Commercial & Savings Bank v. Police Jury

114 So. 841, 164 La. 932, 1927 La. LEXIS 1842
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedOctober 31, 1927
DocketNo. 28650.
StatusPublished

This text of 114 So. 841 (Commercial & Savings Bank v. Police Jury) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Commercial & Savings Bank v. Police Jury, 114 So. 841, 164 La. 932, 1927 La. LEXIS 1842 (La. 1927).

Opinion

THOMPSON, J.

The plaintiff bank, an unsuccessful bidder for the fiscal agency of the public funds of the parish of Ascension for the years 1927 and 1928, instituted the present mandamus proceeding to compel the police jury of said parish to accept its bid and to enter into a contract with the said bank as depository of the public funds for the years stated.

The bid of the relator’s competitor, the Ascension Bank & Trust Company, having been accepted by the police jury, and a contract haying been entered into with that bank, an exception of nonjoinder was filed by the police jury, which was sustained, whereupon that bank was impleaded and made a party defendant.

After a trial, the court below rendered judgment, ordering the police jury to reconsider its action in" rejecting plantiff’s bid and accepting that of the other bank, and to “give due and proper consideration to the bid of relator, ' Commercial & Savings Bank, the same being hereby decreed to be a legal and 'valid bid, and to let their funds to the highest bidder therefor consistent with the safety of such funds, all in accordance with the laws pertinent thereto.”

Prom this judgment the police jury and the Ascension Bank & Trust Company have appealed.

The pertinent provisions of the bid of the plaintiff are as follows, our.numbering:

(1) “We will pay interest semiannually in January and July of each year, at the rate of 4 per cent, per annum, on the daily average balances of the accounts of the police jury, various road districts, sheriff’s salary fund, and assessor’s salary fund.”
(2) “We will lend to the police jury of 'the parish of Ascension, when legally authorized to borrow, for its current expenses^ such amounts within the revenues of said police jury as máy be established by its current budget, ,at a rate of interest not to exceed 5% per cent, per annum, said loans to be secured by á .pledge of the revenues of said police jury.” • ‘
(3) “In accordance with section 4, paragraph 5, Act 205 of 1912, we propose to lend.to the police'jury of the parish of Ascension, when the said police jury has been legally authorized' to borrow, an amount equal to the average deposits which it may have kept in our bank at the same rate of interest as we have bid; that is; 4 per cent, per annum.”
(4) 1‘The above clause, is to be construed as applying to deposits with us of money actually owned by the police jury, and not to be deposits of money to the various bodies over which they are the governing authority, .such as road districts, sheriff’s salary fund, etc.”' ' ! ’

. The provisions of the bid of the Ascensión Bank & Trust Company were as follows: ■ •

(1) “We will pay interest on the ávérage'daily balances on all police jury arid várious road'district accounts at the rate of; 3 per, cent, pgr annum, said interest to be paid semiannually on the 1st of January and July.”
(2) “We agree to comply with' the provisions of paragraph 5 of section.4, of the Act 205 of 1912, to lend to your honorable body, when you have been legally authorized to borrow, ' an amount equal to the average deposit which you have kept in our bank at the,,same, rate of interest as your deposit bears.” , -
(3) “In the event it becomes necessary for your honorable body to borrow money for the usual ordinary and statutory- charges,.and expenditures affixed by your budget, in excess of the amount of your average' deposit, we agree to lend you the same at the. rate of interest !of ¡ 6 per cent, per annum.” ;.

*935 Although it is stated in argument that the hid of the two hanks, except as to the rate of interest, is practically the same, an examination of the bids clearly shows a marked difference) other than that of the difference in rate of interest, and it was this difference that prompted the action of the police jury and provoked this litigation.

The difference is this: The Ascension Bank & Trust Company offered, in addition to paying 3 per cent, on the average daily deposits, ■to loan the police jury, at the same rate of interest, an amount equal to the average daily deposit kept in the bank; in other words, that bank agreed to comply with the obligations created by the statute, without any exception, reservation, or qualification whatever.

Whereas the complaining bank, while offering 4 per cent, on the average daily deposits on all funds deposited with the bank, proposed to restrict or limit its amount of loans at the rate of interest paid to a sum equal to the average balance of particular funds belonging to the parish.

It will be seen, therefore, that the important question tó be determined is whether the . bid of the plaintiff was a legal bid, in point of law, and the best bid for the police jury, in point of fact.

If .the bid was not in compliance with the statute, or if in point of fact the limitations placed in the bid on the loans that might be required to be made, rendered the bid less advantageous to the pólice jury, then the police jury had the legal right to reject that bid, and, in doing so, its action could not properly be said to be either “arbitrary” or “capricious.”

It is contended by counsel for relator that, although the police jury is by law made the governing authority of road districts, this fact does not make the funds of road' districts parish funds; and the same contention is made with respect to the sheriff’s salary fund and that of the assessor.

We cannot agree with this contention, and we do not think that such an interpretation can be reasonably placed on the provision of the fiscal agency statute under consideration.

Paragraph 5 of section 4 of Act 205 of 1912 declares in plain language that:

All parishes “shall require of the bank or banks selected as its or their depositories, in addition to the payment of interest, to lend to such board or authority, when the same have been legally authorized to borrow, cm amount equal to the average deposits which it [the authority letting] may have kept in such lank, at the same rate of interest as its deposit lears.” (Underscoring ours.)

There is not a line or a word in this statute that even remotely suggests that the Legislature, in requiring the fiscal agent to loan to the authority letting the funds, at the same rate of interest, an amount equal to the average daily balances, contemplated a separation for that purpose of the parish funds, strictly speaking, from other funds under the direction and control of the police jury, and to restrict the bank’s obligation to loan only to the extent of the average parish fund proper.

On the contrary, the statute makes it clear that, as.a part of the consideration of receiving the deposits at a specified .rate of interest, the bank shall be required to lend at the same rate to an amount equal to the average daily balances of all funds let by the parish and on which the depositor is to pay interest.

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114 So. 841, 164 La. 932, 1927 La. LEXIS 1842, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commercial-savings-bank-v-police-jury-la-1927.