Marks v. Trustees of Purdue University

56 Ind. 288
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedMay 15, 1877
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 56 Ind. 288 (Marks v. Trustees of Purdue University) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Marks v. Trustees of Purdue University, 56 Ind. 288 (Ind. 1877).

Opinion

Howk, J.

In this action, the appellee was plaintiff', and the appellant was defendant, in the court below. Appellee’s complaint alleged, in substance, that it was a corporation, under and by virtue of an act of the General Assembly of this State, entitled “An act accepting certain donations from John Purdue and others, and locating'and naming the college contemplated by the act of Congress, approved July 2,1862, providing for its organization and management, adding a member to the trustees of the Indiana Agricultural College, and changing the corporate [289]*289name of said trustees, and declaring an emergency,” approved May 6th, 1869, 1 R. S. 1876, p. 60; that on the 7th day of June, 1870, the appellee received a certain county order, drawn by the then.auditor of Tippecanoe county, Indiana, in these words, to wit:

“No. 2181. Lafayette, Ind., June 7th, 1870.

“ Treasurer of Tippecanoe .County: Pay to Martin L. Pierce, treasurer board of trustees of Purdue University, ten thousand dollars, subject to the payment of all delinquent taxes, for first instalment of appropriation made January 14th, 1869.

“ $10,000.

(Signed,) “A. J. Castater, A. T. C.

“ H. Gates, Deputy.”

That said Martin L. Pierce was then appellee’s treasurer, and on said 7th day of June, 1870, he presented said order for payment to appellant, then the treasurer of said county, at said treasurer’s office, ■who then and there had funds of said county applicable to the payment of said order in his hands, more than sufficient to pay said order; that appellant refused, on said presentation, to pay said order, or to endorse thereon that it was not paid for want of funds; that on the 22d day of June, 1870, at the May term, 1870, of the court of common pleas of said county, appellee filed its petition therein against appellant, praying for a mandate to compel him to pay said order, or, if it should appear that there was no money in the treasury of said county to pay the same, to make the endorsement required by law, to which petition the appellant appeared at said May term, and such proceedings were had, as that, at said term, to wit, on the 10th day of August, 1870, it was then ordered and adjudged that the appellant should pay the said order of ten thousand dollars, and the costs of suit; that, from said order and judgment of the said court of common pleas, the appellant appealed to the • Supreme Court, where the said order and [290]*290judgment, on the — day of-, 1872, were in all things affirmed; that afterward, on the 28th day of March, 1872, appellant paid to the clerk of said court of common pleas ten thousand dollars, saying, claiming and directing at the time, that he paid said sum in obedience to the mandate of said common pleas court, under the decision of the Supreme Court, which sum, on the same day, the appellee, by its said treasurer, Pierce, di’ew from said clerk, giving a receipt therefor in these words, to wit:

“ Received of Dan’l Royse, clerk, March 28th, 1872, ten thousand dollars in full of said amount, paid to him by Jacob F. Marks, ex-treasurer of Tippecanoe county, being amount of the original county order, less interest and cost. [Signed,] M. L. Pierce,

“ Treasurer of Purdue University.”

And the appellee charged, that, during all the time intervening between the said 7th day of June, 1870, when payment of said order was refused by appellant, up to said 28th day of March, 1872, when he paid said ten thousand dollars to the clerk, said ten thousand dollars was in the appellant’s personal use and control, and that, by lending the same to other parties and by the use of it himself, he realized and received, as interest on said sum, moneys amounting to one thousand five hundred dollars, all of which rightfully and legally belonged to appellee, who, on said 28th day of March, 1872, demanded the same of appellant, but the payment of which he refused and had ever since refused: wherefore appellee demanded judgment for three thousand dollars damages, etc.

Appellant demurred to this complaint, for the alleged insufficiency of the facts therein to constitute a cause of action, which demurrer was overruled by the court below, and to this decision appellant excepted.

Appellant then answered, in three paragraphs, the appellee’s complaint, as follows:

First. A general denial;

Second. In the second paragraph of his answer, ap[291]*291pellant admitted, that, on the 7th day of June, 1870, he was treasurer of Tippecanoe county; that, on said day, the county order for ten thousand dollars, mentioned in the complaint, was drawn by the county auditor, and the presentation of said order by appellee’s treasurer to appellant he also admitted; but he said that he refused to pay said order, because he had no funds 'in his hands at that time applicable to the payment of said order, and because he believed said order was issued without any warrant or authority of law, and, for the same reason, he refused to endorse the order not paid for want of funds; and appellant also admitted the proceedings of appellee against him, by mandate, in the court of common pleas of said county, the order and judgment of said court therein, his appeal therefrom to the Supreme Court and its affirmance of said order and judgment, as the same were alleged in appellee’s complaint; and the appellant alleged, that afterward, on the — day of-, 1872, in obedience to the judgment of the Supreme Court, he paid into the office of the clerk of the court below the sum of ten thousand dollars, and took his receipt therefor in the words and figures following, to wit:

“Received of Jacob F. Marks, ex-treasurer of Tippecanoe county, ten thousand dollars, which he claims to now pay in obedience to this mandate, under the decision of the Supreme Court, March 28th, 1872.

“ Daniel Royse, Clerk.”

And that, on the same day, the appellee, by its treasurer, received and accepted said sum of ten thousand dollars, and receipted therefor, setting out a copy of the same receipt set out in appellee’s complaint. And appellant averred, that he held said sum of ten thousand dollars as the treasurer of said county, and in no other or different capacity, and that was the whole sum received and retained by him as applicable-to said order and judgment. Wherefore, etc.; and,

Third. The third paragraph of appellant’s answer sets [292]*292out the record of a suit commenced on the 27th day cf July, 1870, in the court helow, by one Orra Dawson, against the appellant and others, the object of which suit was to enjoin the issue and payment of certain county orders, including the one described in appellee’s complaint in this action, and the judgment of the court below in said suit, against said Orra Dawson, and her appeal from that judgment to the Supreme Court.

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Bluebook (online)
56 Ind. 288, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/marks-v-trustees-of-purdue-university-ind-1877.