City of Sulphur v. State Ex Rel. Lankford, Bank Com'r

1916 OK 831, 162 P. 744, 62 Okla. 312, 1916 Okla. LEXIS 967
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedOctober 10, 1916
Docket7092
StatusPublished
Cited by32 cases

This text of 1916 OK 831 (City of Sulphur v. State Ex Rel. Lankford, Bank Com'r) 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
City of Sulphur v. State Ex Rel. Lankford, Bank Com'r, 1916 OK 831, 162 P. 744, 62 Okla. 312, 1916 Okla. LEXIS 967 (Okla. 1916).

Opinion

Opinion by

HOOKER, C.

This action was filed to recover judgment against the city of Sulphur upon 213 warrants alleged to have been executed and delivered by said city since statehood to various parties, and subsequently assigned to the Security State Bank of Sulphur, Okla., and afterwards transferred by said bank to the defendant in error. The City seeks to avoid liability thereon for the following reasons, to wit:

First. Said warrants were not drawn as provided by section 764 of the Compiled Laws of 1909, which provides that:

“All warrants issued by any city upon the city treasurer after the second Monday in July of any year shall be drawn upon one of the special funds * * * created and levied for that year and such warrants shall designate the fund upon which it is drawn and shall state upon its face the amount levied and appropriated to the fund upon which it is drawn and the amount of such funds at the time expended, and the amount remaining in such fund.”

Second. Said warrants were never presented to the city treasurer for payment before the institution of the suit.

Third. The evidence shows that certain of the warrants were issued for an increase in salary during the term for which said officers were elected.

Fourth. Said warrants were not ordered issued by the city council.

Fifth. Some of said warrants were in excess of $500, and that under the provision of section 647, Compiled Laws of 1909, it was in violation of law for the city council of the city of. Sulphur, Okla., to purchase either real or personal property at one time, where the value thereof exceeded $500, -without authority of a majority of the electors of said city authorizing the same.

Sixth. Said warrants were barred by the five-year statute of limitations before suit was filed.

Seventh. The evidence does not establish that plaintiff was the owner of the warrants sued upon.

Eighth. The debts contracted exceed the income and revenue provided for such year without the assent of three-fifths of the voters thereof voting at an election held for that purpose.

Ninth. The indebtedness contracted evidenced by said warrants exceeds 80 per cent, of the tax levied for city expenses during the current years.

This court in the case of State Bank of Miami v. City of Miami, 43 Okla. 811, 144 Pac. 598, said:

“Section 9, art. 10, of the Constitution contemplated a lump levy for all purposes, and the provisions of chapter 14, art. 7, Comp. Laws 1909, in so far as they attempt to prohibit the transfer of surplus funds to a depleted fund of the same year, are repugnant to the Constitution.”

And without extended argument it is sufficient for us to say that under the authority given the position of the plaintiff in er'ror upon the proposition that each warrant must show the fund upon which it is drawn, *314 etc., as provided by section 764 of tbe Compiled Laws of 1909, is not tenable.

We are unable to see bow tbe contentions ot the city that tbe plaintiff: is not entitled to maintain this action because a few of tbe warrants that were issued were not presented to the city for payment can be maintained. Tbe city is here denying its liability and seeking to escape the payment of these warrants upon every defense of which it can avail itself. Most of these warrants were presented and payment refused. The claims for which these warrants were issued were presented to the city council in the manner and form provided by the statute, and in the absence of a showing upon the part of the city to the effect that it had made some effort for these warrants, by creating a fund therefor, that it was necessary for the defendant in error to have presented said warrants to the city treasurer before recovery could he had in this case.

In the ease of Connersville v. Hydraulic Co,, 86 Ind. 184, it is said:

“In a suit upon a city order, it is not necessary, to entitle the holder thereof to recover, that he should show that the city treasurer had funds with which to pay it, or that he indorsed it ‘Not paid for want of funds.’
“The law will not require any party to do a useless thing and the evidence and the pleadings here conclusively justify the opinion that it would have been a very futile effort upon the part of the defendant in error to have presented these warrants to the city lor payment, and in this case it is held that a demand was not essential to the maintenance of this action.”

The city urges that recovery should not have been had here upon some of the warrants presented by Kendall and others for salaries which were increased during the term of office for which said officials were elected. The evidence here does not sustain this fact, for it appears that in March, 1907, the officials of the city attempted to pass an ordinance reducing the salaries, but on account of the failure on their part to comply with the law in force in the Indian Territory ac that time, and by reason of the failure of said ordinance reducing said salaries to receive the proper number of votes in favor thereof, the said ordinance did not become effective and the officials elected in April, 1907, continued to draw their salaries as was piovided by the ordinance prior to the attempted passage of the reducing ordinance in March, 1907. It appears that this question was presented by a test suit filed by one Boswell before the United States commissioners, and by common consent the opinion of the commissioner that the officials of said City were entitled to salaries as evidenced by the warrants issued was accepted as a true rule of law applicable thereto, and from an examination of the law and the evidence, the opinion of the United States commissioners was right. These officials to whom the warrants involved here were issued for salaries were elected to office in April, 1907, and they were entitled to such compensation as the law in force at the time of their election authorized them to receive. The induction of statehood did not change nor alter their compensation as they were entitled to draw the same salary until the next election after statehood which was April, 1909, for the Constitution of the state of Oklahoma prohibited any change during the term of office for which they were elected. The trial court determined that the ordinance reducing the salaries of the city officials was improperly passed, -and in view of the fact that there is evidence and the inferences to be drawn therefrom support the view of the trial court upon the conclusion reached by it, we cannot disturb the judgment of the lower court.

The city records relied upon here to establish a defense were in such condition that it can hardly he said that they import absolute verity or correctly show the proceedings of the city council made at the time the various claims sued upon were presented and allowed by the governing body of the city. A part of the ordinance hook had been torn out and the city records in some instances had been destroyed and burned, and had not been kept, nor preserved in the manner contemplated by law, so as to give to them the significance which is contemplated by records of that character. No one in this case testified that the trial court had before it all of the city records, but upon the contrary it affirmatively appears that it did not.

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Bluebook (online)
1916 OK 831, 162 P. 744, 62 Okla. 312, 1916 Okla. LEXIS 967, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-sulphur-v-state-ex-rel-lankford-bank-comr-okla-1916.