Carroll v. Williams, County Treasurer

202 S.W. 504, 109 Tex. 155, 1918 Tex. LEXIS 63
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedApril 10, 1918
DocketNo. 2919.
StatusPublished
Cited by90 cases

This text of 202 S.W. 504 (Carroll v. Williams, County Treasurer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Carroll v. Williams, County Treasurer, 202 S.W. 504, 109 Tex. 155, 1918 Tex. LEXIS 63 (Tex. 1918).

Opinion

Mr Justice HAWETUS

delivered the opinion of the court.

The material facts which are disclosed by the record and are binding upon this court are to this effect:

Annually, for several years prior to 1914, the Commissioners Court of Jefferson County, as part of a general scheme for exacting from tax payers and expending on roads and bridges of the county more money than the Constitution of this State permits to be raised by taxation and expended for that purpose, deliberately and purposely levied, for various other purposes defined' by said Constitution, taxes which were known by that court, at the times of such levies thereof, to be much greater in amounts than were required to meet the current 'expenditures for such other purposes, and afterwards transferred such excesses in such funds to the road and bridge fund, and expended same accordingly.

The general purpose of this suit was to stop that practice. Specifically the action affects the expenditure of a large sum of money derived from such excessive tax levy for the year 1914.

In pursuance of said scheme, and in addition to a road and bridge tax of 27.05 cents on the one hundred dollars valuation of property, the. Commissioners Court had levied, for 1914, for general “county purposes/'’ a maximum tax of 25 cents per hundred, said latter rate being intentionally and largely excessive, and out of the proceeds thereof, and on May 12, 1915, had transferred to the road and bridge fund an estimated excess amounting to $40,000.

Acting as a tax payer, and for himself and others similarly situated, plaintiff in error Carroll (one of the commissioners), through a petition setting out pertinent allegations, sought from the District Court an injunction perpetually to prevent the defendant in error Williams, as county treasurer, from paying out, on warrants drawn against the road and bridge fund, all or any portion of the $40,000 so transferred.

A restraining order having been issued, and the county treasurer, the Commissioners Court, the county judge, and the county commissioners other than Carroll having answered, the District Court, upon a formal hearing, found from the evidence that the allegations of Carroll were substantially true, as indicated herein, and that of the money so transferred $2560 had been paid out on warrants drawn against the *159 road and bridge fund, leaving of said $40,000 a residue of $37,440, and thereupon, on May 25, 1915, temporarily enjoined the county treasurer from paying out said residue or any portion thereof on warrants drawn against the road and bridge fund.

Upon appeal the Court of Civil Appeals for the ¡Ninth Supreme Judicial District did not disturb the trial court’s findings of fact, upon which no question has been raised, but found, among others, these facts:

(a) That said taxes for the road and bridge fund for 1914 aggregated $14,958 less than would have been realized from a levy on a maximum legal basis of 30 cents per hundred, half of such maximum rate being expressly and unconditionally authorized by said Constitution and by statute, and an additional 15 cents rate for the further maintenance of the public roads at a referendum county election.

(b) That at date of said transfer the road and bridge fund contained an unexpended balance of about $4176.70.

(c) That prior to the service of the writ of injunction, and out of the money so transferred $2560 had been expended on warrants drawn against the road and bridge fund.

Adding the two last mentioned amounts, and deducting their sum from the difference between the proceeds of said actually applied tax rate of 27.05 cents and what would have been the proceeds of said maximum rate of 30 cents for roads and bridges had it been applied— $14,958—($4176.70-t-$2560=$6736.70)=$8221.30 (and calling the resulting amount $8222), the Court of Civil Appeals held that such amount, in addition to said $2560, aggregating $10,782, and only that much, had been legally transferred out of the $40,000 to the road and bridge fund; whereupon the court so reformed the judgment of the trial court as to permit payment of an additional $8222 out of said $40,000 on warrants drawn against the road and bridge fund, hut in all other respects affirmed the judgment of the trial court.

However, upon motion for rehearing, the Court of Civil Appeals admitted error in making said deduction of said unexpended balance, and so reformed its judgment as to permit payment of an additional $12,398, instead of only $8.222, out of said $40,000, on road and bridge warrants. 182 S. W., 29.'

Each side presented here a separate application for a writ of error, which this court granted.

In behalf of the county treasurer and the Commissioners Court it is-contended here that said transfer of the $40,000 and the expenditure, thereof on roads and bridges are fully authorized by Revised Statutes,. 1911, article 1440, when properly construed in conjunction with articles-2242 and 7357; but in behalf of plaintiff in error Carroll it is urged that such transfer is inhibited by section 9 of article 8 of our State Constitution.

Our Constitution provides:

“No county, city or town shall levy more than twenty-five cents for city or county purposes, and not exceeding fifteen cents for roads and *160 bridges, and not exceeding fifteen cents to pay jurors, on the one hundred dollars valuation, except for the payment of debts incurred prior to the adoption of the amendment September 25, T883; and for the erection of public buildings, streets, sewers, waterworks and other permanent improvements, not to exceed twenty-five cents on the one hundred dollars valuation, in any one year, and except as is in this Constitution otherwise provided; and the Legislature may also authorize an additional annual ad valorem tax to be levied and collected for the further maintenance of the public roads; provided that a majority of the qualified property tax-paying voters of the county voting at an election to be held for that purpose shall vote such tax, not to exceed fifteen cents on the one hundred dollars valuation of property subject to taxation in such county.” Const. Texas, sec. 9, art. 8.

“The County Commissioners Court . . . shall exercise such powers and jurisdiction over all county business as is conferred by this Constitution and the laws of this State, or as may be hereafter prescribed.” Sec. 18, art. 5.

The Revised Statutes of 1911 provide:

"Said court shall have the power to levy and collect a tax for county purposes, not to exceed twenty-five cents on the one hundred dollars valuation, and a tax not to exceed fifteen cents on the one hundred dollars valuation to supplement the jury funds of the county, and not to exceed fifteen cents for roads and bridges on the one hundred dollars valuation, except for the payment of debts incurred prior to the adoption of the amendment to the Constitution, September 25, A. D.

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Bluebook (online)
202 S.W. 504, 109 Tex. 155, 1918 Tex. LEXIS 63, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carroll-v-williams-county-treasurer-tex-1918.