Davis v. White

284 S.W. 764, 171 Ark. 385, 1926 Ark. LEXIS 452
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedJune 7, 1926
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 284 S.W. 764 (Davis v. White) 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
Davis v. White, 284 S.W. 764, 171 Ark. 385, 1926 Ark. LEXIS 452 (Ark. 1926).

Opinion

Smith, J.

This suit was begun by appellants, who pay taxe's and reside in Mammoth Spring Special School District No. 2, against the directors of said district, the treasurer of the county, and the Citizens’ Bank of Mammoth Spring, and certain other parties.

After much testimony had been taken, the court made an order, at the joint request of both parties, wherein a master was appointed to continue the taking of testimony and to make findings of fact on the issues raised. Testimony was taken from time to time, and, after the cause had been pending for about a year and a half, the Hanchett Bond Company, hereinafter referred to as the bond company, filed an intervention, in which it alleged that the district had issued certain bonds, which the bond company had purchased, and that the district had defaulted in the payment of both principal and interest. The bond company prayed judgment for the unpaid interest and for the amount of the bonds which had matured and had not been paid. The appellants filed a response to this intervention and a cross-complaint, in which they alleged that the bonds had not been legally issued and were not valid obligations of the district, and it was prayed that these bonds be canceled. The bond company filed a demurrer to this response and cross-complaint, which was sustained by the court, whereupon appellants filed a substituted response. Thereupon the bond company renewed its demurrer to the substituted response, and this demurrer was also sustained, and a decree was thereupon rendered in favor of the bond company requiring the district to pay the bond company the matured part of the bonds and the interest.

We will not review the immense record in the case, as the court appears to have found in favor of appellants on the disputed questions of fact, but, after doing so, the court rendered a decree dismissing the complaint as being without equity, except that the court found that the district had illegally issued a warrant for $691.36 interest due the Citizens ’ Bank on warrants of the district which the bank had cashed, and the costs of the entire case were assessed against appellants.

The court made findings of fact which reflect what the issues were upon which the testimony was taken, as follows:

(1). Appellants are citizens and taxpayers, and as such brought this suit on behalf of the school district to protect what they conceived to be the interests of the district, as the directors of the district had refused to bring the suit.

(2). B. L. White is the county treasurer of Fulton County, as alleged in the complaint.

(3). C. W. Dixon was a director of said district and the secretary and acting treasurer of the school board, and the president of the Citizens’ Bank at the time said bank cashed the various school warrants which had been issued by the district in paying the' salaries of school teachers and for other purposes.

(4). That all the school revenues for the fiscal school year of 1919-1920 were paid out on warrants issued for the maintenance of said school, and, in the absence of sufficient funds on hands, and without a petition signed by a majority of the patrons of said district, the directors issued warrants covering the operating cost of the school for the year 1919-1920.

(5). Warrants bearing date 1920-1921 were also issued by tbe directors, although the school revenues collected for the maintenance of said school during the fiscal year 1920-1921 would be absorbed by the payment of warrants previously issued for the operation of the school, and in the absence of sufficient revenue for that school year, and without any petition signed by a majority of the patrons of the school district.

(6). That warrants dated during 1921-1922 were issued, although all school revenues collected for the maintenance of the school during said school year would have been absorbed in the payment of warrants previously issued for the maintenance of the school. These warrants had been'cashed by the Citizens’ Bank for the holders thereof at their face value.' (A part of the relief prayed by the appellants was that these unredeemed, warrants be canceled).

(7). That in 1922 the county treasurer paid on excessively issued and left-over warrants of 1919-1920 all the school revenues of the district collected and turned into the county treasury during the fiscal school year .of 1922-1923, leaving nothing for the maintenance of the school during that year.

(8). That the bonds of the district, which had been issued and used in building an addition, to the schoolhouse, were issued and sold without any election being held in said district for such purpose; were sold below par; the' sale was no.t advertised; nor were any of said bonds registered with the county treasurer or indorsed by the State Superintendent of Public Instruction; and the proceeds from the sale of the bonds were never turned over to the county treasurer, but were delivered to and deposited with the Citizens’ Bank and paid out in cash for building purposes.

(9). (a) Although said warrants were issued in excess of all available revenues on hand or contemplated for the respective fiscal school years during which same were issued, and (b) in the absence of petitions signed by a majority of the district patrons for the employment of teachers for which said warrants were given, they are valid evidences of debt against said special school district, and due and payable as funds are collected and turned into the county treasury from year to year until said warrants are paid.

(10). That the school district made oral, instead of written, contracts with the teachers for whose services the warrants were drawn.

(-11). And when said teachers- were so employed there were no funds on hand with which to pay the teachers, and these contracts of employment were made without any petition signed by a majority of the patrons of the school district.

(12). Said warrants were not registered with the county treasurer within sixty days of their issuance.

(13). The teachers’ contracts were not reduced to, writing and filed with the county -treasurer.

(14). The county treasurer paid out all the school revenues turned into his office from 1919 to 1923 without a copy of any contract of employment of teachers being filed in his office.

Upon these findings of fact, appellants insist that the bonds of the district should be declared void, and canceled; that the warrants anticipating the revenues of the district, which were cashed by the bank, should also be canceled; and judgment was prayed against the county treasurer and the sureties on his bond for. the amount of warrants paid to teachers who had no written contracts, etc.

The court denied the relief prayed, except that it decreed the cancellation of the warrant issued by the district in payment of the interest to the bank on warrants which the bank was carrying.

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Bluebook (online)
284 S.W. 764, 171 Ark. 385, 1926 Ark. LEXIS 452, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/davis-v-white-ark-1926.