Golding, State Auditor v. SALTER

107 So. 2d 348, 234 Miss. 567, 1958 Miss. LEXIS 530
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 8, 1958
Docket40898
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 107 So. 2d 348 (Golding, State Auditor v. SALTER) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Golding, State Auditor v. SALTER, 107 So. 2d 348, 234 Miss. 567, 1958 Miss. LEXIS 530 (Mich. 1958).

Opinion

*574 Kyle, J.

The State Auditor of Public Accounts brought suit in the Circuit Court of Neshoba County, under authority of Section 3877-05, Mississippi Code of 1942, Recompiled, (Ch. 202, Laws of 1948, as amended by Ch. 176, Laws of 1952), against L. B. Salter, Administrator, and Brady Lane, Bien Jackson, Holley Henley, Howard Reagan and Ben Watkins, members of the Board of Trustees of the Neshoba County Hospital, and also the United States Fidelity and Buaranty Company, surety on the official bond of L. B. Salter, seeking to recover large sums of money belonging to the county hospital alleged to have been misappropriated, or otherwise illegally expended *575 by said administrator and said board of trustees during tbe fiscal year beginning October 1, 1954, and ending September 30, 1955. The declaration, as filed, included a demand for tbe repayment of money alleged to have been illegally collected from tbe State Hospital Commission as reimbursement for tbe cost of services rendered to charity patients. But tbe declaration was amended, and tbat item was eliminated before tbe case was called for trial.

Tbe plaintiff alleged in bis declaration tbat tbe said administrator and said board of trustees, on or about December 20, 1954, paid to certain employees of tbe hospital sums of money designated as Christmas bonuses, in tbe total sum of $285, which payments were made in direct violation of Section 66 and Section 96 of tbe Constitution of 1890; tbat said administrator and said board of trustees, during tbe above mentioned fiscal year, issued checks drawn on tbe hospital funds to doctors and patients either as refunds or rebates, without warrant of law and in direct violation of Section 66 of tbe Constitution of 1890, which refunds and rebates total tbe sums of $4,634.79; tbat, under tbe direction of said administrator and said board of trustees, gifts were made from tbe “Employees Insurance Fund” to divers and sundry persons, including members of tbe board of trustees, totaling $412.35, all in direct violation of Sections 66 and 96 of tbe Constitution of 1890; tbat two of tbe trustees, namely, Howard Reagan and Hlen Jackson, sold eggs and beef to tbe hospital for which they were paid tbe total sum of $1733.40, in violation of Section 109 of tbe Constitution of 1890 and contrary to tbe provisions of Section 9027, Code of 1942, Recompiled, (Chapter 292, Laws of 1950); tbat said administrator and said board of trustees made purchases of meat for tbe hospital in tbe amount of $322.25, without advertising for bids therefor, and paid for tbe same out of hospital funds, without demanding or receiving itemized invoices covering tbe *576 same, in violation of Section 9027, Code of 1942, Recompiled, (Chapter 292, Laws of 1950).

The plaintiff also alleged in his declaration that the defendant L. Gr. Salter was paid the sum of $475 in excess of the amount of salary and authorized expenses which he was entitled to receive as administrator for the fiscal year, and that Mrs. Vertice Bozeman, who was employed as bookkeeper for the hospital, was paid the sum of.$175 in excess of the amount of salary which she was entitled to receive under her contract of employment for said fiscal year, all in direct violation of Section 96 of the Constitution of 1890; and that the sum of $47.50 had been unlawfully expended out of hospital funds for the purchase of flowers for employees.

The plaintiff further alleged that the members of the board of trustees and said administrator had authorized and paid to the members of the board of trustees per diem allowance during the fiscal year in the sum of $300 each as compensation for their services as trustees, and that, in addition thereto, the sum of $503.80 had been appropriated out of hospital funds for the payment of premiums on hospital insurance policies for the members of the board and the attorney for the board, all in direct violation of Section 4048, Code of 1942, Recompiled. Itemized statements of each of the above mentioned groups of expenditures were attached to the declaration; and the total amount sought to be recovered was $10,-089.09. The plaintiff further alleged that written demand had been made upon the above named trustees and said administrator for the repayment of the above mentioned illegal expenditures, but despite said written demand, the said defendants had failed and refused to pay the same.

In their answer the defendants admitted that the defendant Salter had paid to certain employees of the hospital Christmas bonuses in the amount stated in plaintiff’s declaration. The defendants stated, however, that *577 the so-called Christmas bonuses were paid as a reward for faithful services, and if such payments were not authorized by law, they were made in good faith, and none of the defendants derived any personal gain therefrom. The defendants denied that the administrator had issued checks to doctors and patients, either as refunds or rebates, as alleged in the plaintiff’s declaration, in the amount of $4,634.79; and the defendants averred that all of the items listed in the schedule of refunds or rebates attached to plaintiff’s declaration represented items of money belonging to the patient or the doctor, or other person to whom such payments were made, and that none of the money belonged to the hospital. The defendants admitted that certain gifts were made, as shown in Schedule “F” attached to the plaintiff’s declaration, and listed as “Expenditures for Gifts from Employees Insurance Funds”, amounting to $142.35. But the defendants averred in their answer that the gifts were not made from the funds of the hospital or other public funds, but from profits realized from the operation of soft drinks and candy vending machines placed in the hospital for the convenience of employees. As to the item of $235 included in these gifts, the defendants stated that that item represented five chairs which were given by the employees to the five members of the board of trustees, without any suggestion being made by the trustees as to such gifts; that the trustees understood and believed that the chairs were given to them by the employees whose names were signed to the gift card, and if there was anything wrong about the gifts each trustee was perfectly willing to return his chair over to the hospital or to reimburse the employees insurance fund for the amount expended for the gift.

The defendants admitted in their answer that the administrator had purchased from Howard Reagan, a member of the board of trustees, during the fiscal year, eggs and beef in the amount of $1342.20, and that the adminis *578 trator had purchased heef from Glen Jackson, a member of the board of trustees, in the amount of $391.20, and that payments had been made therefor to the said trustees out of the hospital funds, as alleged in the declaration.

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Bluebook (online)
107 So. 2d 348, 234 Miss. 567, 1958 Miss. LEXIS 530, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/golding-state-auditor-v-salter-miss-1958.