Jennings v. Abbeville County

24 S.C. 543, 1886 S.C. LEXIS 77
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedApril 20, 1886
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 24 S.C. 543 (Jennings v. Abbeville County) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jennings v. Abbeville County, 24 S.C. 543, 1886 S.C. LEXIS 77 (S.C. 1886).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Mr. Justice McGowan.

In 1831, the county commissioners of Abbeville let out the contract to build a wooden bridge over Little River at Searls’ Mill, in said county, to Catlett Corley, William Harmon, J. T. Jennings, and J. C. Jennings as the contractors, for $556. After the contract was made, it was changed so as to require rock piers, at the additional cost of $60 per pier (being three in number). There were specifications as to the kind of rock and the manner in which the piers were to be built, requiring “good rock that will not crumble, laid solidly in good hydraulic cement, the workmanship to be very substantial and [544]*544complete,” &c. It was announced that the bridge was finished according to contract, inspected by the county commissioners, and from its external appearance accepted by them in September, 1881, and the claims of the contractors (the whole claim, it seems, was divided among them) were approved by the county commissioners November 7, 1881, and payment in part made, but checks for the balances still due on the contract were not drawn.

Within a few months, during the high waters of January and February, 1882, the bridge fell down. The county commissioners then made a careful examination-of the fallen piers, and, as they thought, discovered for the first time that they had not been built according to contract, but, on the contrary, instead of being built solid with good rock laid in cement, only the rim or outer wall was laid in cement, and the hollow filled up with loose rock from the stream; and having, as they supposed, made this discovery, refused to issue the checks for the remainder of the price agreed to be paid. Thereupon the contractors brought this action against the County of Abbeville. The interest of Catlett Corley had been assigned to one Henry Young, and as he would not join in the action as plaintiff, he was made a defendant.

The defendant demurred, on the grounds that the complaint did not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action, a-nd that the Court of Common Pleas has not jurisdiction to hear and determine an original action upon a county claim. The presiding judge overruled the demurrers, and sent the case to the jury. They found a verdict for the plaintiffs to the extent of the whole balance of the price agreed upon, and'the defendant, County of Abbeville, appeals to this court upon the following grounds: First.. Because his honor erred in overruling the demurrers of defendant: 1. That the complaint did not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action. 2. That the Court of Common Pleas did not have original jurisdiction of the subject matter of the action. And failing in these, then for a new trial. * * *

From the view the court takes of this Case, it will not be necessary to consider any of the grounds of appeal, except the first, as to the demurrers. This is the first case in w'hich the question has been made in this court whether, under the constitution of 1868 and the laws since passed, the board of county commis[545]*545sioners have exclusive jurisdiction to audit and provide payment for that class of demands which, being contracted' by the commissioners as representing the county, are called “county claims,” subject only to the right of appeal; or whether the Court of Common Pleas may take original jurisdiction of such claims and hear and determine them, rejecting or giving judgment against the county precisely as in ordinary cases. There have been cases in which the question might have been made, as, for instance, Ostendorff v. Charleston County, 14 S. C., 403; Holmes & Calder v. Same, Ibid., 146; Edmondston v. Aiken County, Ibid., 622; Wheeler v. County of Newberry, 18 Id., 135; and Duke v. Williamsburg County, 21 Id., 414.

But in these cases the point was not raised, and cannot, therefore, be considered as adjudged. This court, in Wheeler v. Newberry, supra, said : “The court has never been required to consider how a creditor, having a claim already audited, should proceed to enforce it against the county — whether, considering the audit as a judgment of the tribunal established for the purpose of deciding county claims, he should seek to enforce it by mandamus, requiring the county commissioners to have the money raised to pay it, or sue upon it in the Court of Common Pleas to get thereby an enforcible judgment against the county. There is some want of uniformity in the practice of the different States upon the subject, and until the point is made and argued before us, we will make no ruling upon it.” And in the subsequent case of Duke v. County of Williamsburg, supra, Mr. Justice McIver, who delivered the judgment of the court, said: “No question has been raised as to the form of proceeding in this case, and we shall not volunteer to do so. Whether a person claiming to be the creditor of a county can bring his action in the usual form for the recovery of his alleged debt, except in such cases as the right of action is given by statute, or whether he should not submit his claim for audit to the county commissioners, from whose judgment, if unfavorable to him, he may appeal, and after he has thus established his claim, whether his remedy is not by mandamus to compel the county commissioners to levy a tax to pay the same, is a question upon which we prefer to reserve our judgment,” &c.

[546]*546The point is now, however, formally made, and it is necessary for us to decide it. The constitution of 1868 made a new distribution of the judicial power of the State. Section 15, article IV., provides that “The courts of common pleas shall have * * exclusive original jurisdiction in all civil cases and actions ex delicto, * * and appellate jurisdiction in all cases as may be provided by law,” &c. Section 19, article IV., provides as follows : “The qualified electors of each county shall elect three persons for the term of two years, who shall constitute a board of county commissioners, which shall have jurisdiction over roads, highways, ferries, bridges, and in all matters relating to taxes, disbursements of money for county purposes, and in every other case that may be necessary to the internal improvement and local concerns of the respective counties: Provided, that in all cases there shall be the right of appeal to the State courts.”

These sections stand in what is known as the judicial article, and, considered together as parts of the same instrument, seem to show two things: First, that a new body, known as the “board of county commissioners,” was then created, having a local but large jurisdiction, having, indeed, entire charge of county affairs as the one administrative body of the county; not only to -contract but to “audit” and provide payment for all that class of demands known as “county claims.” And second, that these powers are not only original, but in their very nature exclusive; not falling within any other jurisdiction, exceptas provided by appeal to the State courts. This view is fortified by the fact that at the time the constitution was drafted, giving this right of appeal, the counties of the State were not bodies politic and corporate, and as such capable of being sued directly.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

McCall v. Batson
329 S.E.2d 741 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 1985)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
24 S.C. 543, 1886 S.C. LEXIS 77, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jennings-v-abbeville-county-sc-1886.