Nemaha Valley Drainage District v. Nemaha County

158 N.W. 438, 100 Neb. 64, 1916 Neb. LEXIS 134
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedJune 3, 1916
DocketNo. 19554
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 158 N.W. 438 (Nemaha Valley Drainage District v. Nemaha County) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Nemaha Valley Drainage District v. Nemaha County, 158 N.W. 438, 100 Neb. 64, 1916 Neb. LEXIS 134 (Neb. 1916).

Opinion

Fawcett, J.

Plaintiff, which will he called the drainage district, is a public corporation organized under the provisions of sections 1797-1865, Rev. St. 1913. Defendant, which will be called the county, is also a.public corporation and one of the political subdivisions of the state. ‘ The petition sets out two causes of action. The issues tendered thereby present questions of law only, the facts having been stipulated. The first presents the question of the liability of the county to account for interest collected by the county treasurer,' and credited to the general fund of the county, on the funds of the district, deposited by the county treasurer, together with other funds in his hands, in the several depository banks of the county, under the provisions of the statute requiring the deposit of all funds collected by him. The second presents the question of the liability of the county for collection fees charged by the county treasurer, and credited to the general fund of the county, on the taxes levied by the district and certified to the county clerk of defendant county and extended by him on the tax rolls of the county, and thereafter certified by him and delivered to the county treasurer of defendant county for collection. Plaintiff recovered on the first cause of action, and defendant recovered on the second. Each party appeals.

We will first consider defendant’s appeal from the judgment on the first cause of actio a. Section 6660, Rev. St. 1913, provides that the county treasurer shall deposit “the amount of moneys in his hands collected and held by him as such county treasurer.” In the next section, providing for the manner in which the money shall be kept, it is termed “public funds on deposit,” “public moneys,” and “public moneys of the county,” and it was provided that “all interest on such moneys be credited by the [66]*66county treasurer directly to the account of the geneial fund of the county.” In the next section the fund is spoken of as “moneys of the county.” Section 6663, Rev. St. 1913, prohibits the making 'of profit, directly or indirectly, out of any money in the county treasury belonging to the county, the custody of which the treasurer is charged with, and it is made his duty “to use all reasonable and proper means to secure to the county the best terms for the depositing of the money belonging to- the county consistent with the safe-keeping and prompt payment of the funds of the county when demanded.” (Italics are ours.) By succeeding sections the power is given 1:o county boards, city councils, school boards and township boards to direct the county treasurer to invest the sinking funds of such corporations in his hands in the warrants issued by each respectively.

In ordinary cases when money is collected by a county treasurer for the benefit of a separate public corporation, the county holds the money as trustee until drawn out by the treasurer of the district, village or city. At the time the depository law was passed, no drainage district corporations, of which the county treasurer was ex officio treasurer, were provided for by statute. If he collected funds for a drainage district then existing, it was his duty to pay it to the treasurer of the district on demand. As in the case of the funds belonging to a school district, or other public corporation, the treasurer of the district might preserve the interest for the benefit of his district by drawing the money from the county treasury and taking it within his own control. But, when a later statute made the county treasurer ex officio treasurer of drainage districts of the class then made possible, it became beyond the power of the district to protect itself by withdrawing the money from the county treasury and placing it within the district treasury. If we take the view that this is a county fund, the district will lose the interest, and the county will reap where it has not sown. We will not presume that it was the intention of the legislature to [67]*67discriminate against the owners of land within the drainage district, by the special assessment of whose property the fund was created, by taking from them for the benefit of other taxpayers the accumulations of this fund. The money of such a drainage district as this, as soon as collected, passes automatically from the county treasurer, in his capacity as collector, into his custody as ex officio treasurer of the district. It is the general rule, where there is no statute to the contrary, that interest becomes a part of the fund by whose investment it was produced, and hence the interest belongs to the drainage district. It may be said that, while the statute does not require the treasurer of the drainage district to give a bond, it would seem that the bond required from the county treasurer should be sufficiently large to guarantee the safety of all moneys in his hands, whether he holds it merely and purely as county treasurer, or whether, by virtue of his office, he holds the same for the drainage district. This, evidently, was the idea of the county board, when it required an increased bond to cover the further liability. The county received its compensation for this by the collection fees provided for by statute, as later appears in this opinion. The district court properly found that the drainage district was entitled to the interest obtained by the county from the fund in the hands of the. treasurer as ex officio treasurer of the district.

We come now to a consideration of the second cause of action. The levies made by the district, which were certified to the county clerk and by him to the county treasurer for collection, were made on two different dates, the first being for $213,124.41, and the second for $30,718.46. When he collected these taxes and assessments the county treasurer from time to time charged the regular collection fees, amounting in the aggregate to $5,363.59, all of which he credited to the general fund of the county. The agreed statement of facts shows that the county treasurer never qualified as an officer of the. drainage district by taking the oath of office and by giving bond to plaintiff [68]*68for the safe-keeping of its funds; that by reason of bis control of the plaintiff’s funds bis bond was increased $100,000 and the expense of the premium on such bond was paid by the county; that the compensation of the county treasurer of defendant county had been fixed at $2,000 and certain deputy and clerk hire; that the fees and charges for the collection of the regular taxes levied by the county, state and other subdivisions, authorized to levy taxes, paid all the fees of the office and deputy and clerk hire, and left a surplus without taking into consideration the collection of the special assessments and levies made by plaintiff.

Section 1855, Rev. St. 1913, makes the treasurer of the county “in which the drainage district, or the largest portion thereof, is situated,” ex officio

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
158 N.W. 438, 100 Neb. 64, 1916 Neb. LEXIS 134, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nemaha-valley-drainage-district-v-nemaha-county-neb-1916.