Gibson County v. Rains

79 Tenn. 20
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedApril 15, 1883
StatusPublished

This text of 79 Tenn. 20 (Gibson County v. Rains) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gibson County v. Rains, 79 Tenn. 20 (Tenn. 1883).

Opinion

Cooke, Sp. J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Rains sued Gibson county, before a justice of the peace, upon a number of county warrants, some of which had been issued to him directly by the chairman of the county court, and some issued to other persons and either assigned to him or transferred by delivery. The following are specimens of these warrants :

$44.20.
To the Trustee of the county of Gibson:
Pay to A. W. Bains $44.20 on account of spring jury tickets, appropriation, etc., from 1st of March, 1876.
Allowed April term, 1876.
A. W. Bains, Chairman.
No. 1339, Book A, page 53.
$25.00.
To the Trustee of the county of Gibson:
Pay to Y. :H. Taylor, Trustee, etc., twenty-five dollars on account of amount allowed Mrs. Clay and family as paupers.
Allowed April term, 1875.
A. W. Bains, Ghaimum.
No. 329, Book A, page 13.
Pay to A. W. Bains.
V. L. M. Taylor.
By J. T. Alrord.

All of said warrants were issued before February, •1877. Suit was instituted o'n the 18th of February, 1878. Judgment was rendered in favor of the plaintiff, and the defendant appealed to the circuit court, where the cause was tried by the court without the intervention of a jury, when judgment was rendered [22]*22in favor of the plaintiff below, and the county has appealed to this court.

Various errors are assigned here for reversal.

It is first alleged that the county cannot be sued upon these demands, at least until the plaintiff has followed and exhausted all. the modes prescribed by section 427, and following sections, of the Code for obtaining money from the county treasury.

"We do not think there is anything in this position. The provisions of the Code above referred to were evidently intended to protect the county treasury from peculations, and also to facilitate the collection of claims against the county without suits. But by section 403 of the Code suits may be maintained against a county for any just claim as against other corporations, and process shall be served upon the presiding officer of the county.” And by section 534, where judgment is obtained against a county, the county court shall impose a tax to pay it at the next regular imposition of takes after the judgment; and the taxes, when levied and collected, shall be immediately applied to the payment of the judgment.” The case of Camp v. Knox County, 3 Lea, 199, was a suit upon a county warrant in substance precisely similar to these now under consideration, and the only question made in that case was as to whether or not it 'bore interest as a matter of law; and while this question was determined adversely to the plaintiff in that case, the suit was maintained and judgment rendered in favor of the plaintiff for the amount specified in the warrant with[23]*23out interest. So in the case of Davidson County v. Olwill, 4 Lea, 28, and tbe causes heard with it. These were agreed cases, and the question was whether the county could stipulate by express contract to pay interest upon these warrants" after a given time, and it was held that it could, and judgment was rendered against the county. In neither of these cases was there any question made as to the right of the holder of these demands a,gainst the .county to sue upon them.

It is next objected that these warrants are not instruments of such a character that suits can be predicated upon them. In the case of Bradley County v. Surgoine & Tibbs, 9 Baxt., 407, it seems to have been assumed that they were, but without any discussion of the question or citation of authorities. Yet in a later case (Camp v. Knox County, 3 Lea, 199,) this was seriously questioned. How this is, it is not necessary here to inquire or determine, as in this case no objection was taken in the case below, in any manner, either to the form of the action or the introduction of these warrants in support of it. Under the liberal rules established in favor of proceedings before justices of the peace, we hold that it is too late now to make the objection, as, if it had been done upon the trial below, the proper amendment might have been made under our statutes of jeofail.

The next objection urged is, that as- these warrants are not negotiable, the plaintiff below cannot maintain the suit in his own name upon such of [24]*24them as were assigned to him or transferred by delivery.

The samé answer applies to this as well as to the last objection. This was mere matter of form, and no exception having, been taken in the court below, it was cured by the finding of the court acting in the place of a jury, and cannot now be assigned as error: 1 Heis., 313.

The circuit court allowed interest upon these demands from the time the warrants were presented to the trustee and payment refused because there was no money in the treasury, and it is very earnestly insisted that this was error.

It is very true that these warrants, although drawn in the form of negotiable instruments, are not such by law, and do not bear interest, either from the date of their issuance, or even after demand and refusal of payment, and are simply 'prima facie evidence, in the hands of the holder, of a non-interest-bearing demand against the county. Yet such demand, being left as at common law, and being due and unpaid, a jury, or the court acting as or instead of a jury, had an equitable power to give interest by way of damages, if he thought justice so demanded. And having exercised that power, we see no cause to interfere with it.

It is also urged that the court erred in refusing to allow a continuánce of the cause on the application of the defendant below, in support of which a statement taken as upon affidavit was submitted, to the effect that one Beggs, the then chairman of the [25]*25county court, had been attending to the case; that he was a material witness, and setting forth facts which the counsel deemed material for the defense, and which he expected to prove by said witness, and that letters had been received from him stating that his family and himself were too sick for him to leave them. It is not necessary to inquire whether the facts which it was stated were expected to be proved by said witness were material or not, as it is not shown that he had been summoned as a witness in the cause, or any reason why he was not summoned, or that he or his family were actually sick, or that there was no other witness known to the defense, either present or whose attendance could be procured, by whom the same facts could be proved. It was also further stated that one of .the leading .counsel for the defendant was sick and unable to attend the court, but as the court no- doubt saw that the defense had other leading and competent counsel present, and as the cause had then been in court more than a year, his honor declined to grant the application.

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Bluebook (online)
79 Tenn. 20, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gibson-county-v-rains-tenn-1883.