News-Dispatch Printing & Auditing Co. v. Board of Com'rs

1916 OK 935, 161 P. 207, 61 Okla. 259, 1916 Okla. LEXIS 880
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedNovember 14, 1916
Docket7854
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 1916 OK 935 (News-Dispatch Printing & Auditing Co. v. Board of Com'rs) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
News-Dispatch Printing & Auditing Co. v. Board of Com'rs, 1916 OK 935, 161 P. 207, 61 Okla. 259, 1916 Okla. LEXIS 880 (Okla. 1916).

Opinion

Opinion by

JOHNSON, C.

During the month of December, 1914, the board of eounty commissioners of Grady county entered into an agreement with the News-Dispatch Printing & Auditing Company, by the terms of which the auditing company was engaged to audit the books and accounts of the clerk of the district court and county clerk of said county, the county to pay for the services of one expert accountant to be furnished by the auditing company at the rate of $10 per day and traveling expenses, the audit to be completed within 30 days, or as soon thereafter as practicable. After the accountant furnished by the auditing company had worked 15 days, the county board ordered the work stopped, and notified the company that performance of the contract could not proceed, for the reason that the board had received advice that the contract for the audit was not within the powers of the board, and consequently not legal. The work was stopped; and the auditing company later filed its claim with the county for the work done, expenses, and for 40 additional days that the auditor would have been paid for if he had been allowed to complete the contract. The claim was disallowed, and this suit was brought by the auditing company for the Items covered by the claim. The lower court sustained the demurrer of the board to the petition, one Of the grounds of demurrer being that the county board had no authority under the law to enter into the alleged contract ; and the auditing company has appealed to this court.

The question involved is whether a board of county commissioners may legally employ the services of an accountant, other than the state examiner and inspector and his deputies, to audit the books and accounts of county officers and custodians of county funds. The statute creating the office of state examiner and inspector, after providing for the duties of such officer with reference to the books and accounts of state officials, contains this provision, viz. :

“Duties and Powers. * ' * * In addition to the above-prescribed duties, upon request of the county commissioners of any county, or upon request to the Governor, signed by five per cent, of the legal voters of any county, and by order of the Governor, the state examiner and inspector shall examine or cause to be examined by duly appointed deputy or deputies, the books and accounts of all or any of the officers or custodians of the varions funds of the county; and payment for such examinations shall be made out of the contingent fund of the county so examined at the same salary and expenses provided herein for deputy examiners. The state examiner and inspector shall have power to appoint additional special deputies for this purpose: Provided, that no deputy shall examine the books or records of the county of his residence. * * *” Section 8119, Revised Laws of 1910.

Section 1600, Revised Laws 1910. confers the following power upon boards of county commissioners, to wit:

“To audit the accounts of all officers having the care, management, collection or disbursement of any money ' belonging to the county, or appropriated for its benefit.”

Section 1601, Revised Laws 1910, provides:

“The board of county commissioners is hereby vested with full power to inquire into and investigate the accounts, disbursements, bills and expenses of any county, district, or township officer, and to that end may subpoena witnesses,” etc.

It is the contention of defendants in error that under these statutes, while the county commissioners have authority to provide for the auditing and examination of county records, they are confined to the employment of the state examiner and inspector or deputies from his office, and cannot legally contract with a private individual or corporation to do that work. It is contended by plaintiff in error that while the law provides that the county commissioners may call upon the state examiner and inspector to make the *261 audit, • yet tlie language here employed does not compel them to do so. but leaves them free to act in accordance with their own discretion in choosing employes or agents to perform the service.

It may first be said that a county is an involuntary political and civil subdivision of the state, created by statute to aid in the administration of governmental affairs, and possessed of a portion of the sovereignty. All the powers with which it is intrusted are the powers of the sovereignty which created it, and all the duties with which it io charged are the duties of the sovereignty. It is only liable for such obligations as the Legislature has imposed, or authorized it to create, or such as are necessarily incident to the object of its creation. And the hoard of county commissioners can exercise such powers only as are conferred upon it by the Constitution or the statutes, or such as may arise by necessary implication from an express grant. Board v. Watson, 7 Okla. 174, 54 Pac. 441; Tulsa St. Ry. Co. v. State, 26 Okla. 559, 110 Pac. 373; Allen v. Board, 28 Okla. 773, 116 Pac. 175.

Such power as the county commissioners have to choose an agency for the service under consideration must be found in the statutes hereinabove quoted. Sections 1600 and 1601 undoubtedly confer authority upon the board to audit, inquire into, and investigate the accounts of county officers, and this authority includes, not alone the power to approve or disapprove, audit, and investigate the reports of such officers, but the power to procure an expert audit of the county records. Section 8119, quoted supra, provides an instrumentality for the exercise of the latter power, viz., the services of the state examiner and inspector, and his duly authorized deputies. It becomes necessary to determine whether this instrumentality is exclusive. It has been said by this court;

“It is a familiar rule of construction, as laid down in the syllabus of United States v. Weld, McCahon, 185 Kan. Dassler’s Ed.) 591 (Fed. Cas. No. 16660), that: ‘When one person or class of persons, is named in a power of attorney, or an act of the lawmaking power as being authorized to do a certain thing therein named, all other persons are thereby excluded from doing the same thing as effectually as if they were positively forbidden.’ ” State ex rel. Haskell, Governor, v. Huston et al., 21 Okla. 782, 97 Pac. 982; Osage & Oklahoma Co. v. Millard, 45 Okla. 334, 145 Pac. 798.

With reference to the power of the county board to employ agents, Cyc., vol. 11, p. 473, lays down the general rule as follows:

“With these limitations, county boards or courts have power to appoint such agents, officers, and servants as may be required for ccuuty purposes, and which are not otherwise provided by law or by the state Constitution.” (Emphasis ours.) Chase v. Board, 37 Colo. 268, 86 Pac. 1011, 11 Ann. Cas. 483; Stringer v. Franklin County, 58 Tex. Civ. App. 343, 123 S. W. 1168; Wilhelm v. Cedar Co., 50 Iowa, 254; Ringgold Co. v. Allen, 42 Iowa, 697.

In the case of State v. Goldthait, 172 Ind. 210, 87 N. E. 133, 19 Ann. Cas. 737, the Supreme Court of Indiana said:

“A contract with a county for the performance by a third person of duties which are imposed by law on a public officer is void as against public policy.”

In the ease of Stringer v. Franklin Co., supra, the Court of Civil Appeals of Texas said:

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Bluebook (online)
1916 OK 935, 161 P. 207, 61 Okla. 259, 1916 Okla. LEXIS 880, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/news-dispatch-printing-auditing-co-v-board-of-comrs-okla-1916.