Franklin County v. Harriman Nat. Bank

19 F.2d 182, 1927 U.S. App. LEXIS 2209
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedApril 18, 1927
DocketNos. 7589, 7590
StatusPublished

This text of 19 F.2d 182 (Franklin County v. Harriman Nat. Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Franklin County v. Harriman Nat. Bank, 19 F.2d 182, 1927 U.S. App. LEXIS 2209 (8th Cir. 1927).

Opinion

STONE, Circuit Judge.

These are separate writs of error from judgments, in two consolidated eases, according recovery on county warrants.

These warrants were issued in payment of a contract to build a courthouse. The statutes of Arkansas prescribe the method of making such contract as follows: Commissioners are appointed by the county court who receive bids and" enter into a tentative contract; they then report such action to the court and, if their action and the contract is approved, it becomes binding. Such was the procedure here. This contract was made, the courthouse built and the warrants delivered to the contractor in pursuance of and in the amounts called for by the contract.

Two contentions urging invalidity of these warrants are presented here. One relates to the form of the warrant. Section 1999 of Crawford & Moses’ Digest of the Laws of Arkansas prescribes a form of county warrant. That form was not followed here. However, these warrants contain all of the essential requirements of the statutory form. In addition, they contain other matters such as prescribing that the warrants are payable at a bank in New York upon a day named and pledging the “faith, credit and resources” of the county to the “punctual payment of this warrant in accordance with its terms.” This court has recently held (Madison Bond Co. v. Scott County, Arkansas, 289 F. 37, 40) that a warrant issued under the above statute is not void because it does not follow the precise statutory form, saying: “If the indebtedness evidenced by them is justly owing, and the stipulation for payment at a future date is without authority of law, the stipu[183]*183lation may well be disregarded and judgment given accordingly.” Under the author•ity of that case, the provisions in these present warrants which go beyond the power given in the statute may be treated as invalid and inoperative without destroying the entire warrant and the warrants upheld as obligations of the county to be treated and paid in accordance with the statutes govem-ing payment of warrants issued in due form.

The second contention is that these warrants are void because issued in direct violation of section 2028 of Crawford & Moses’ Digest. That section is as follows:

“It shall be unlawful for any county court in this state to allow any greater sum for any account, claim, demand or fee bill against the county than the amount actually due, estimating a dollar in county warrants as at par with a dollar in lawful money of the United States, dollar for dollar, according to the legal or ordinary and customary compensation for services rendered, materials furnished, salaries or fees of officers, when the same are paid in said lawful money; nor shall any county court direct the issue of any warrants, nor, if directed in violation of this act, shall any clerk issue any such warrant upon such accounts, claims, demands or fee bills for more than the actual amount so allowed, a dollar in lawful money of the United States and no more.”

The meaning of this section is clearly that the county is forbidden to agree to or to make payment through warrants except upon a cash par value basis. The Supreme Court of the state has declared such construction. In Vale v. Buchanan, 98 Ark. 299, at page 301, 135 S. W. 848, 849, the court said:

“The power and authority to issue county warrants is derived solely from the statute, and before such warrants can be received in payment of the taxes and debts due to the county they must conform to the provisions of the statute authorizing their issuance.”

In Union County v. Smith, 34 Ark. 684, at page 686, the court said:

“It appears from the recitals of the judgment, that the county scrip of Union county was, at the time the expenses charged for in the account were incurred, not worth more .than fifteen cents on the dollar in lawful money, and it is manifest from the face of the judgment, that the charges in some of the items of the account were greatly enhanced by the claimant, and allowed by the court, on account of the depreciation of the county scrip, which was forbidden by statute, and contrary to public policy. Gantt’s Dig. § 602; Goyne v. Ashley County, 31 Ark. 552.
“It may have been difficult for the sheriff to procure guards, etc., and feed them at ordinary money charges, when the eountty, owing to its financial condition, could not meet its current expenses otherwise than by the issuance of depreciated scrip, but the enlargement of allowances on account of such depreciation enhances the evil, is a ruinous public policy and forbidden by law. All who serve the public must receive such compensation for their service as the law provides.”

To the same effect is Goyne v. Ashley County, 31 Ark. 552. The Smith, Goyne and other cases (Barton v. Swepston, 44 Ark. 437; Chicot County v. Kruse, 47 Ark. 80, 14 S. W. 469) were based upon claims not requiring the contract to be publicly let to the lowest bidder. ■ In Watkins v. Stough, 103 Ark. 468, 147 S. W. 443, the state Supreme Court differentiated the above eases on the ground that they applied to contracts not required to be so let and stated the rule as to construction of this section when applied to contracts let to the lowest competitive bidder to be that recovery could not be denied where the lowest bidder had based his bid, in part, upon the depreciated value of county warrants so long as there was no fraud or collusion between bidders (based on that consideration). In that ease there was evidence that the county judge, at the time of the bidding, had announced that warrants were worth 50 or 55 cents on the dollar, but he denied making any such statement and the Supreme Court did not consider any action of the county judge as affecting its conclusion. The heart of the holding is that the cash market price does not govern in competitive bidding, the court (page 471 [147 S. W. 445]) saying:

“In other words, where a contract for constructing bridges or other work is required by law to be let to the lowest bidder, and is so let, then the contract price is the measure of the contractor’s rights, and no* the customary cash market price for the materials furnished or work done. And, unless fraud or collusion to increase the priee by reason of payment in depreciated warrants be shown, the contractor is entitled to recover the amount of the contract priee. If the successful bidder for the contract could only recover the cash market priee of the material and work, then the legal requirement for letting the contract to the [184]*184lowest bidder would be useless. Under the statute, where the lowest bid is accepted and the contract is made pursuant thereto, the contract is mutual, to 'do the work on ’ the one part and to pay the stipulated price on the other, and the contract can not be avoided except by proof of fraud or collusion.”

The case of Stone v. Mayo, 135 Ark. 127, 204 S. W. 751, dealt with other facts and extended the rather narrow rule laid down in the Watkins Case. The bid. there was as follows: *

“T. A. Bettis, Commissioner: We propose to furnish all labor and material to build courthouse at Harrisburg, Arkansas, according to revised plans and specifications prepared by Mitchell Seligman, architect, for the sum of $91,000, payment to be made in courthouse warrants at 70.125 base.”

As that case is cited as controlling here, it is well to have in mind the facts then before the court.

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Related

Goyne v. Ashley County
31 Ark. 552 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1876)
Union County v. Smith
34 Ark. 684 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1879)
Barton v. Swepston
44 Ark. 437 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1884)
Chicot County v. Kruse
47 Ark. 80 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1885)
Vale v. Buchanan
135 S.W. 848 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1911)
Reeves v. Hot Springs
147 S.W. 445 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1912)
Watkins v. Stough
147 S.W. 443 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1912)
Stone v. Mayo
204 S.W. 751 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1918)
Madison Bond Co. v. Scott County
289 F. 37 (Eighth Circuit, 1923)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
19 F.2d 182, 1927 U.S. App. LEXIS 2209, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/franklin-county-v-harriman-nat-bank-ca8-1927.