Fountain v. State Ex Rel. Hybart

97 So. 59, 210 Ala. 51, 1923 Ala. LEXIS 127
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedFebruary 1, 1923
Docket1 Div. 259.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 97 So. 59 (Fountain v. State Ex Rel. Hybart) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fountain v. State Ex Rel. Hybart, 97 So. 59, 210 Ala. 51, 1923 Ala. LEXIS 127 (Ala. 1923).

Opinion

*52 SAXRE, J.

Appellees petitioned the circuit court for a writ of mandamus to require appellant. Fountain, as judge of probate and ex officio president of the board of revenue, to register their claim as provided by sections 146 and 147 of the Code, “to record in the minutes ,on the minute book of said board of revenue of the meeting <3f May 9,1922, the action of said board of revenue allowing said claim of your petitioners by said board,” and issue to petitioners a warrant for a certain sum of money on account of a claim for services rendered to the county which, the petition alleged, had been'audited and allowed by the board of revenue. Respondent answered, and to the answer relators demurred. The demurrer being sustained, respondent refused to plead over and judgment went for relators, after which this appeal.

Respondent’s answer alleges certain facts, and those allegations are admitted by the demurrer. Therein it appears that a majority of the hoard, on May 9, 1922, voted to allow the claim of relators, but that decision of a majority of the board was never registered in the hook kept by the board for the purpose of showing claims as required by sections 146 and 147 of the Code, and thereafter, on August 19th, the board again considered the claim and disallowed the same; this order of disallowance being shown by the minutes of the board, a copy of which is exhibited with respondent’s answer. What occurred with reference to this claim is shown in greater detail by the petition, the allegations of which, so far. as not in conflict with the answer, are accepted as true. The majority of the hoard, on May 9th aforesaid, voting for the allowance of the claim, indorsed on the back thereof the word “Allowed,” and signed their names thereunder, after which the board adjourned sine die. ihe allegation of the answer is:

“That on ihe same date, and soon after the adjournment of the said meeting of the board, respondent was advised by a member of said board that one of the members of said board who had voted for allowing said claim bad considered the matter, and reached the conclusion that he had acted too hastily in voting for the allowance of said claim, and desired to change his vote in order that the consideration of the claim might be continued to a subsequent meeting of the board in order that a proper investigation might be made by the board as to the reasonableness of the claim and the propriety of allowing same for the amount claimed; that he, together with the member of the board originally opposing the allowance, desired to have their vote so recorded as to effect a continuance of the consideration of said claim.
“Respondent further shows to the court that under these circumstances he did not at the time feel that record of this proceeding was essential; therefore he made no record of the proceeding, did not register the claim as allowed, and did not issue a warrant therefor.”

The authorities in other jurisdictions are not in accord as to the effect of a decision of the commissioners’ court allowing or disallowing claims against .the county. But in this jurisdiction it is firmly settled that—

“The audit and allowance of claims against thg county is the exercise of administrative or executive, not of judicial, power.” State v. Goldsmith, 162 Ala. 171, 50 South. 394, and authorities there cited; Converse Bridge Co. v. Geneva County, 168 Ala. 432, 53 South. 196; Mobile County v. Williams, 180 Ala. 639, 61 South. 963.

Section 3314 of the Code requires the judge of probate to record the proceedings of the commissioners’ court, in lieu of which the board of revenue has been created with like powers in Monroe county, but does not provide when he shall enter them of record. As to that, this court in Goodson v. Dean, 173 Ala. 301, 305, 55 South. 1010, referred, doubtfully, to subdivision 2 of section 5421 of the Code, prescribing the duty of the judge of probate “to keep minutes of all bis official acts and proceedings; and, within three months thereafter, to record the same,” as furnishing a rule perhaps in respect of his duty to record the proceedings of the commissioners’ court as laid down in section 3314 of the Code. But further as to this see Adams v. Southern Railway, 176 Ala. 323. 58 South. 397. Sections 146 and 147 require that all claims against the county, passed upon and allowed, must be entered in a hook kept for that purpose within two weeks after the term at which such allowances are made, “and the. judge of probate must give the claimant a warrant on the treasury for the amount so allowed.” Neither of these records was ever made of the action of the court in this case, or a majority thereof, on May 9th. In .view of what was said in Speed v. Cocke, 57 Ala. 223, and in the recent case of Mobile County v. Maddox, 195 Ala. 336, 70 South. 259, and the intervening cases therein cited, it is clear enough t-hat there is no record such as the law contemplates (Code, § 3314), of the alleged allowance of appellees’ claim on May 9th. In Speed v. Cocke it was held that the book required by sections 146 and 147 of the Code .for the registration of all claims allowed is *53 not a record of an allowance ordered by the court, and in that ease the court said:

“If the statute had not declared the court of county commissioners a court of record, if it had only fixed the time of its terms, and required that within the term it should exercise its jurisdiction and authority, from the very nature of the jurisdiction and authority with which it is clothed, its recognition as a court of record would have been an inevitable necessity. It could not have been supposed, unless every suggestion of ordinary prudence was disregarded, that the evidence of its proceedings should rest in the fleeting memory of witnesses to its transactions, or be committed to the uncertainty of vague and indefinite memoranda, made by those who were present at these transactions, though in them they may have participated.”

There is therefore, for aught appearing in the statement of facts composed from the Xileadings in this cause, but one competent record — indeed, but one record of any character whatever — of any action taken by the board of revenue in the matter of appellees’ claim against the county, and the action so shown was against the allowance of the claim. In Speed v. Cocke, supra, a case in which the question arose whether a claim that had been presented to the commissioners’ court had been allowed, it was said:

“The allowance of the claim must be matter of record. A court of record speaks only through its records. A written memorial is the only evidence which other courts can receive of its proceedings, whether it is of the exercise of judicial power, or of mere ministerial authority and duty.”

The court further quoted from Wade v. Odeneal, 14 N. C. 423, as follows:

“Courts of record speak only in their records. They preserve written memorials of their proceedings, which are exclusively the evidence of those proceedings. If they choose to keep minutes, which they understand, and can act on to their satisfaciion, it is well. If, from them, they can undertake afterwards to draw out the record to perpetuate it to their successors, or to communicate its contents to another, I know nothing to x>revent them but tlie difficulty in their own minds of being sure they make it what it was originally intended to he.

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Fountain v. State Ex Rel. Hybart
100 So. 892 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1924)

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Bluebook (online)
97 So. 59, 210 Ala. 51, 1923 Ala. LEXIS 127, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fountain-v-state-ex-rel-hybart-ala-1923.