Diggs v. Lobsitz

1896 OK 11, 43 P. 1069, 4 Okla. 232, 1896 Okla. LEXIS 35
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedFebruary 13, 1896
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 1896 OK 11 (Diggs v. Lobsitz) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Diggs v. Lobsitz, 1896 OK 11, 43 P. 1069, 4 Okla. 232, 1896 Okla. LEXIS 35 (Okla. 1896).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Bueeobd, J.:

This is an original action in this court, ■brought by the plaintiff to procure a peremptory writ of mandamus, compelling the defendant, as treasurer of the *233 ■city of Perry, to pay a certain city warrant, of which the plaintiff alleges he is the owner. The alternative writ •and the return constitute the pleadings.

It appears from the alternative writ that the city of Perry is a city of the first class, under the laws of the Territory of Oklahoma, and has been since October, 1893. The defendant, Lobsitz, is the treasurer of the said city of Perry, and, as such officer, has in his posses.sion, belonging to said city, a sufficient amount of money in the general fund to pay all the registered outstanding warrants of said city up to and including registered number six hundred and twenty-four, of which the plaintiff Diggs is the owner. That the plaintiff, Diggs, presented said wrrrant numbered six hundred and twenty-four to the said Lobsitz for payment on the 2d day of December, 1895, and that said payment was refused by said treasurer. That said warrant is for a valid indebtedness of said city, and was on the 28th day of March, 1894, presented to the treasurer for payment, and payment refused for want of funds, at which time said warrant was duly registered and became entitled to payment •out of the general funds of said city in the order of its registration.

An alternative writ was allowed by Associate Justice Bierer, returnable before this court. The city treasurer filed his return to the alternative writ on the 7th day of ■January, 1896, in which it is alleged in substance that on the 9th day of November, 1895, the city of Perry funded its outstanding warrant indebtedness and issued bonds therefor, which bonds were approved, signed and delivered by the district court to said treasurer. That the warrant in question is one of the warrants embraced within said bonds, and for the payment of which said bonds were issued. That said bonds are now in the *234 hands of the city treasurer for sale, but unsold at the date of said return.

Said treasurer further alleges that he has no authority to pay any warrants for the payment of which said bonds were issued from any funds in his hands at this time, but is required to pay the same from the proceeds of the s-üe of said bonds only.

Upon the facts shown by the writ and return, the plaintiff has moved for judgment on the pleadings. But one question is presented for our consideration. The case has not been briefed and in the oral argument no authorities were cited bearing upon .the indentical question here presented. The question calls for an interpretation of our Statutes relating to warrant and bonded indebtedness of cities of the first class.

It is conceded that the warrant in question was for a. valid claim and regularly issued and registered for the lack of funds to meet its payment at the time of its presentation. It is also conceded in the argument that in the month of November, 1895, the city of Perry, by its-proper officers, went before the district court of that county and proceeded to and did, issue bonds for the purpose of funding the outstanding legal indebtedness of said city, and that the warrant in question is one of the warrants embraced within said bonds and for the payment of which said bonds were issued.

It is contended by the plaintiff, that inasmuch as the statute which provides for .the issuance of warrants on the city treasury, requires that said warrants shall be paid in the order of their registration, whenever funds are in the hands of the treasurer sufficient to meet the same, that the issuance of funding bonds does not defeat this right, but that the warrants embraced within the funding bonds are still payable within the*order of their *235 registration from any funds in the hands of the treasurer, and that when said bonds are sold, the funds realized from such sale should be applied to the payment of an equal amount of outstanding warrants in the order of their registration, without any reference to the question as to whether or not such warrants were in existence at the time of the issuance of such bonds. This contention is untenable under the provisions of the Statute relating to the subject of municipal indebtedness. These bonds were issued under an act of the legislative assembly, approved March 8, 1895, Session Laws 1895, ch. 7, p. 63. By the provisions of said act, any city of the first class is authorized and empowered to refund its outstanding legal warrant indebtedness in the order of registration,, and to issue bonds for that purpose in a sum not exceeding the amount of such indebtedness, nor in excess of' four per cent, of the assessed valuation according to the last preceding assessment of such municipality. The act further provides the means of determining the amount of indebtedness; the manner in which the officers shall proceed and how the bonds shall be signed, issued, delivered to the treasurer and sold. It' is provided in section four among other things that, “the proceeds of such bonds shall be applied to the payment.of the outstanding warrant indebtedness and the interest upon the same, and for no other purposes.”

The act further provides for the levy of a sufficient, amount of tax each year to pay the annual interest upon, the bonds, and at the proper time a levy sufficient to pay the principle of said bonds as the same become diie.. Section 9 of said act is as follows:

“Any person who shall appropriate, use, aid or abet in the appropriation or using any of the funds mentioned in this act for any other purpose than as in this act pro *236 vided, shall be deemed guilty of a misdemeanor, and upon conviction thereof shall be fined in a sum double the amount of money so appropriated or used, and imprisoned in the county jail for not less than three months, nor more than one year, and he and his bondsmen shall also be liable in a civil action for the amount so appropriated or used, to be prosecuted by any bondholder or other party entitled thereto.”

By § 10, the interest coupons upon such bonds, so soon ■as they become due, are made receivable in payment the same as money for taxes due the city.

A person who deals with a municipal corporation deals with it with reference to the law governing such corporation, and is bound by such law. The law providing the means and manner of payment by a municipal corporation, is incorporated into and becomes a part of, any contract between such corporation and any other person.

When the plaintiff in this case accepted his warrant from the municipal authorities, he took it subject to the conditions and on the terms prescribed by law for its payment. The law at that time provided that when such warrant was issued it should be presented to the treasurer for payment, and if no funds were in the treasury for the payment of the same, the treasurer was required to indorse the same “Not paid for want of funds,” and register the same in a book kept for that purpose, and the payment of said warrant was then postponed until such time as it could be paid from funds to come into the treasury, in the order of its registration. The law at that time authorized cities of the first class, Statutes 1893, art.

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Bluebook (online)
1896 OK 11, 43 P. 1069, 4 Okla. 232, 1896 Okla. LEXIS 35, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/diggs-v-lobsitz-okla-1896.