Frohmiller v. Board of Regents of University & State Colleges

171 P.2d 356, 64 Ariz. 362, 1946 Ariz. LEXIS 154
CourtArizona Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 1, 1946
DocketNo. 4905.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 171 P.2d 356 (Frohmiller v. Board of Regents of University & State Colleges) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Arizona Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Frohmiller v. Board of Regents of University & State Colleges, 171 P.2d 356, 64 Ariz. 362, 1946 Ariz. LEXIS 154 (Ark. 1946).

Opinion

STANFORD, Chief Justice.

Appellant, who was the plaintiff in the superior court of Maricopa County, will in this opinion be termed as such, and the ap-pellee styled defendant.

Plaintiff, as auditor of the state of Arizona, had presented to her for approval certain claims by defendant. The claims were against funds of the University of Arizona, Arizona State College at Tempe and Arizona State College at Flagstaff.

Plaintiff’s complaint alleged that "defendant, acting through its duly authorized agents and employees, contends that the expenditures evidenced by said claims, and each of them are for a public purpose, are properly and legally payable out of state funds, and has requested plaintiff to issue her warrant in payment of said claims.

“That plaintiff as State Auditor of the State of Arizona, denies that the expenditures evidenced by said claims, or any of them, are for a public purpose, denies that said expenditures are properly or legally payable out of monies of the State of Arizona, and has refused to issue her warrant in payment of said claims, or any of them.” °

The position of plaintiff is set forth in her proposition of law:

“It is the duty of the appellant as Auditor of the State of Arizona to examine each claim filed with her calling for the expenditure of public funds, and disapprove and refuse to allow any expenditures she believes is not for a public purpose, and the auditor, if she approves an expenditure which is not for a public purpose, is liable for the amount thereof plus a 20% penalty, even though she has acted in the utmost good faith.”

Two classes of claims were presented by defendant. 1. Claims for dues for membership of the respective institutions herein mentioned in certain activities. 2. Claims for reimbursement for travel attending conventions of association meetings. The claims in class 1, plaintiff claims, are mostly for membership dues in specified educational societies or associations. Plaintiff feels compelled to resist this class of a claim because of our case of City of Phoenix v. Michael, 61 Ariz. 238, 148 P.2d 353, 354.

In the case of City of Phoenix v. Michael, supra, the plaintiff, E. W. Michael, a taxpayer of the City of Phoenix, brought an action to enjoin the city.and its officers from expending the city’s public funds in the payment of its dues and assessments as a member of the Arizona Municipal League, and this court said:

"* * * The vital question for decision then is whether the public money expended by the Municipal League, to maintain its activities as enumerated, is for a public purpose.”

*364 The Michael case, supra, quotes from In re State ex rel. Thomas v. Semple, Director of Finance, 112 Ohio St. 559, 148 N.E. 342, 343:

“* * * the court held the city was without power or authority to contribute to the support and maintenance of the so-called ‘Conference of Ohio Municipalities.’
* * # * $ *
“ ‘It does not follow, from the broad powers of local self-government conferred by Article 18 of the Constitution of the state, that a municipal council may expend public funds indiscriminately and for any purpose it may desire. The misapplication or misuse of public funds may still be enjoined, and certainly a proposed expenditure, which would amount to such misapplication or misuse, even though directed by a resolution of council, would not be required by a writ of mandamus. Without considering the validity of such a provision, it must be conceded that there is no express provision of the charter of the city of Cleveland relative to the contribution from the treasury of the city to a fund made up of contributions of various municipalities for the purposes enumerated in the Constitution of the “Conference of Ohio Municipalities,” and no general provision from which authority may be inferred to expend the funds of the city to assist in creating and maintaining an organization with offices and officers entirely separate from those of the city, selected by representatives of various municipalities of the state, with salaries and expenses also fixed by them.’
“There is no expression in the Phoenix charter concerning the expending of the city’s public money to maintain the Arizona Municipal League, or any other organization of its kind.”

So it appears that the case of City of Phoenix v. Michael was decided on the lack of power by the charter of the City of Phoenix to allow the expenditure of funds for membership in the Arizona Municipal League.

In 1945 the regular session of our 17th legislature passed Chapter 103, being an act making appropriations for the different departments of the state, for state institutions, for public schools and for interest on the public debt. That bill became a law before the expenditures of the monies involved in this action, and in said Chapter 103 under the heading of “Arizona State College at Flagstaff, Arizona State College at Tempe and The University of Arizona,” is the following:

“Lump Sum Appropriation:
“For salaries and wages; for operation, including dues, assessments or membership fees in societies, associations and organizations; for travel to attend meetings, conferences and for other college purposes; for capital investment; for repairs and replacements :”

Plaintiff stated in her brief that “Frankly, the appellant is in accord with this con *365 tention by the appellee but believes that this Court has held to the contrary in Michael v. City of Phoenix.” While it is true that in the City of Phoenix v. Michael case, supra, the City of Phoenix lacked proper authority through its charter to expend certain funds, the reasoning in the case of People v. Bunge Bros. Coal Co., 392 Ill. 153, 64 N.E.2d 365, 371, shows the trend of courts to a broader view in allowing the use of taxpayers’ money. From said case we quote:

“Appellant next argues that it was error to sustain the objection to the appropriation and levy for dues to be paid to the Illinois Municipal League, $3,000; dues to be paid to the United States Conference of Mayors $3,000, and the purchase of works of art $2,000. The trial court held these appropriations were not for corporate purposes. We are of the opinion that so far as the payment of dues to the Illinois Municipal League and the United States Conference of Mayors are concerned, these represent not appropriations to private corporations, as argued, but appropriations to the city to be used for payment of dues in these organizations by reason of the benefit to be derived from the service given by such corporations. It seems clear that the discussion, by mayors and other city officials, of problems affecting the well-being of their respective cities, and the study of conditions affecting taxpayers of municipalities, are public purposes, and moderate appropriations for those purposes are justified. * * *”

The State of Arizona, however, has specially enacted a law.

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Related

Austin v. Campbell
370 P.2d 769 (Arizona Supreme Court, 1962)
Board of Regents of University & State Colleges v. Frohmiller
208 P.2d 833 (Arizona Supreme Court, 1949)
City of Glendale v. White
194 P.2d 435 (Arizona Supreme Court, 1948)

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Bluebook (online)
171 P.2d 356, 64 Ariz. 362, 1946 Ariz. LEXIS 154, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/frohmiller-v-board-of-regents-of-university-state-colleges-ariz-1946.