until it has money in its treasury to satisfy such obligations. In the course of the opinion, the court said:

*290 “This action was based upon certain written obligations, and in the absence of the intervening circumstances, would become barred within five years from the date of their issuance. It is the settled law of this state, however, that the statute of limitations does not run in favor of municipal or quasi-municiapl corporations upon its outstanding obligations until the corporation has provided a fund with which payment thereof may be made.”

In the case of School District No. 5 v. First National Bank of Wabash, 66 Pac. 630, in a decision by the supreme court of the State of Kansas, we find the following language in the opinion:

“Statutes of limitation give the defendant the right to resist the payment of a demand based upon some act of negligence or omission of the plaintiff. But in the case at bar, the defendant would found its right to defeat the claim sued on by asserting its own negligence. It has never set the machinery of the law in motion to collect the money required to meet its obligations. It has remained since the debt was contracted in a' continued state of insolvency, created by its own act.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1904 OK 59, 78 P. 108, 14 Okla. 284, 1904 Okla. LEXIS 80, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/c-m-barnes-v-turner-and-kirkwood-okla-1904.