McKinney v. Robinson, Judge

19 S.W. 699, 84 Tex. 489, 1892 Tex. LEXIS 970
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedMay 3, 1892
DocketNo. 7185.
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 19 S.W. 699 (McKinney v. Robinson, Judge) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McKinney v. Robinson, Judge, 19 S.W. 699, 84 Tex. 489, 1892 Tex. LEXIS 970 (Tex. 1892).

Opinions

HOBBY, Presiding Judge,

Section A. — The appellee, who was the county judge of Wilbarger County, brought this suit on October 31, 1888, against the appellant, who was the county treasurer of said county, and the sureties on his official bond, to recover certain money alleged to have come into the hands of said treasurer after February 10, 1885, and before ¡November 20, 1886, and which he was charged with unlawfully withholding from the county and converting to his own use.

The charges he was alleged to have unlawfully made against the county and money withheld by him consisted of:

1. Commissions on county scrip received by the tax collector of Wilbarger County in payment of county taxes and turned over and delivered to said McKinney as treasurer.

2. Commissions on court house and jail bonds issued by the Commissioners Court of Wilbarger County to pay for the building of a court house and jail in said county.

3. Six hundred and forty-eight dollars and thirty-six cents alleged to have been deposited by said treasurer in bank and not accounted for or paid over by him. '

The defendants answer by general denial and special answer, charging that during McKinney’s said term of office he made reports of moneys received and paid out by him, and quarterly settlements with the Commissioners Court of all debits and credits existing between him and said county; and on ¡November 30, 1886, he turned over to himself, as his own successor, all moneys in his hands as such treasurer; that the money was deposited in bank by order of said court, and that he accounted to said court for said deposit and was given credit therefor; that the said court recognized his right to commissions on said court house and jail bonds, and had in settlement with him allowed the same.

The cause was tried by the court without a jury, and judgment was rendered against appellant for the amount claimed. This appeal is prosecuted therefrom.

*493 Several assignments of error, in proper form, raise the question of the correctness of the finding of the court, that the appellant was not entitled to commissions on the county scrip received by him from the collector and delivered to his (appellant’s) successor; and the further finding, that he was not entitled to the commissions on the amount of the bonds delivered by him to the contractors, which the county had issued for the purpose of erecting a court house and jail; also the court’s conclusion, that the appellant was liable for the amount of the county funds by him deposited in the Wichita Exchange Bank.

These assignments present the material questions involved on this appeal.

There is no statement of facts in the record. But it appears from the findings of fact by the court, that appellant was elected county treasurer for Wilbarger County, in November, 1884; that the bond sued on was executed on February 9, 1885, and approved on the 10th of February, 1885; that appellant entered upon the duties of and held the office until the general election in 1886, at which time he was elected his own successor, and on the 20th day of the same month gave a new bond. That from time to time, after February 10,1885, and before November, 1886, the tax collector of the county received in payment of county taxes county scrip aggregating $4076.85, which he turned over to appellant as county treasurer, who entered the same on his books on the debit and credit sides thereof, as so much money received and paid out by him, for which he charged the county 5 per cent commission. The total commissions charged on the scrip turned over to appellant by the tax collector was $203.05, of which sum the Commissioners Court had allowed him $103.05 as such commissions.

On the 15th of May, 1885, the Commissioners Court ordered appellant to deposit all county funds in the Exchange Bank of Wichita Falls. This order he complied with. The bank failed; there being $648.36 of the funds deposited, none of which was collected by appellant. On the 14th of May, 1886, the Commissioners Court, by an order, allowed him a credit for this sum.

On the-day of-, 18 — , the Commissioners Court of Wilbarger County contracted with Strain, Risely & Swinburne for the building of a jail in said county to be paid for in jail bonds of the county; and thereafter the court caused to be issued such bonds to the amount of $8088, payable to the order of said Strain, Risely & Swinburne, with interest coupons attached.

Again, to-wit, on the 13th of April, 1886, the Commissioners Court contracted with the same parties, Strain, Risely & Swinburne, to build a court house to be paid for in bonds of said county, which the contractors agreed to accept at par; and thereafter said court caused to be issued court house bonds of the county to the amount of $20,000, pay *494 able to the order of said Strain, Bisely & Swinburne, with interest coupons attached.

Under instructions from the Commissioners Court, McKinney, as treasurer, registered the court house bonds and jail bonds above mentioned and delivered them to the said Strain, Bisely & Swinburne, who accepted them in payment for said court house and jail, and thereupon McKinney charged to the county on his book 21 per cent commission on the fund.

The conclusions of law found by the court were:

“1. That the appellant was not entitled to commissions under the law on county scrip received by him from the tax collector in payment of county taxes, and by him turned over to his successor.
“2. That he was not entitled to commissions on court house and jail bonds issued by the county to contractors in payment for the erection of a court house and jail, and which were registered by the treasurer and by him delivered to such contractors.
1 3. That the order of the Commissioners Court directing the deposit of $648.36 in the Wichita bank by the treasurer, and the order of said court releasing him from liability for that sum, were void.”

The exceptions to the petition were properly overruled. The petition alleges with sufficient certainty the amounts retained by the defendant in his hands as commissions. They are alleged to consist of the sum of $203.05, charged by him as commissions on the county scrip received from the tax collector, and $702.20 commissions on the court house and jail bonds delivered by him to Strain, Bisely & Swinburne, contractors, etc., and the sum of 648.36 deposited in the Exchange Bank of Wichita Falls, and which sum he had not collected. Each of the foregoing sums, it was alleged, appellant unlawfully withheld from the county and converted to his own use.

The court correctly found, as a conclusion of law, that the appellant was not entitled to commissions on scrip received by him from the tax collector in payment of county taxes, and by him turned over to his successor. This scrip had performed all of its functions as money when it was paid to the collector by the taxpayer, and it was not received by the treasurer as money belonging to or constituting a part of the county funds in any sense.

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Bluebook (online)
19 S.W. 699, 84 Tex. 489, 1892 Tex. LEXIS 970, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mckinney-v-robinson-judge-tex-1892.