Easterling v. Cook

299 S.W. 1009, 175 Ark. 574, 1927 Ark. LEXIS 494
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedNovember 28, 1927
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 299 S.W. 1009 (Easterling v. Cook) 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
Easterling v. Cook, 299 S.W. 1009, 175 Ark. 574, 1927 Ark. LEXIS 494 (Ark. 1927).

Opinion

Humphreys, J.

This is a suit brought in the chancery court of Chicot County by appellant, a resident landowner and taxpayer in said county, for the benefit of himself and all other taxpayers in the county, to recover from appellees, officers of the county, $42,934.56 alleged to have been illegally diverted by them from the compromise loan bond fund, which was a fund raised by taxation for the purpose of paying the compromised bonded indebtedness of said county to the general revenue fund and to other funds, and used in repairing the courthouse, buying records, constructing bridges and buying in general county warrants, and for $500 alleged to have been misappropriated and paid out of the county general revenue fund and used by one of the appellees, Harry E. Cook, for the purpose of taking a trip on a special train, known as “Arkansas on Wheels,’’ to Washington, D. C.

Appellees filed an answer, denying that the $42,934.14 expended by them for the purposes alleged in the complaint was a part of the fund raised by taxation for the payment of the compromise bonded indebtedness, but that same was derived from a different source, and was legitimately expended by appellees as officers of the county; and that the item of $500 was properly appropriated and expended for the necessary conduct of the county government.

The case was submitted to the court upon the pleadings and testimony adduced at the trial, which resulted in a decree dismissing appellant’s complaint for want of equity, from which is- this appeal.

The record reflects the following facts: In 1895 the Legislature passed Act No. 114, authorizing any county in the State to refund its bonded indebtedness. This act provided that any county issuing bonds for said purpose should also provide for a levy and collection of an annual tax sufficient to pay the annual interest on such funding bonds as they became due and to create a sufficient sinking fund for the payment of the principal when it became due. It also provided that the treasurer of the county might purchase one or more of the-funding bonds at any time be had sufficient funds arising from the tax to do so,' in case the purchaser thereof would sell same. It also provided that the fund arising from the tax should be held and deemed an inviolable sinking fund for the purpose of extinguishing said indebtedness, and to be used for no other purpose.

In 1909 the quorum court of Chicot County proceeded under said act to refund its old bonded indebtedness of $246,600. The refunding bonds were made payable on July 1, 1929, and a tax of five mills was levied from year to year upon all the property in the county to pay the semi-annual interest accruing upon the bonds and to retire the bonds at maturity. A resolution was adopted creating a sinking fund board, consisting of the county judge, county clerk, and the county collector of said county, and directing that funds derived from the special tax as it accrued should be turned over to said hoard and loaned out by it, to the best interest of the county. The fund derived from the special tax was turned over annually to the sinking fund board by the treasurer of the county, which was. loaned to certain banks in said county by said board at five per cent, interest per annum, and, at the time of the trial of this cause, interest on said fund in the sum of $71,348.51 had been earned and collected. All the fund, including the special taxes collected and the accumulated interest, was held and kept together and loaned from time to time to the banks by said board.

Harry E. Cook, one of the appellees, was county judge of said county from 1906 to 1916, during which time the old bonded indebtedness was refunded, and was a member of the sinking fund board that received from the treasurer the compromise sinking fund and loaned same to the banks. In 1916 he went out of office, was reelected in 1920, and again assumed the duties of office in 1921. From that time on he has served the county in the capacity of county judge by election. George Elder, also an appellee herein, has served the county in the capacity of county clerk by election for sixteen years. W. J. Splawn, also an ajipellee herein, lias served the county as its treasurer by election since, January 1, 1917.

When Harry E. Cook assumed the duties of county judge, it was ascertained that about $80,000 in county warrants were outstanding against the general revenue fund, and, in addition to making other provisions to rehabilitate the general revenue fund, which was greatly depleted, so much so that scrip was worth from forty-five to fifty cents on the dollar, it occurred to him that a part of the interest which had been derived from lending the compromise bonded sinking fund might be used to purchase a part of the outstanding warrants and to make necessary repairs on the courthouse, to buy necessary records, and to construct bridges, leaving sufficient in said fund to pay the interest on the compromise funding bonds and to retire them at maturity, and at the same time reduce the five-mill levy materially. He revealed this information by letter to the circuit judge, prosecuting attorney and grand jury, and received their written indorsement of his plan. The plan was published, so that the citizens throughout the county became cognizant of it. He then recommended the plan to the quorum court, which authorized him to use the fund for the purposes outlined. Pursuant to the authority thus vested in him, he appointed the county clerk and the county treasurer trustees to purchase the outstanding warrants which could not be redeemed with money received from other sources, to the amount of $26,375.62, which they purchased for eighty cents on the dollar, using $'21,029.14 of the interest in the compromise bond sinking fund in the purchase thereof. Thereafter, pursuant to the same authority, sums amounting to $21,905 were used out of the interest in said fund to repair the courthouse, buy certain records, and construct certain bridges in the county. The method used was to transfer the amounts needed out of the compromise sinking fund to the general revenue fund and such other funds as was necessary in order to expend the money for the purposes designed. The total amount transferred was $42,934.14. The withdrawal of this amount of interest from the fund lacked $28,413.95 of absorbing all of the interest which had accumulated by lending the fund. The tax fund itself remained intact, except that it was in the hands and under the control of the sinking fund board, instead of being in the hands of the treasurer, where it lawfully belonged. As we read the record, there is practically enough left in the fund to take care of the interest as it matures on the funding bonds, and will be enough in the fund to retire the bonds at maturity. The result was obtained by the adoption and practical operation of the plan suggested by Judge Cook, notwithstanding the quorum court reduced the levy for the compromise bond sinking fund in 1922,1923 and 1924 to 3 mills, and-in 1925 .to 2 mills. The transfer of the portion of the accumulated interest of this fund to other funds for the purposes outlined had the effect of rehabilitating the finances of the county, until scrip is exchanged in the market for face value, or thereabouts.

At the October term of the quorum court in 1923 it appropriated $500 to pay the expenses of Judge Cook to Washington, D.

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Bluebook (online)
299 S.W. 1009, 175 Ark. 574, 1927 Ark. LEXIS 494, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/easterling-v-cook-ark-1927.