Lewis v. Board of Education

189 S.E. 233, 183 Ga. 687, 1936 Ga. LEXIS 157
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedDecember 4, 1936
DocketNo. 11449
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 189 S.E. 233 (Lewis v. Board of Education) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lewis v. Board of Education, 189 S.E. 233, 183 Ga. 687, 1936 Ga. LEXIS 157 (Ga. 1936).

Opinion

Hutcheson, Justice.

On April 18, 1936, J. F. Lewis, in behalf of himself and others similarly situated, brought a petition against Lowndes County, the Board of Education of Lowndes County, the secretary of said board, the superintendent of schools of said county, the tax-commissioner of the county, and the First National Bank of Valdosta, alleging substantially as follows: The board is indebted to petitioner upon a promissory note, due April 28, 1933, in the principal sum of $2,200, plus interest and attorney’s fees, said, note being a renewal note given for the balance due after successive renewals of a certain note for $7,000 evidencing a loan by petitioner to the board pursuant to a resolution passed at the regular monthly meeting of the board on March 26, 1932. The amount due the board from the public-school fund of the State for the year 1932 was far in excess of the $7,000, and far in excess of moneys borrowed by the board during the year. The board is further indebted to petitioner on certain warrants issued in the years 1930, 1931, and 1932, for legal and authorized expenses of administering and operating the schools of the county. Each of the claims evidenced by the warrants has been approved and audited, and all are for legitimate items of expense which can and ought to be paid out of the common-school fund of the county. These claims are admitted to be due and correct by the school authorities. During the fiscal years 1930, 1931, and 1932, the board did not make any contracts, create any indebtedness, or issue any orders or drafts which involved the expenditure of funds in excess of the funds received by the board from all sources for the support [689]*689of the county schools for the said fiscal years, or in excess of the total funds appropriated to the lawful uses of the board. A considerable portion of the funds received by the board during the years 1930, 1931, and 1932 was used to pay old debts which were valid and lawful obligations of the board. All of the indebtedness sued upon was incurred for the purpose of administering and operating the schools of the county for the years in which the debts were incurred. The claims of petitioner as evidenced by the warrants constitute equitable assignments of so much of the common-school fund as will be necessary to pay them in full, which entitles the petitioner to invoke the aid of a court of equity to preserve said fund and prevent its dissipation as hereinafter pointed out. The county school superintendent is custodian of the common-school fund, and he has said fund on deposit with the First National Bank. In addition there is a balance due the county from the school fund appropriated by the State for the past several years, and the tax-commissioner has on hand a large number of uncollected tax fi. fas. for the past several years, in which there is included a five-mill tax levy for the common-school fund of the county, all of which moneys, when collected, will be turned over to the superintendent of schools. The exact amounts of these various components of the common-school fund are unknown to petitioner, but can be readily ascertained by the defendants. It is the purpose of the board to apply all moneys now on hand and all moneys coming into their hands this year to the payment of liabilities created by the board for the current fiscal year; and on information and belief petitioner avers that such liabilities are sufficiently large to consume all of such funds. Before 1930 the board was heavily in debt, and during the years 1931 and 1932, when tax collections and money from the State were delayed, teachers and bus-drivers were paid by the warrants sued upon. From and after the year 1932 the board so arranged their budget that they would consume all moneys received for each current fiscal year in the operation of the schools for that year, thus making it impossible to pay any creditors who had advanced money to the board in previous years. Payment of petitioner’s claims has not been declined by the board, nor have the claims been repudiated ; but at various times the board has used its funds to pay debts of more recent origin than those' of petitioner. He does not [690]*690know the exact amount of these claims alleged to have been paid. He is not able to show that the county school superintendent or the board now has on hand a sufficient common-school fund to pay his claims; and mandamus will not prevent the diversion of all available funds to the payment of liabilities of the board of inore recent origin than those of petitioner. Discovery was waived. The prayers were for an order restraining the defendants from disbursing any of the funds on hand or to come into their hands until further order of the court; that the bank be required to answer under oath the amount of school funds on deposit; that all funds’ in the hands of any of the defendants or coming into their hands be impounded until it can be determined on what claims and in what proportion the funds should be applied; that petitioner’s claims be paid out of any funds appropriated at any time for the purpose of operating the common schools of the county; for judgment upon the note and warrants; and for such further relief as the court may deem meet and proper. Demurrers to the petition were sustained, and the petitioner excepted.

The petitioner is seeking the aid of a court of equity in the collection of his claims against the school board, on the grounds that he has no adequate remedy at law for the collection thereof; that he has a legal right to compel the payment of the obligations on which he sues, but the processes of the law are inadequate to meet the exigencies of the situation as set forth in the petition. "Equity jurisdiction is established and allowed for the protection and relief of parties, where, from any peculiar circumstances, the operation of the general rules of law would be deficient in protecting from anticipated wrongs or relieving for injuries done.” Code, § 37-102. However, "Equity is ancillary, not antagonistic, to the law;'hence equity follows the law where the rule of law is applicable, and the analogy of the law where no rule is directly applicable.” § 37-103. The rule that equity follows the law has become the first maxim of equity (Carter v. Jordan, 15 Ga. 76), and it can not override and control the positive enactments of the statutes. Persoll v. Scott, 64 Ga. 767.

Is there any statute of this State which, under the alie-' gations of the petition, would deny to petitioner the right to payment out of the school funds from which payment is sought in the present case? We think there is. See Ga. L. 1925, p. [691]*691135, the particular provision of which, as Code § 32-947, denies petitioner such right under the case as made by the allegations of his petition. A careful study of the legislation in this State relating to the common schools, and particularly the act of 1919 (G-a. L. 1919, pp. 288, 363), and the act of 1925, supra, shows an intent on the part of the legislature to systematize and regulate the expenditure of the common-school funds so as to prevent an accumulation of burdensome debts by the boards of education over the State, and to provide for the operation of schools in such mam ner that the expenditures shall not exceed the income. County boards are given authority to borrow money to pay for the operation of the public schools of the county, " provided, that no board of education shall have authority to borrow a sum of money greater in the aggregate than the sum to which the county may be entitled from the public-school fund.” Code, § 32-921.

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Bluebook (online)
189 S.E. 233, 183 Ga. 687, 1936 Ga. LEXIS 157, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lewis-v-board-of-education-ga-1936.