County of Tehama v. Sisson

92 P. 64, 152 Cal. 167, 1907 Cal. LEXIS 324
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 3, 1907
DocketSac. No. 1455.
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 92 P. 64 (County of Tehama v. Sisson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
County of Tehama v. Sisson, 92 P. 64, 152 Cal. 167, 1907 Cal. LEXIS 324 (Cal. 1907).

Opinion

SLOSS, J.

This action, instituted by the district attorney of Tehama County to restrain the payment of a warrant for nine hundred and fifty dollars drawn by the auditor of said county on the treasurer thereof, resulted in a judgment in favor of the plaintiff. The defendants appeal from the judgment and from an order denying their motion for a new trial.

Findings amply sustained by the evidence, taken together with uncontroverted averments of the complaint, disclose this state of facts: For the fiscal year commencing'July 1, 1902, and ending June 30, 1903, the board of supervisors of Tehama County had raised by taxation a fund known as the indigent fund, to be applied to the care and maintenance of the indigent sick and dependent poor of the county, and the support of the county hospital. During said year the board of supervisors had incurred indebtedness in behalf of the county and allowed claims for the same against the indigent fund to such an extent that on June 20, 1903, a few days before the expiration of the fiscal year 1902-3, all of the revenues provided for that fund for the then fiscal year had been exhausted, and claims had been allowed and debts and liabilities incurred by the said board of supervisors, chargeable against the indigent fund to such an extent that in the estimation of the board an additional sum of nine hundred and fifty dollars would be required in said fund for that year to meet the payment of such claims and liabilities. On June 20, 1903, G. W. Vestal, H. C. Kauffman, W. H. Samson, and Perry E. Lee, four of the members of the board of supervisors, acting in their individual capacities, borrowed nine hundred and fifty dollars from the Bank of Tehama County and executed a joint and several promissory note to the bank for said sum. The money *170 so borrowed was paid by the bank to A. L. Conard, who at once delivered it to B. L. Sisson, the county treasurer. Sisson credited it to the indigent fund of the county, and out of it claims accruing during the fiscal year 1902-3 were subsequently allowed and paid. This addition of nine hundred and fifty dollars to the indigent fund for the year 1902-3 was represented in the records of the board of supervisors as having been realized in the following manner: At a meeting held on the twentieth day of June, 1903, the board of supervisors caused to be entered in their minutes an order reading in part as follows: “It appearing to the Board that it is necessary to sell and dispose of some of the property at the County Hos.pital, in order to raise additional funds to pay the outstanding indebtedness of the amount charged and registered against the Indigent Fund for the Fiscal Tear ending July 1, 1903, therefor it is hereby ordered that the crop of fruit now growing on the trees and vines in the orchard at the County Hospital be sold, and it is further ordered that the said crop of fruit be sold by the Board as a whole, and that said crop of fruit be and the same is hereby offered for sale to the highest bidder at this time (the said fruit being the product of the County Farm). The said crop of fruit was then offered for sale, and A. L. Conard bid the sum of $950 for the said crop of fruit. There being no further bids, it is hereby ordered that the said crop of fruit now growing on the trees and vines in the orchard of the County Hospital be and the same is hereby sold to A. L. Conard for the sum of $950, and he is hereby directed to pay the said amount into the County Treasury to the credit of the Indigent Fund. It appearing that the proceeds of the sale of the crop of fruit would be sufficient to pay the outstanding indebtedness of the amount chargeable against the Indigent Fund to July 1, 1903, it is ordered that no other property be offered for sale.”

No delivery of the said fruit, which, as the court finds, was worth not exceeding one hundred dollars, was ever made to Conard, and he never took possession of any of it.

Cn the fourteenth day of July, 1903, after the commencement of the next fiscal year, said board of supervisors met and entered an order reading as follows: “It is ordered that the crop of fruit growing on the trees and vines at the County Hospital be purchased from A. L. Conard for the sum of $950, *171 and the County Auditor is hereby ordered to draw a warrant in favor of said A. L. Conard for the sum of $950 in full payment of the said crop of fruit, said warrant to be drawn on the Indigent Fund.” Pursuant to this order the auditor drew his warrant, number 214, in favor of A. L. Conard or order. This warrant was delivered by Conard to the Bank of Tehama County, and while it was still unpaid this action was instituted by the district attorney to prevent its payment. The bank will, if it collects the warrant, apply the proceeds to the satisfaction of the promissory note executed to it by the members of the board of supervisors. Conard had no interest in the transactions above set out except to aid in carrying out the plans of the defendant members of the board of supervisors.

The court finds—and in view of the facts above stated it is difficult to see how any other inference is possible—that the sale to Conard and the purchase from him were not made in good faith, but were a merely ostensible and colorable sale and purchase, and that the transactions and orders of the board of supervisors constituted a plan or device by which the indebtedness of Tehama County, incurred during the fiscal year commencing July 1, 1902, and allowable against the indigent fund for that year, might be paid from the revenues provided for said fund for the fiscal year commencing July 1, 1903, without the assent of two thirds of the qualified electors of said county. It is further found that while the indigent fund was exhausted as above stated, there was at the expiration of the fiscal year 1902-3 a surplus of moneys in the general fund provided for said fiscal year sufficient to pay all claims and indebtedness chargeable against the indigent fund. The board of supervisors never authorized or directed the district attorney to prosecute this action.

The court made conclusions of law to the effect that the payment of the warrant number 214 would have the effect of paying the indebtedness of the county incurred during the fiscal year 1902-3 from the revenues provided for the indigent fund of the county for the next fiscal year; further, that the defendants, members of the board of supervisors, were interested in the so-called contracts for the sale and purchase of the crop of fruit and in the payment of said warrant, and their interest was such as to make illegal and void all *172 of the said contracts and proceedings and the warrant itself; further, that the action is properly brought and prosecuted by the district attorney. Accordingly, a decree was entered enjoining the treasurer of the county from paying the said warrant from the funds or money of said county, enjoining the Bank of Tehama County from presenting the said warrant to the treasurer for payment, and enjoining the board of supervisors from “making any order or allowance for the payment of any debt, indebtedness or liability incurred by the said board of supervisors during the fiscal year commencing July 1, 1902, from the moneys or revenues provided for such fund for any subsequent fiscal year.”

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Bluebook (online)
92 P. 64, 152 Cal. 167, 1907 Cal. LEXIS 324, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/county-of-tehama-v-sisson-cal-1907.