De Soto County v. Stranahan

131 So. 640, 159 Miss. 23, 1931 Miss. LEXIS 12
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 5, 1931
DocketNo. 28785.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 131 So. 640 (De Soto County v. Stranahan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
De Soto County v. Stranahan, 131 So. 640, 159 Miss. 23, 1931 Miss. LEXIS 12 (Mich. 1931).

Opinion

McG-owen, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

Plaintiffs in the court below, Stranahan, Harris & Oatis, appellees and cross-appellants here, sued De Soto county, appellant and cross-appellee here, on an alleged contract of purchase of a road bond issue amounting to *26 seventy-five thousand dollars. The declaration alleged a breach of the contract, in that the board of supervisors of the county had sold the bonds to their assignor, and thereafter breached the contract and resold the bonds to another party, alleging in the first count, that the county made one thousand two hundred fifty dollars profit on the sale, and that, if the bonds had been delivered according to contract, the plaintiffs would have made a profit in excess of five thousand dollars, and on the second count alleged a profit of the plaintiffs, in the court below, of two thousand dollars. De Soto county pleaded the general issue, and also gave notice under the general issue, which is unnecessary to state here, as same will more fully appear in the statement of facts in this case.

In the court below the case was tried before the judge, without the intervention of a jury, who rendered judgment in favor of the plaintiffs for one thousand two hundred fifty dollars, from which judgment De Soto county filed a direct appeal, and Stranahan, Harris & Oatis filed a cross-appeal therefrom.

On May 7, 1917, the Yazoo delta continuous highway taxing district was organized and created by the board of supervisors of De Soto county in virtue of chapter 173, Laws of 1916. On November 8, 1922', the board of supervisors of said county entered an order on its minutes accepting the bid of Spitzer & Co. and Tigrett & Co., jointly made, for the purchase and sale of. the bonds of said road district, of the par value of seventy-five thousand dollars at a premium of seven hundred fifty dollars and the costs of printing the bonds. This bid, and acceptance thereof, for the sale of the bonds was made in anticipation of and prior to an election by the qualified electors of the district, which was rendered necessary by the petition of the electorate and the statutes of the state.

On May 6', 1924, the board of supervisors entered a second order to the effect that, when said bonds had been *27 issued and duly executed, they should be delivered to Spitzer & Co. on their bid. On October 8, 1924, the board of supervisors, having- learned that Spitzer & Co. had gone out of business, passed an order accepting the individual bid of Tigrett & Co. for the purchase of said bonds. Tigrett & Co. did not comply with their bid. At the May, 1925, meeting of the board of supervisors it was ordered that advertisements be made for bids on said bond issue. On June 2, 1925, the said bonds of the said district were sold by the board of supervisors to the Hibernia Securities Company for par and accrued interest with a premium of two thousand dollars.

Oin April 25,1924, Spitzer & Co. assigned for a nominal consideration whatever rights they had in the purchase of this seventy-five thousand dollar bond issue to Stranahan, Harris & Oatis. On May 1, 1924, Spitzer & Co. went' out of business, dissolved its business, and ceased to exist as such.

The offer to purchase these bonds, or bid, was dated November 7,1922, and was jointly made by Sidney Spitzer & Co. and A. K. Tigrett & Co., and was approved as a joint bid for the bonds by the order of the board of supervisors, and the order provided that same was to be void if the election failed. The bid stipulated that the bonds were to be dated January 1, 1923, and that one thousand five hundred dollars, in amount thereof, should mature on January 1,1924, and January 1,1925.

The record does not show that Tigrett & Co. ever notified the board of supervisors that they had withdrawn the joint bid as accepted, or that they had assigned their interest in said bid to Spitzer & Co. The record discloses that there was considerable litigation over a long period of time prior to and subsequent to the election. The letters in the record written by the assignee plainly show that they felt they had a right to withdraw their bid at any time they saw proper; in fact, at one time they *28 demanded a return of their cash deposit as earnest money, and the reply thereto shows that the certified check deposited as earnest money was lost. However, the earnest money is not involved in this litigation.

The appellant contends here that the order of the board of supervisors contracting to sell the bonds of the county before an election was held was void; and, being void, the assignment by Spitzer & Co. to Stranahan, Harris & O'atis was of no effect because Spitzer <&) Co. had nothing to assign, and that the board of supervisors was without power to ratify the order, for the reason that the bid was joint and had to be accepted in its entirety.

On the first proposition, that the board of supervisors was without power under chapter 173, Laws of 1916, to sell the bonds pending and prior to an election authorizing the issuance and sale of the bonds, we are of the opinion that the board of supervisors had no authority to make a binding contract in advance of the authority to issue and sell the bonds. Chapter 173, Laws of 1916, is a special scheme authorizing the boards of supervisors to create road districts for the purposes of constructing and maintaining highways to connect with improved highways of adjoining counties, so as to form a continuous system of improved interstate, intercounty, and interdistrict highways, and for the issuance of bonds for that purpose. The first paragraph of section 2 provides “that before issuing the bonds of the county, county district, supervisors’ district or special road district, for such purpose, it shall be the duty of the board of supervisors to publish notice of its intention to issue the bonds of the county, county district, supervisors’ district or special road district for that purpose, in a newspaper published in the county ánd having a general circulation therein, for three weeks next preceding the meeting of the board of supervisors at which such board proposes to issue such bonds.” The next paragraph provides *29 that, if twenty per cent of the qualified electors of the proposed district petition against the issuance of the bonds, the bond's shall not be issued unless authorized by a majority of the electors voting in an election for that purpose.

’It is conceded here that the contract relied on, if entered into at all, was prior to any election, and that all parties knew that an election in this particular case must be held. The fourth paragraph of section 2 of the act provides, in effect, that the bonds may be issued by the board of supervisors if the result of the election shows a majority of the votes cast in the election to be in favor of the issuance of the bonds.

Chapter 173 is a special statutory scheme by which the boards of supervisors are controlled and regulated, and its terms must be substantially complied with.

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Bluebook (online)
131 So. 640, 159 Miss. 23, 1931 Miss. LEXIS 12, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/de-soto-county-v-stranahan-miss-1931.