McLain v. Miller County

23 S.W.2d 264, 180 Ark. 828, 1930 Ark. LEXIS 17
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedJanuary 13, 1930
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 23 S.W.2d 264 (McLain v. Miller County) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McLain v. Miller County, 23 S.W.2d 264, 180 Ark. 828, 1930 Ark. LEXIS 17 (Ark. 1930).

Opinion

Mehaefy, J.

J. H. McLain was county judge of Miller County for four years, and during that time as such county judge and ex-officio road commissioner he had the care, custody and control of the mules and other stock belonging to said county. Immediately after he went into office, January, 1925, he took charge of the stock, and, as county judge rented 80 acres of land from his sisters for the purpose of pasturing and keeping said stock, and it was so used by him during said four-year period. The rental was fixed at $240 a year. J. H. McLain, as county judge, executed one note for $240 as follows:

“Rent note, $240, Texarkana, Arkansas, January 2, 1928, December 31, 1928, I as county judge of Miller County, Arkansas, promise to pay to Mrs. W. J. Timber-lake, and others, or order, at Texarkana, Miller County, Arkansas, $240 for the use of 80 acres of land about two miles east of Texarkana, and situated on the north side of old Rando road; said lands are to be used for pasturing the county’s teams. J. H. McLain, County Judge, Miller County, Arkansas.”

The notes were not paid for quite a while, and, finally, while J. H. McLain was still county judge, he filed a claim in his own name for three of the notes. The claim filed is as follows:

“To J. H. McLain, Dr., Road District No. 5.
“To rent of corral and pasture lands for county’s team for the year 1925.....................................................*...........$240
“'To the same for the year 1926................................................... 240
“To the same for the year 1927...................................................... 240'
“$720”

There was also a claim filed by Hal Green for $96.50, $80 of it being for 160 bales of hay, and $16.50 for alfalfa. This claim was filed in the name of Hal Green. The claims were all properly verified, and were all allowed by the county court, and warrants were issued; one warrant for $80 to Hal Green, a warrant in the sum of $720 to J. H. McLain, and a warrant for $240! to Mrs. J. W. Timberlake. All >of the warrants were paid.

An appeal was taken from the order and judgment of the county court to the circuit court by a taxpayer, and, when the case reached the circuit court, McLain filed a motion to dismiss, and Hal Green also filed a motion to dismiss the appeal. The circuit court overruled the motions to dismiss, and affirmed the judgment of the county court as to the claim allowed Mrs. Timberlake for $240, and affirmed the judgment in favor of Hal Green in> the sum of $80, but disallowed the sum of $16.50 in the Hal Green claim. This appeal is prosecuted to reverse the judgment of the circuit court.

The circuit court disallowed the claim of J. H. McLain for $720, and reversed the judgment of the county court on the ground that McLain had no personal interest in the subject-matter of the claim, and that the allowance of the claim by the county court was void, and should be set aside without prejudice to the claim- being made in behalf of the parties who were entitled to assert the same for rent of pasture for some amount, if any rent should be due, but affirmed the judgment of the county court and allowed the claim of $240 in favor of Mrs. Timber-lake, whose claim was filed in the county court in her own name.

J. H. McLain contends that the motion to dismiss the appeal in the 'circuit court should have been sustained, because it was allowed and paid by the county court to the persons who were entitled to receive the same, and that there was nothing left for the circuit court to try.

It is contended that, because the warrants were issued after the judgment in the county court and paid to the parties to whom they belonged, and because it is contended that there ceased to be an issue, facts having intervened; that is, the judgment of the county court having been paid, rendered the decision of no practical application to the controversy between the litigants.

We do not agree with the appellants in this contention. The law provides that appeals may be granted, as matter of right, from all final judgments of the county court at any time within six months after the rendition of same. Section 2287, 'Crawford & Moses’ Digest. And the statute provides that the circuit court shall proceed to try such appeal cases. Section 2292.

This court said, in a case appealed from the county court to the circuit court: “The judgment of the circuit court disallowing the claim rendered invalid the warrants previously issued under the judgment of the county court; and when they were presented to the county court for" reissuance, that court properly rejected them.” Murphy v. Garland County, 99 Ark. 173, 137 S. W. 813.

The court also said in the above case: “The appeal from the county court was prosecuted by a citizen and taxpayer, who had the right to so prosecute from a judgment allowing a claim against the county.”

The taxpayer had a right to prosecute the appeal from the county court; the circuit court had jurisdiction to try the case, and the fact that a warrant had been issued, before it was tried in the circuit court, was immaterial. When one has a claim allowed in his favor by a county court, he is bound to know that a taxpayer may prosecute an appeal to the circuit court within six months from the judgment allowing the claim. And whether he is paid in the meantime or not, the circuit court has jurisdiction to try the case, and a judgment of the circuit court disallowing the claim operates as a reversal of the order of the county court, and makes void the warrant issued thereunder unless reversed by the Supreme Court.

As we have already said, McLain’s claim was filed in his own name in the county court, and, he had, according to his own testimony, no interest in the claim. He said that he represented his sisters, as their agent. If he did this, he had no right to make a contract with himself as county judge, representing both the county and the owners of the land. A public officer cannot make a legal ¡contract with himself as agent of some other person, whether the contracts are made in good faith or not.

“As the efficiency of the public service is a matter of vital concern to the public, it is not surprising that agreements tending to injure such service should be regarded as being contrary to public policy. It is not necessary that actual fraud should be shown, for a contract which tends to the injury of the public service is void, although the parties entered into it honestly, and proceeded under it in good faith. The courts do not inquire into the motives of the parties in the particular case, fa> ascertain whether they were corrupt or not, but stop when it is ascertained that the contract is one which is opposed to public policy. Nor is it necessary to- show that any evil was, in fact, done by or through the contract. The purpose of the rule is to- prevent persons from assuming a position -where selfish motives may impel them to sacrifice the public good to private benefit. ” 6 R. C. L. 730.

If J. H.

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Bluebook (online)
23 S.W.2d 264, 180 Ark. 828, 1930 Ark. LEXIS 17, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mclain-v-miller-county-ark-1930.