Danley v. Whiteley

14 Ark. 687
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedJanuary 15, 1854
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 14 Ark. 687 (Danley v. Whiteley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Danley v. Whiteley, 14 Ark. 687 (Ark. 1854).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice Watkins

delivered the opinion of the Court;

It appears from the record before the court on this appeal from the judgment of the Pulaski Circuit Court in a proceeding by mandamus, that at the December term, 1851, of that court, the relator, Whiteley, presented his petition setting forth, in substance, that pursuant to a joint resolution of the General Assembly, approved on the 12th day of November, 1850, making it the duty of the Committee on Public Printing to receive proposals, and contract with the lowest bidder, for the printing of the then present General Assembly, and such other public printing as the pub ¡ lie service mightrequire previous to the meeting of the next General Assembly, and to take bond to the State, with sufficient security, for the faithful performance of the contract, the proposals made by the relator were accepted by the committee as the lowest bid, and he accordingly entered into the contract and gave the bond required; all of which, on the report of the committee, was approved by the General Assembly, on the 20th of November, 1850. The relator further represented, that in compliance with his contract, after printing the Acts of that General Assem-' bly, the account for which had been paid and settled, he proceeded to print one thousand copies of the journal of the Senate, and one thousand copies of the journal of the House of Representatives, the number of each required by law to be printed and deposited in the office of the Secretary of State: that he printed the Senate Journal from the copy furnished him by the Secretary of the Senate, containing 452 pages of printed matter, the price for which, according to contract was $842 58; that along with the House Journal proper, he was also furnished by the clerk of the House of Representatives, with copies of certain documents, consisting of the report of the Financial Receiver of the Bank of the State of Arkansas, including various tabular statements made out by him, and forming a part of his report; also oí the report of the State Land Agent, and that of the Superintendent of the Penitentiary, and a petition of the Attorney General, presented to the Legislature. The relator avers that in consequence of these documents having formed a part of those accompanying the Governor’s Message, at the opening of the session, or of their having been referred to appropriate committees and forming the basis of legislative action, they became a part of the journal of the House, necessary and proper to be printed, and the clerk whose duty it was to do so, furnished him with copies of them, for the purpose of being printed with the journal, of which they constituted an integral part, and he accordingly printed them in the form of an Appendix: that the journal of the House, not including the appendix, contained 496 printed pages, the contract price for which was $932 60, and the cost of printing the matters contained in the Appendix, estimated according to the established rules among printers, with reference to the terms specified in the contract, the size of the tables being reduced to correspond with the pages of the printed journal was $1,373 74, amounting together to the sum of $3,148 52. The relator further represented. that having deposited the requisite number of copies in the office of the Secretary of State, and presented an account of the items charged for the work, that officer accepted the journals as printed in due time and in a workmanlike manner, and on the 13th day of August, 1851, delivered his official certificate to the relator annexed to the account in question, certifying that the relator’s account for printing the journals amounted, according to his contract, to $3,148 52 in specie, and in script, estimating it at 90 cents to the dollar, to $3,498 35 due for such printing. This certificate exhibited with the petition proceeds as follows:

“Mr. Whiteley having made an error in his account for printing the Acts, of $1,279 27, amounting in script at 85 cents to the dollar, at which rate he was paid for printing the Acts, to the sum of $1,505, this latter amount must be deducted from his present account for printing the journals, leaving a balance due to him of $1,993 35, for which sum the Auditor will draw a warrant on the Treasurer in favor of Mr. Whiteley.” The relator, after, averring the presentation of the account with the certificate of the Secretary of State annexed, to the Auditor of Public Accounts, and his refusal, upon request, to issue his warrant for the amount so certified to be due, and that there remained in the Treasury an unexpended balance of money appropriated on the 11th of January, 1851, to pay for printing the Acts and Journals, more than sufficient to pay the same, prayed for an alternative writ of mandamus to the Auditor, that he issue his warrant, or show cause why he does not do so.

The Auditor in his response to the alternative writ awarded by the court, showed for cause why he did not obey it, that to issue the warrant in favor of Whiteley for the sum demanded, being the balance of $1,993 35, as certified to be due him by the Secretary of State, would be a gross wrong to the State, and a fraud upon the public treasury, in his judgment; and he proceeded to state the facts and reasons, upon which his refusal was predicated, to the following effect: That on the 20th of May, 1851, Whiteley had presented to the respondent, as Auditor, an account for printing the Acts of the General Assembly of 1850-51, and the reports-and tables appended thereto, certified to be correct by D. B. Greer, Secretary of State, in which he charged for such printing, $3,584 20 in specie, and the Secretary of State, in his certificate to the Auditor, estimating the value of State script at 85 cents on the dollar, directed respondent to issue his warrant on the Treasurer in favor of Whiteley, for $4,216 70 in payment of the same: That this account being regularly certified by the Secretary of State in accordance with the provisions of the first section of the appropriation act of January 11th, 1851, and respondent presuming that the Secretary of State had discharged his duties faithfully and honestly, in the premises, and not then suspecting Whiteley of fraudulent designs upon the public treasury, treated the certificate of the Secretary of State as a sufficient voucher for the correctness of the account, to authorize him to issue a warrant on the Treasurer in Whiteley’s favor for the sum so certified, without requiring further evidence or making an investigation of its correctness. Some time afterwards, respondent having cause to suspect that a fraud had been perpetrated upon the treasury, in the amount charged for printing the Acts, caused the accounttobe examined, and ascertained that there were overcharges in the items composing the account amounting in the aggregate to $1,301 88 in specie, which having been paid to Whiteley in script, at 85 cents on the dollar, made the over-payment amount to the sum of $1,531 62, of which Whiteley was notified, and informed that it would be deducted from his account for printing the journals.

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Bluebook (online)
14 Ark. 687, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/danley-v-whiteley-ark-1854.