Jefferson County v. Hawkins

23 Fla. 223
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedJanuary 15, 1887
StatusPublished
Cited by39 cases

This text of 23 Fla. 223 (Jefferson County v. Hawkins) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jefferson County v. Hawkins, 23 Fla. 223 (Fla. 1887).

Opinion

Judge Foster

delivered the opinion of the court:

This cause comes up on au appeal from the Second Judicial Circuit, Jefferson county.

The action was to recover certain moneys claimed to be due on a debt owed by the county of Jefferson to the appellees, which debt was represented by certain so-called. [226]*226bonds, issued by the County Commissioners of Jefferson county, in the year 1866-7, which bonds were designated in the record as the “ White Bonds,”

The assignments of errors are as follows :

1. There can be but one final judgment in an action at law and when that is rendered the court has no further jurisdiction to entertain further plaints of the plaintiff, or to allow new issues to be joined, and the court erred in allowing this cause to proceed after the first final judgment for these purposes against the objections of the plaintiff in appeal, who was defendant in the court below.

2. The final judgment rendered in this action on the 1st day of December, A.D. 1884, disposed of and terminated the case and the court erred in requiring the plaintiff in appeal to plead to the merits as presented by a new declaration, filed subsequent to the said judgment.

8. All the proceedings herein subsequent to the date of the final judgment aforesaid were coram non judice and the court erred in entertaining the same.

4. The court erred in overruling the plea of the plaintiff in appeal to the new, further and amended declaration, filed by the defendant in appeal subsequent to the final judgment aforesaid, urged upon the ground that the said defendant had no further right to sustain his said action, which said plea was demurred to by said defendant, and the said plea should have been sustained and the demurrer thereto should have been overruled.

5. The new, further and amended declaration aforesaid was defective in its second count, for reasons set forth in the demurrer thereto and the court erred in not sustaining said demurrer.

6. The defendant in appeal having declared upon certain bonds as issued upon certain date and upon the authority of a public board of limited power of a stated date, and the [227]*227said bonds purporting upon their face to be issued upon such authority and at such date, could not support his ease by proof of authority, or assumed authority, of a date later than that alleged in the declaration and subsequent to the actual date of the bonds, and the court erred in admitting ■evidence of such later authority and of later acts ■ of the County Commissioners after the issue of the bonds against plaintiffs objections.

7. The White bonds were illegal and void and were not a proper basis upon which the defendant in appeal could recover, and their connection with the cause was not made apparent, and the court erred in allowing them to be read in evidence.

8. The court erred in refusing to strike from the evidence before the jury retired the entries in the book designated as the record of county bonds relating to the new, or white bonds, issued to Wm. Bailey.

9. The court erred in charging the jury, both in giving the instruction objected to by the plaintiff in appeal and in refusing those asked for by said plaintiff.

10. The court erred in refusing to set aside the verdict of the jury and grant a new trial.

11. The County Commissioners had no power in the issue of negotiable bonds beyond that given by the statute under which they acted. They had no power to issue new bonds or to enlarge the old debt, or to make a new arrangement with reference thereto. Their duty with reference to the bonded indebtedness authorized by such statute upon its maturity was to levy a tax for its payment, and

■ all parties had notice of their powers and were bound thereby, and the court erred in sustaining exercise of other power in the premises.

12. The County Commissioners under the statute authorizing the issue of the bonds to pay for the railroad stock [228]*228mentioned in the declaration had no authority to pay interest and the bondholders had notice thereof. When they made arrangement to do this by the new issue of coupon bonds bearing interest, they exceeded their powers, and the defendant in appeal and his testator who accepted the said bonds, when they received interest upon interest,, were equally in fault, and the amount of the county money unlawfully paid and received by this arrangement as interest should be credited upon the original interest and should not be upheld as a payment? of interest upon interest, and the court erred in charging the jury to the contrary.

13. If the defendant in appeal were entitled to recover interest upon his demand, or any part thereof, he should receive such interest at the rate of six per cent, per annum,, and the court erred in charging that interest should be included in the judgment at a higher rate.

14. The second judgment rendered works wrong and injustice to the plaintiff in appeal.

15. The second judgment rendered herein was illegal,, and if a second judgment could properly have been rendered it should have been rendered for the plaintiff in appeal and not in favor of defendant.

McClellan’s Digest, page 829, section 71, reads as follows: “ Causes of action of whatever kind, provided they . be by and against the same parties and in the same rights, may be-joined in the same suit, but this shall not extend to replevin or ejectment, and when two or more of the causes-of action so joined are local and arise in different counties the venue may be laid in either of such counties,, but the court or judge shall have power to prevent the trial of different causes of action together, if such trial would be inexpedient, and in such case such court or judge may order separate records to be made up and separate trials to [229]*229'be had.” By virtue of the powers vested in him by that section the judge below ordered a separate record and trial •of the issues and allowed the separate issues, designated for •convenience the “ blue bonds ” and “ white bonds,” to be made up, and judgment was entered on the “ blue bonds.” When the issues were joined on the “ white bonds ”- the judgment on the “blue bonds” allowed by the judge was set up as a bar to the suit on the “ white bonds.” The amount sued for in the “ white bonds ” and the moneys due were not one and the same with those of the “ blue bonds ” upon which judgment had been rendered. The cause of action was different. The issue was still undetermined and the court below did not err in overruling the plea. The ■statute leaves the consolidation of causes of action, and the making of separate records and causing separate trials, to be had within the discretion of the judge or court. Appellate Courts will not review the acts of a court below that are discretionary, unless the discretion has been abused or hardship has worked to the injury of either party. We find no abuse of discretion and certainly no hardship was wrought. While it would be always better to have but one judgment when one can be had—when separate records are made up and separate trials had, it is not error to have separate judgments.

The next error assigned is that the court erred in overruling the demurrer to the second count in the amended declaration.

It is clearly beyond cavil that the “ blue bonds ” were legal bonds legally issued, and a just indebtedness of the county of Jefferson.

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Bluebook (online)
23 Fla. 223, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jefferson-county-v-hawkins-fla-1887.