Nichols v. Patterson

678 So. 2d 673, 1996 WL 297340
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedJune 6, 1996
Docket93-CA-00621-SCT
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 678 So. 2d 673 (Nichols v. Patterson) 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
Nichols v. Patterson, 678 So. 2d 673, 1996 WL 297340 (Mich. 1996).

Opinion

Between September 1989 and February 1990, the Mississippi State Auditor's Department (Auditor) conducted an investigatory audit on the City of Olive Branch, Mississippi (Olive Branch). The investigative audit of Olive Branch resulted in the Auditor taking exception for thirteen separate items of expenditures. The Auditor found no criminal liability, but made demand upon various city officials based upon the following expenditures: telephone service of a city employee, personal telephone calls, the Mayor's travel reimbursements, travel reimbursements by the alderman and city employees, gasoline credit card payments, flower purchases, travel for William Rose, payments made to the Holiday Inn Conference Center, certain petty cash transactions, miscellaneous dinner expenses, 53rd checks, and Volunteer Appreciation Dinners.

The Auditor later dropped his demand by $13.05 for personal telephone calls, the entire amount for the flowers, and his demand for accrued interest. The audit costs of $4,715.00 were also included in the demand. Olive Branch paid a total of $37,681.66 under protest, reserving the right to seek a declaratory judgment on the lawfulness of the excepted expenditures.

At the beginning of the trial Olive Branch announced that they would not contest their reimbursement on the personal telephone calls, travel expenses for the alderman and city employees, gasoline credit card payments, travel expenses incurred by William Rose, and payment to the Holiday Inn Conference Center. Thus, Olive Branch only sought reimbursement of $28,826.32, plus assessed costs, for the telephone service of the city employee, the miscellaneous dinners (police dinners and City Beautiful Commission dinners), the 53rd checks to employees, travel advances to the Mayor, and the expenses *Page 675 incurred for the Volunteer Appreciation Dinners.

The Auditor took exception to expenditures of public funds for what Olive Branch called police dinners.1 At trial the Mayor of Olive Branch, D.M. Nichols (Nichols) testified that the city devoted these dinners to important police business. Nichols testified that no city facility was large enough for the entire group to meet, so meeting elsewhere was necessary for the police force. Nichols further testified that the meeting was to review the employee handbook for the police department.

The first dinner was for $102.28. On this occasion a petty cash voucher was paid directly to Nichols. The other police dinner was for $80.28 and was paid directly by check to a restaurant named Earnies. Both payments were made without benefit of minute authorization by the City of Olive Branch.

The Auditor took exception to two lunches given to the City Beautiful Commission. The City Beautiful Commission is a volunteer organization, composed mainly of the Mayor's wife, and the wives of the Aldermen, which provides beautification services to the city. Their responsibilities included erecting and maintaining the entrance signs to the city, erecting and maintaining the entrance signs to the City Park, purchasing and erecting Christmas lighting and decorations throughout the city, and landscaping city property. One of the lunches that the Auditor took exception to was in December 1986 and the other was in December 1989. The lunches were held at the Summit Club in Memphis. The 1986 lunch amounted to $95.05. The 1989 lunch was for $79.79. Olive Branch reimbursed one lunch to Nichols and once the Summit Club was paid directly by the city. There were no minute entries concerning these lunches.

The Auditor took exception to two travel advances to Mayor Nichols. The city issued one warrant to Nichols in December 1985 for $500.00 and the other for $300.00 in December 1989. The advance of $300.00 was for a trip taken to research a sewer project the city was undertaking. The trip was to Houston and Tulsa. Two other city employees also went on this trip and their expenses were paid out of this advance. The $500.00 was advanced for a Mississippi Municipal Association Convention. The Auditor could find no documentation for these expenses. The Mayor testified at trial that the appropriate receipts and expense vouchers were filed with the city but were lost.

The next exception the Auditor took was to what Olive Branch called "53rd" checks. The city of Olive Branch's work year consists of fifty-two weeks, however, employees were given a 53rd check. Nichols testified that when employees were hired, they were told their annual salary would be divided into fifty-three checks. The Auditor introduced the city payroll records at trial which showed that employee salaries were divided into fifty-two checks with an extra check given around Christmas time.

The last exception taken by the Auditor was to dinners the city called "Volunteer Appreciation Dinners." These dinners were held during the months of December from 1985 through 1988. The city discontinued the dinners in December of 1989 when the Auditor questioned them. Olive Branch argued that the dinners were held to promote and publicize the City and to encourage the volunteers to continue their efforts in the coming year. They invited various dignitaries, including but not limited to, area state representatives, members of Congress, and businesspeople. The volunteers included the City Beautiful Commission, the volunteer fire department, volunteer ambulance drivers and EMTs, the Planning Commission, the Housing Authority, the Industrial Development Committee, reserve police officers, and the trustees of the Chain Public Library. Olive Branch invited the volunteers' spouses to attend also.

At trial Nichols testified that these dinners were held to bring favorable publicity to the city. There were no minute entries finding that these functions would encourage volunteers *Page 676 or otherwise advertise resources of Olive Branch.

After the bench trial, Judge Gibbs entered his Order and Opinion on April 4, 1993. The judge sustained Olive Branch's protest with regard to one item of the Auditor's exception. This item related to the provision of basic monthly telephone service for a city employee. Judge Gibbs rejected the remainder of Olive Branch's protest and entered judgment for the Auditor for the remainder amount paid under protest.

I.

WERE THE EXCEPTED EXPENDITURES LAWFUL UNDER MISSISSIPPI STATUTORY AND CASE LAW?

The Appellants argue that all the expenditures by the authorities of Olive Branch were for a lawful purpose, and that the lower court was incorrect in holding that the expenditures, such as extra checks given to employees, police dinners, City Beautiful Commission lunches, travel advances to the Mayor, and Christmas parties, were donations, because there would have had to have been evidence of an "absence of consideration." The Auditor responds that a public board speaks and acts only through its minutes. In the absence of an entry on the minutes, a Board can take no action.

The Auditor took exception to two police dinners one in 1986 and one in 1989. He took exception to two City Beautiful Commission Meetings, one in December 1986 and one in December 1989, two travel advances for the Mayor, one in 1985 for $500.00 and one in 1989 for $300.00, and Christmas Volunteer Appreciation Dinners, during the months of December from 1985 through 1988.

A. Police Dinners.

At the trial Mayor Nichols testified that the police dinners were working meetings, held at times when gathering the entire police force together was necessary. Olive Branch stated that the credible testimony of Nichols was offered to show that the police dinners were business related, and the Auditor offered no proof otherwise.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
678 So. 2d 673, 1996 WL 297340, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nichols-v-patterson-miss-1996.