Merchants' Bank & Trust Co. v. Scott County

145 So. 908, 165 Miss. 91, 1933 Miss. LEXIS 281
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 13, 1933
DocketNo. 30395.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 145 So. 908 (Merchants' Bank & Trust Co. v. Scott County) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Merchants' Bank & Trust Co. v. Scott County, 145 So. 908, 165 Miss. 91, 1933 Miss. LEXIS 281 (Mich. 1933).

Opinion

Ethridge, P. J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

On the 18th day of February, 1929, the board of supervisors of Scott county, Mississippi, gave the following notice:

“Notice is hereby given that the board of supervisors of Scott county, Mississippi, will receive bids in writing on Monday of the next regular meeting of said board, on one grader for each of districts 3, 4 and 5, one Ford truck for district No. 5, and one caterpillar for district No. 5, No. 20.
“This the 18th day of February, 1929.
“BL R. Nichols, Clerk.”

On the 6th day of March following, the board entered the following order on its minutes:- “It appearing to the board that advertisement has heretofore been duly made in manner and for the time required by law, and. that competitive bids have been filed as required by law for the purchase of tractors for road work; the boardi having investigated the entire matter, including the advertisements and bids, is unanimously of the opinion that the bid of The Munson Road Machinery Company to furnish this county one Cletrac Crawler Tractor, 30 HP, without electric starter, and lights, is the lowest and best bid, and the bid which should be accepted, and that said bid does not exceed advertised prices plus freight; It is thereupon ordered that said bid be and the same is hereby accepted, and the said The Munson Road Machinery Company, is hereby directed to deliver to Scott Beat # 5 County the foregoing described equipment at and for the *99 snm of two thousand four hundred two dollars and twenty cents, and one used 2 Ton Holt tractor, of which amount, the sum of four hundred dollars shall he paid in cash in April, 1929, and the balance shall be paid as follows : two thousand two dollars and twenty cents balance on March 1, 1930, in accordance with the term of Senate Bill No. 58, Extraordinary Legislative Session, 1928.”

The proof of publication showed the publication to-have been made in a newspaper of the county on February 21 and February 28,1929, two issues only.-

Said proof of publication does not appear to have been filed until March 26, 3932, and does not appear to have been filed prior to the 6th day of March, 1929.

Subsequent to the entry of the order by the board on the 6th day of March, 1929, and on or about the 3d day of June, 3929, the Merchants’ Bank & Trust Company sent to the board of supervisors an assignment of the latter’s contract to pay two thousand two dollars a.nd twenty cents, requesting that such assignment be entered upon the minutes. The deputy clerk in charge of the office entered the same reading as follows: “The board of supervisors hereby accepts notice of an assignment to¡ the Merchants’ Bank & Trust Company, of Jackson, Mississippi. of a balance due on this tractor of two thousand1 two dollars and twenty cents to be allowed as follows: two thousand two dollars and twentv cents to be allowed March 1. 1930, and the clerk is hereby directed and ordered to issue the warrants for said amounts to the said The Merchants’ Bank & Trust Company of Jackson, Mississippi, and to deliver said warrants to the latter in accordance with the contract referred to hereinabove.”

When the board of supervisors checked the minutes before signing same, this order was read and disapproved, the board not having authorized same, and the clerk was instructed to erase it, which he did by running dollar marks with the typewriter over it, but the lettering was visible nevertheless.

*100 Subsequent, to this time, and after the maturity of the alleged two thousand two dollars and twenty cent payment, a claim was presented to the clerk of the board by attorneys for the allowance in favor of the Merchants ’ Bank & Trust Company of its assignment, which the clerk refused to do, stating that there was some controversy about the matter. The claim was not formally placed on the docket of claims, but the attorneys interviewed the member from the district in which the tractor was situated, and be stated to the attorneys that he could do nothing about the matter until he conferred with hia attorneys. There was no entry of an order either rejecting or allowing the claim, and thereupon this suit was brought.

There seems to have been a discrepancv as to the machinery advertised for and that, purchased, the advertisement calling for twenty horse power machinery, and that purchased being thirty horse power.

The chancellor dismissed the bill filed by the appellants, and this is an appeal from the order of dismissal.

The statute under which the alleired transaction took place reads as follows: “Boards of supervisors of any county may purchase after legal advertisement, when the total amount of such purchases makes it necessary that such purchase be made upon competitive bids after legal advertisement, thereof, trucks, tractors, motor vehicles, and road bnildine- machinery, and make a part payment' in cash thereon, the balance to be paid in installments, and the deferred payments, above provided for, may be evidenced bv an order of the board of supervisors, spread upon the minutes of said board, provided that the maturitv of said deferred pavments shall not extend bevond March 1st next, succeeding such purchases, and in no event, bevond the tprm of office of the board of supervisors making such order.” Chapter 61, section 1, Extraordinary Session 1928.

*101 The contention is whether or not there was a legal advertisement under the terms of this statute, and whether the order of the board of supervisors, above recited, precluded the inquiry into that matter, and also whether the failure to file the proof of publication before the order was made invalidated it. There is also a question raised as to whether the claim could be allowed because the budget for that year did not contain a provision for such purchase.

But, in view of the conclusion we have reached, it will not be necessary to consider and decide that last question.

We think the provisions of chapter 61, section 1 thereof, Extraordinary Session of 1928, “after legal advertisement” contemplates a three weeks’ advertisement, and that it refers, by implication, especially to notices required in making contracts for public work. Under sections 239 and 240, Code of 1930, notice is specifically required to be published for three weeks. Section 1 of chapter 61, Extraordinary Session of 1928, does not fix specifically what “legal advertisement” means, and does not fix any number of weeks to constitute a legal advertisement.

The general law throughout the statutes requires publication of public notices to be for three weeks, except in a few instances where the statutes fix another length of time. The reference in chapter 61 to publication, ‘ ‘ when the total amount of such purchases makes it necessary that such purchase be made upon competitive bids after legal advertisement thereof,” refers to the general rule before boards of supervisors to publish notice for three weeks.

We are satisfied that the statute contemplates publication for three

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Bluebook (online)
145 So. 908, 165 Miss. 91, 1933 Miss. LEXIS 281, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/merchants-bank-trust-co-v-scott-county-miss-1933.