Citizens & Contractors Bank v. Maddox

166 S.E. 227, 175 Ga. 779, 1932 Ga. LEXIS 329
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedOctober 12, 1932
DocketNo. 9168
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 166 S.E. 227 (Citizens & Contractors Bank v. Maddox) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Citizens & Contractors Bank v. Maddox, 166 S.E. 227, 175 Ga. 779, 1932 Ga. LEXIS 329 (Ga. 1932).

Opinion

Gilbert, J.

On March 18, 1920, a Butts County warrant (No. 317) was issued to Mary R. Griffin. It was assigned several times, and finally became the property of the Citizens & Contractors Bank, transferee of the Lithonia Banking Company. The petition in this case, by Citizens & Contractors Bank, was presented on December 17, 1931. It was against Dodson, county treasurer, Howell, Hodges, and Jinks, then constituting the board of commissioners of roads and revenues of Butts County, together with Maddox, who during the years 1927 to 1930, inclusive, had been a member of that board, and Jackson National Bank. The purpose of the petition was to enforce by writ of mandamus the payment of the balance due upon the warrant. There were also prayers for holding the officers in contempt, and for other relief. The trial judge, in his opinion, stated the controlling issue as follows: “Is the plaintiff entitled to relief other than is granted by the order of October 9, 1928?” And ruled thereon as follows: “The court holds that [780]*780under the petition and the answers thereto, and the evidence submitted to the court, that the court is without power to grant unto petitioner relief other than is contained in said order of October 9, 1928.”

Attached to the petition as “exhibit 1” is a petition entitled “John Martin et al. vs. Butts County and J. 0. Gaston, Sole Commissioner of Roads and Revenues of Butts County. Petition for Mandamus in Butts Superior Court. February Term, 1918.” It continues as follows: “And now comes Lithonia Banking Co., a banking corporation under the laws of Georgia, and shows to the court: 1. Your petitioner shows that it is interested in the subject-matter of the above suit, and therefore asks to be allowed to intervene in said case.” It then sets out the ownership by Lithonia Banking Company of Butts County warrant No. 317 in language identical with the description in the present petition. It alleges presentation of the warrant to the treasurer of the county, and refusal to pay by reason of “no fund with which to pay the same.” The petitioner prayed “that it be allowed to intervene in the above-stated case, and to be made a party thereto, and that its said claim share with the other claims set forth in the petition and the amendments thereto, in the above-stated case, in the funds raised by taxation under order of the court.” The genuineness of this warrant and the correctness of the amount as an indebtedness against the county was admitted by Gaston, sole commissioner of roads and revenues. The petition of John Martin et al. does not appear in the record, and there are no means by which this court can ascertain what were its allegations and prayers. Judgment on the petition of Lithonia Banking Company allowed it to intervene, and the court further ordered “that the order heretofore made in said case be amended as to include the said warrant held by Lithonia Banking Company, and that the said J. 0. Gaston, commissioner, pay the said warrant, together with interest thereon, as provided on the face of said warrant, out of the funds which may be realized from said levy, and in accordance with the terms of said order and judgment of the court.” This-judgment was dated January 2, 1926.

The original judgment rendered in the proceeding brought by John Martin et al. is not in the record, and its terms can not be ascertained. It does appear from the judgment rendered on the [781]*781intervention, just mentioned, that Lithonia Banking Company intervened subsequently to the rendition of the judgment in favor of John Martin et ah, and that the judgment in favor of Lithonia Banking Company, by its terms, became a part of the John Martin judgment and shared with other creditors according to its terms. The Lithonia Banking Company judgment contained the further provision: “that in the event such levy is not sufficient to pay said warrant heretofore referred to in full, during the time stated in said order of court, then said levy be and the same is hereby extended and continued from year to year until said warrant is paid in full, principal and interest.” The expression in the excerpt just quoted, “ during the time stated in the said order of court,” obviously refers to the order rendered in the John Martin proceeding previously to the intervention of the Lithonia Banking Company.

Subsequently Lithonia Banking Company brought another action for mandamus against Maddox and others, alleging that by act of the legislature (Ga. Laws 1925, p. 566) a board of commissioners of roads and revenues for Butts County was created in lieu of the sole commissioner, that a judgment absolute in the mandamus proceeding to compel the sole commissioner to pay the warrant that had formerly been issued was an adjudication that said warrant was a valid liability against the county and should be paid by it, and that the commissioners refused to obey the terms of the mandamus absolute. It alleged that the county was insolvent, and that without a special tax levy its debts could not be paid; and that the county officers had refused to perform their official duty in paying off the obligation and to obey the orders of the court with reference thereto.

The judge, to whom the case was submitted for decision without a jury, sustained the demurrer to the answer, and made the mandamus absolute, on June 27, 1927, requiring defendants to levy a special tax to pay the warrant. That judgment was affirmed. Maddox v. Lithonia Banking Co., 166 Ga. 616 (144 S. E. 107).

Subsequently the judge of the superior court rendered another judgment, “John Martin et al. v. Butts County. Mandamus in Butts Superior Court--Term, 1918.” It recited: “Judgment of the court on application for order to enforce the rule absolute in the above-stated case at the instance of certain intervenors. At Chambers, Forsyth, Ga., October 9, 1928.” The names of the intervenors were stated, but Lithonia Banking Company was [782]*782not included among those named. The petition for intervention is not included in the record, and it is impossible for this court to ascertain its terms except as stated above. The judgment recites that these intervenors allege that they “are the holders of the certain numbered and specified county orders listed as a part of the petition, heretofore issued on the dates therein named by J. 0. Gaston, the former sole commissioner of said county, alleging that the same are unpaid as to certain amounts of principal and interest due thereon, although petitioners by virtue of their interventions in the above-stated case have had their specified warrants, thus drawn on the treasurer of said county, adjudicated and ordered paid by the court by commanding said J. 0. Gaston, commissioner, and his successors in office, to levy a tax, and praying that the said above-named commissioners of said county, as successors to the said former sole commissioner, be required to make a levy for the special purpose of paying off said indebtedness at the rate of 25 per cent, per annum until paid in full.” This judgment quotes from the mandamus order as follows: “That J. 0. Gaston as sole commissioner of Butts County, and his successors in office, . . be and he and they are hereby directed and ordered by this mandamus to levy a sum of three mills on the dollar of the property of Butts County, subject to taxation for the years 1919, 1920, 1921, and 1922, to discharge the warrants set out in the foregoing petition.”

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Bluebook (online)
166 S.E. 227, 175 Ga. 779, 1932 Ga. LEXIS 329, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/citizens-contractors-bank-v-maddox-ga-1932.