Crass v. Walls

259 S.W.2d 670, 36 Tenn. App. 546, 1953 Tenn. App. LEXIS 140
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedMarch 11, 1953
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 259 S.W.2d 670 (Crass v. Walls) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Crass v. Walls, 259 S.W.2d 670, 36 Tenn. App. 546, 1953 Tenn. App. LEXIS 140 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1953).

Opinion

McAMIS, J.

In this case Garvin W. Walls, a former Mayor of Oliver Springs, appeals from a decree of the Chancery Court of Roane County awarding a recovery against him in favor of said municipality and adjudging him ineligible to hold public office for a period of ten years under Code sections 1874, 1875 and 1876, providing:

“It shall not be lawful for any officer, committeeman, director, or other person whose duty it is to vote for, let out, overlook, or in any manner to superintend, any work or any contract in which any municipal corporation, county, or the state, shall or may be interested, to be directly or indirectly interested in any such contract.

‘ ‘ Should any person, acting as such officer, committeeman, director, or other person above referred to, be or become directly or indirectly interested in any such contract; he shall forfeit all pay and compensation therefor.

“Such officer shall be dismissed from such office he *549 then occupies, and be ineligible for the same or a similar position for ten years.”

Under the original bill, as amended, the complainants are Everett J. Crass and E. A. West, citizens and residents of Oliver Springs, and Honorable it. Beecher Witt, District Attorney of the Fonrth Judicial Circuit of Tennessee as relator for the 'State of Tennessee, for the use and benefit of the incorporated Town of Oliver Springs. The bill sought a recovery of one-half the amount paid a partnership composed of the defendant Garvin W. Walls and his brother for hauling and spreading crushed rock on the streets of Oliver Springs and for gathering and disposing of garbage.

The defendant answered, denying that he willingly or knowingly violated ¡any of the laws of the State but admitting that the partnership composed of himself and his brother performed the services alleged in the bill though not under contract as alleged. The answer set up the affirmative defense that the trucks of the partnership were used to haul stone and gather garbage within the Town only because, due to unusual conditions growing out of the close proximity of a large plant of the Atomic Energy Commission, no other trucks were available to perform these necessary services in behalf of the people of the Town except at prohibitive prices. It was further asserted in the answer that the partnership made no profit out of these operations and that they were carried on at the urgent insistence of the governing board of the Town and in a sincere and honest effort to render a community service.

The Chancellor found from the proof as to which there is little if any conflict that the use of the trucks of the partnership while the defendant was serving as Mayor was without any intentional or willful violation of the *550 statute; that the defendant was prompted by Ms interest in the welfare of the people of Oliver Springs “more than the compensation which he derived” and that no profit was made from their operation in the service of the Town. However, following Hope v. Hamilton County, 101 Tenn. 325, 47 S. W. 487; Madison County v. Alexander, 116 Tenn. 685, 94 S. W. 604; Savage v. Mynatt, 156 Tenn. 119, 123, 299 S. W. 1043; Hammon v. Miller, 13 Tenn. App. 458, the decree awarded a recovery for one-half the amount paid the partnership or $572.41. At the time the decree was rendered defendant no longer held the office of Mayor and there was no occasion to decree that he vacate his office. The Chancellor, at first, declined to declare defendant ineligible to hold office under section 1876 because he acted in good faith and without willful purpose to violate the statute. But, upon complainants’ petition for additional findings, it was finally decreed that defendant .he so declared.

The defendant also filed a petition for additional findings that the individual complainants were not entitled to maintain the suit because they had failed to allege or prove that they were taxpayers of the'Town and that the District Attorney General of the Fourth Judicial Circuit had no legal power or authority to prosecute the suit against a defendant residing in the Nineteenth Judicial Circuit of the State. The decree responding to the petition held that these two grounds of the petition came too late.

Responding to other requests for findings filed hy defendant, the Chancellor found that the services rendered hy defendant were necessary and essential; that, while there was no express contract between the Town and the defendant, there was an implied contract and that, while the Town might have been forced to expend larger *551 sums in obtaining services from others, there was a number of truckers whose services might have been had. The Chancellor refused to find, as requested, that the defendant performed the services in question in the discharge of his official duties as Mayor.

We hold without merit the insistence that the Chancellor erred in failing to hold that the suit is not being prosecuted by proper parties complainant. We are not cited to any authority sustaining the insistence that suits of this nature can only be maintained by a taxpaying citizen or resident. If so, however, no question of proper parties was made until defendant sought to amend his answer after the case had been submitted to the Chancellor, eight months after the filing of the petition of E. A. West claiming to be a taxpayer and long after the intervention of the District Attorney Gteneral. There was no abuse of discretion in refusing to allow the amendment at the time it was tendered. It results that it is immaterial whether the original complainant instituted the suit for ulterior reasons.

Although agreeing with the findings of the Chancellor and, particularly, that defendant acted in good faith and without improper motives, we think the cases above cited and, especially, Savage v. Mynatt, 156 Tenn. 119, 299 S. W. 1043, 1044, directly applying the statute here invoked, require that he be compelled to repay the amount received. These cases hot only hold that one performing services in violation of the statute may not recover either upon the contract or upon quantum meruit, but that, having paid for the services, the municipality may maintain an action to compel repayment. As directly in point, it was said in the Savage case:

“It was the evident intent of the lawmakers to meet a serious menace to public funds by drastic and far-reach *552 ing provisions. The language ‘shall forfeit all pay and compensation therefor,’ would appear to embrace, not only a refusal of payment, but the right to compel repayment when made in the -teeth of the statute. The word ‘forfeit’ is inclusive of both remedies. It is commonly employed in connection with penalties for the recovery of which actions may be maintained. * * *

“Looking to the manifest object of the legislation as well as the language employed, we are unable to agree that its effect is to be so limited as to defeat a right of recovery of sums already so unlawfully paid. To so hold would leave open to corrupt officials handling public funds, who oftentimes are alone advised of the facts at the time of payment, unlimited opportunity to violate the law and protect themselves in their unlawfully gotten gains.” To the same effect see Southern v. Beeler, 183 Tenn. 272, 295, 195 S. W. (2d) 857, and State v.

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Related

Town of Smyrna v. Ridley
730 S.W.2d 318 (Tennessee Supreme Court, 1987)
State ex rel. Kirkpatrick v. Tipton
670 S.W.2d 224 (Court of Appeals of Tennessee, 1984)
State ex rel. Vaughn v. Williamson
614 S.W.2d 347 (Tennessee Supreme Court, 1981)
State Ex Rel. Wallen v. Miller
304 S.W.2d 654 (Tennessee Supreme Court, 1957)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
259 S.W.2d 670, 36 Tenn. App. 546, 1953 Tenn. App. LEXIS 140, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/crass-v-walls-tennctapp-1953.