Millikin v. Gillum

122 S.W. 151, 135 Ky. 280, 1909 Ky. LEXIS 286
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedNovember 5, 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 122 S.W. 151 (Millikin v. Gillum) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Millikin v. Gillum, 122 S.W. 151, 135 Ky. 280, 1909 Ky. LEXIS 286 (Ky. Ct. App. 1909).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

.Judge Hobson

Affirming.

The fiscal court of Logan county during its regular October term, 1905, allowed numerous claims, including one of $1,650 involved in this action. That part of the order allowing this claim is as follows: “The following claims were allowed and made payable out of the county levy for 1906: ‘Roads.’ Flowers, J. S. Commissioner at Duncan’s on Muddy River $1,650.00.” Soon after the allowance of the claim, Flowers, who was -a magistrate of Logan county and therefore a member of the fiscal court, procured of the clerk of the Logan county court [282]*282two warrants covering the amount named; one of them being for $450 and the other for $1,200. In November, 1905, he assigned the two warrants to appellees, George L. Gillum & Son, a firm composed of George L. Gillum and Perry Gillum, engaged in the hardware business in Russellville, and received of them $1,552.40 therefor. Of the amount thus received, Flowers expended $1,108.17 in constructing an iron bridge on Muddy river, where it is crossed by the Russellville and Morgantown road near Duncan’s in Logan county. Following the completion of the bridge, the appellees, George L. Gillum & Son, demanded of the appellant John W. Milliken, treasurer of Logan county, payment of each of the warrants assigned them by Flowers, but that officer refused to pay them, and appellees thereupon brought suit against him in his official capacity and against Logan county and also against J. S. Flowers to recover the $1,650 claimed to be due them upon the warrants.

The answer filed by the treasurer for himself and Logan county denies any liability on their part upon the warrants, claims that both are void for uncertainty, that the fiscal court was without power to appoint Flowers commissioner to construct the bridge, and that the assignment of the warrants by the latter to appellees was unauthorized and void, as were his acts in constructing the bridge and expending therefor such part of the money he received from appellees as was applied to that purpose. The answer of Flowers alleged the bona tides of the assignment of the warrants to appellees, and of his acts in constructing the bridge and expending therefor the money received of appellees, and also alleged that out of the balance of $444.23 he claimed was left in his [283]*283hands after paying for the bridge he paid $260 for road work in the Russellville magisterial district which the fiscal court had directed him as commissioner to have done, but later refused to pay him for, and was entitled to $42 for his services in superintending the building of the bridge, and these sums, which, it was averred, he was entitled to be paid out of the $444.23, left in his hands, but $184.23, and the latter sum he was, as alleged, entitled to retain for services rendered by him as commissioner of public roads by order of the fiscal court. Responsive pleading controverting both answers was filed by appellees.

The circuit court on the issues thus made, and following the taking of proofs by the parties, rendered the following judgment, viz.: “These consolidated causes coming on to be heard upon the pleadings and testimony and the court being advised, it is now adjudged by the court that the plaintiffs, George L. Gillum and Perry Gillum, partners trading as George L. Gillum & Son, recover of the defendant, Logan county, the sum of $1,108.17, with interest thereon at the rate of 6 per cent, per annum from the 1st day of January, 1907, and two-thirds of their costs in these actions expended, for which execution may issue after 10 days.. To which judgment the defendant Logan county objects and excepts, and prays an appeal to the Court of Appeals, which is granted. It is further adjudged by the court that the plaintiffs as above named recover of the defendant J. S. Flowers, the sum of $454.83, with interest thereon from January 1, 1907, until paid at the rate of 6 per cent, per annum, and one-third of their costs in ihese actions expended, for which execution may is[284]*284sue after 10 days. To all of which judgment against him'the defendant J. S. Flowers objects and excepts, and prays an appeal to the Court of Appeals, which is granted. The court delivered a written opinion in these actions, which is hereby filed and made a part of this record, and these cases are hereby continued.”. We concur in the conclusions expressed in the written opinion of the circuit court that the order allowing Flowers the $1,650 was and is void, because of its indefiniteness and the want of' authority • on the part of the fiscal court to appoint Flowers, one of its members, a commissioner to construct a bridge. It is impossible to determine from the language of the order for what purpose Flowers was appointed a commissioner, whether to construct a bridge, .public road, or some other public improyement not described.

The fiscal court, like other courts, must speak through its records. Extraneous evidence to show the meaning of its orders will not be allowed. As the fiscal court, though a court of record, is one of limited jurisdiction and powers the greater reason exists for applying to its records the rule referred to, otherwise the counties of the state could not conduc! their monetary affairs with safety, or protect themselves from expensive and unnecessary litigation. The fiscal court cannot delegate to an agent the discretion with which the law clothes it. It may, after determining the necessity therefor, appoint a commissioner, not a member of the court, to construct a bridge or contract for its construction, but in doing so it should in advance direct through its records what character of bridge it should be and its cost, instead of allowing him a round sum with [285]*285which to do the work and leaving to his judgment what shall be the character of the work and its cost, or allowing him to obtain the money in advance of the doing of the work, either by a sale and assignment of warrants therefor, or collecting it from the county treasurer.

The treasurer of the county is the legal custodian of its money and responsible upon his official bond for its safe-keeping and payment, and the fiscal court has no power to order the county’s money paid by the treasurer into the hands of another person to be paid out by the latter some months later in satisfaction of the county’s indebtedness created by the person receiving the money. Nor can the fact that such a method of building and paying for roads and bridges had long been a matter of custom in Logan county sanction or legalize the method. In the instant case the warrants embracing the sum allowed for the construction of the bridge were assigned to and discounted by appellees in November or December, 1905, when the commissioner had not made a contract for the construction of the bridge, and did not know what it would cost. The money he received upon the warrants he held until the summer of 1906, when about two-thirds of it was paid on the bridge, leaving the remainder in his hands, which, it is claimed for the county, has not since been expended as contemplated by the fiscal court. Such methods of conducting the business of a county cannot receive our approval. In no event had the fiscal court the power to appoint Flowers commissioner to construct the bridge in question, as he was a magistrate of Logan county, and, by virtue thereof a member of the fiscal court of the county. In the case of [286]*286Pulaski County v. Sears, 117 Ky. 249, 78 S. W. 123, 25 Ky. Law Rep.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
122 S.W. 151, 135 Ky. 280, 1909 Ky. LEXIS 286, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/millikin-v-gillum-kyctapp-1909.