Jackson County v. Derrick

117 Ala. 348
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedNovember 15, 1897
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 117 Ala. 348 (Jackson County v. Derrick) 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
Jackson County v. Derrick, 117 Ala. 348 (Ala. 1897).

Opinion

BRIOKELL, C. J.

The case is an appeal from a decree of the court-of chancery, sustaining demurrers and dismissing for want of equity, an original bill for relief, in which the appellant was the party complainant. The principal purpose of the bill is, to compel the sureties on successive bonds of a deceased county treasurer, to an accounting of the fine and forfeiture fund, the principal had received, and to the payment of such parts thereof as he had misappropriated. The misappropriation consisting in the application of the fund to the payment of claims which were not legally chargeable upon it, and in the payment more than once, and in the overpayment of other claims which in their nature and character were chargeable upon and payable from the fund.

The argument chiefly pressed by the counsel for the appellees, in support of the decree dismissing the bill for want of equity, rests upon the proposition that a county has not in and to the fine and forfeiture fund, such right and interest, as entitles it to sue a county treasurer for its misappropriation — that the right of suit or of action resides exclusively in the State, or in claimants of the fund to whose use the statutes appro[357]*357pri’ate it, and who may be disappointed by the official delinquency.

The general statute now devotes the fund' primarily, to the payment of the costs and fees attending the administration of the criminal law. The local statute prevailing in the county of Jackson, as will appear hereafter, in some particulars varies from the general statute, while it devotes the fund to like uses to which it is devoted by that statute ; but it works no change in the duty and liability of the county treasurer in respect to the fund, nor in the ownership of the fund.

The fund had passed into the county treasury; there was no other depositary of it, and upon the treasurer devolved the duty of keeping and disbursing it according to law. Consistently with the allegations of the bill, the misappropriation imputed to the treasurer had not diminished the fund to such an extent that it was insufficient to satisfy all outstanding claims upon it, if any such claims there were. And if such claims existed, a misappropriation, nor the waste or conversion of the fund by the treasurer would not have furnished the claimants a cause of action. The duties of the treasurer are prescribed and carefully enumerated by the statute, (Code of 1886, § 915; Code of 1896, § 1429.) The greater part of these duties are owing to the public, as represented by the county, and are readily separable and distinguishable from the duties imposed for the benefit of individuals, and owing them peculiarly. The duty to individuals, as it may be summarized, is the' payment from funds in the treasury of claims against the county, and of claims on the fine and forfeiture fund, on presentation, in the order and-upon the conditions of payment, the statutes may prescribe. A misappropriation, or the waste or conversion of funds coming to the possession of the- treasurer, would not avoid or excuse the neglect or non-performance of the duty, and is not the injury which entitles the individual having claims against the county, or claims upon the fine and forfeiture fund, to maintain suits because of the official delinquency — it is the non-payment of the claims on presentation, in the order and upon the terms and conditions of payment, the statutes may prescribe, funds haying come to the possession of the treasurer properly applicable in payment,- which constitutes the [358]*358official liability, and furnishes each disappointed claimant a cause of action. In Mechem on Public Officers, § 597, it is said: “The liability of a public officer to an individual is based upon and is co-extensive with his duty to the individual or the public. If to the one or the other he owes no duty, to that one he can incur no liability.” In the succeeding section it is said: “The first question for determination, therefore, in considering the liability of a public officer to private action, is whether that officer owes any duty to the individual complaining. If he does not, then the individual has no right of action, even though he may have been injured by the action or non-action of the officer.” The safe-keeping of the moneys of the county, and their disbursement according to law, is the primary duty of the county treasurer — a duty owing to the public, and not to individuals. If there is a breach of the duty, followed by a loss of the moneys, whether the loss results from misappropriation, or from waste, or conversion, the title to and ownership of the funds' determines the right of suit or of action. If title and ownership resides in the State-, the county may not sue — and conversely, if title and ownership resides in the county, the State may not sue.—People v. Ingersoll, 58 N. Y. 1. This brings us to a consideration of the remaining point, on which the ai’gument ixi sxxppox’t of the decree dismissing the bill depends.

The coxxstituents of the fuxxd are fines — the pecuniaiy punislxxnent of misdemeaixors, the mulcts or penalties ixnposed for contempts by courts or judicial officers, and the penalties ixxflicted oxx non-attending jurors in obedience to suxnxnons ; forfeitures — the adjudged breaches of recogxiizances of bail taken in criminal cases, and of recognizaxices of witnesses for the State, and the penalties adjudged against such witnesses for neglect to obey the mandates of subpcexxas issixed to and served xxpon them. Having these constituexits, distinguished, from all other public fuxids or revenues by the sources from which it is derived, the fund has existed from the earliest pexiod of legislatioxi.—Scruggs v. Underwood, 54 Ala. 186 ; State v. Coleman, 73 Ala. 550; Herr v. Seymour, 76 Ala. 273; Sessions v. Boykin, 78 Ala. 328. Issuing from violations of the criminal law7, and from the breaches of obligations and duties to the State, all of right, title and interest in [359]*359and to the fund and the consequent capacity to maintain actions or suits, of which it may be the subject matter, could not, in the absence of legislation providing otherwise, reside elsewhere than in the State.

The fund, originally, was payable into the territorial treasury, not impressed with or devoted to any particular uses or purposes, subject, as were all'other-public funds or revenues, to legislative appropriation, and the territorial auditor of public accounts was authorized to maintain suits against delinquent officers charged with duty in respect to it. — Laws of Ala., 214, § 44; 216, § 56; 864, § 44; 365, §§ 1-6; 367, §§ 1-3. In 1815, an act was passed, as expressed on its face, “for the purpose of providing a fund to pay county expenses, ” declaring among other things, that thereafter, all fines and forfeitures should be paid into the treasury of the county in which they were incurred, “and not into the territorial treasury.” The clerks of the courts were required to make to the county treasurer, the reports and accounts of the fund, they had been required to make to-the territorial auditor of public accounts, and to pay him the money when collected, at the same time, and in the same manner, they had been required to make payment into the territorial treasury; and the county treasurer was authorized to maintain suits against officers delinquent in the performance of duty in regard to the fund. Laws of Ala., 672, § 3. Legislative power over public revenue, from whatever source derived, .no element of contract intervening, compelling a particular application or appropriation, is unrestrained by constitutional limitation.

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Bluebook (online)
117 Ala. 348, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jackson-county-v-derrick-ala-1897.