Odd Fellows Savings & Commercial Bank v. Quillen

11 Nev. 109
CourtNevada Supreme Court
DecidedApril 15, 1876
DocketNo. 775
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 11 Nev. 109 (Odd Fellows Savings & Commercial Bank v. Quillen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nevada Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Odd Fellows Savings & Commercial Bank v. Quillen, 11 Nev. 109 (Neb. 1876).

Opinion

By the Court,

Hawley, C. J.:

On the fifth day of January, a. d. 1876, respondent presented to appellant certain interest coupons issued under the act entitled, “An act to consolidate and pay the indebtedness of Lincoln county” (Stat. 1873, 54), and demanded payment of the amount due thereon. Appellant refused to pay the same, whereupon the respondent applied for and obtained from the district court of said county a peremptory writ of mandamus directing appellant to transfer the money [113]*113then in the general fund, to the interest fund of said county, to be applied to the payment of said coupons as provided by section nine of said act.

This appeal is taken from that order.

It appears that the money in the interest fund is insufficient to pay the coupons; that if the money in the general fund is transferred to the interest fund it will pay the amount due on said coupons; that at the date aforesaid the legal, allowed, audited and outstanding claims against the general fund of said county were largely in excess of the amount of money then in the general fund; that prior to the presentation of said coupons they were detached and separated from the bonds with ivhich. they were originally issued.

1. It is claimed by appellant that no legal demand was made for the payment of said coupons.

This position is sought to be maintained upon the ground that the coupons were detached from the bonds before being presented to the treasurer for payment. Section five of the act provides as follows: “When any interest shall be paid upon a bond issued under the provisions of this act, the county treasurer shall detach the coupons for the interest then due and paid, and deliver the same to the county auditor taking his receipt therefor, whose duty it shall be to file the same in his office.” It is claimed by appellant that this section is mandatory; that it was inserted to prevent fictitious coupons from bffing presented to the treasurer, and that it prohibits him from paying any coupons not detached by himself. It is not pretended that the coupons presented were fictitious; but on the other hand it is admitted that they are genuine, and that if they had been paid the treasurer could have delivered them to the county auditor as directed in said act. True it is that there was no excuse for the holder of the bonds to detach, or cause to be detached, the coupons before presenting the same to the treasurer, and fin's was certainly not the safest course to pursue. It is always best to follow the plain provisions of the statute and thereby avoid any question of construction. But the respondent, having disregarded the provision, insists that the [114]*114statute is merely directory, and that inasmuch as no one has been prejudiced it ought not to lose its claim because it did not present the bonds with the coupons attached. We are of opinion that courts have often gone too far in declaring positive- provisions of tbe statute merely directory. This summary mode of dispensing with statutory provisions is often liable to abuse. It is the exercise of a power which trenches so closely upon legislative discretion that it ought never to be resorted to by the courts “except,” as was said by Lewis, C. J., in Corbett v. Bradley, “ when it is clearly manifest that the legislature did not deem a compliance with it material, or unless it appears tó have been prescribed simply as matter of form.” (7 Nev. 108.)

Judge Cooley in his work on Constitutional Limitations, in discussing this question, says: “Those directions which are not of the essence of the thing to be done, but which are given with a view merely to the proper, orderly, and prompt conduct of the business, and by a failure to obey which the rights of those interested will not be prejudiced, are not commonly to be regarded as mandatory; and if the act is performed, but not in the time or in the precise mode indicated, it may still be sufficient if that Avhich is done accomplishes the substantial purpose of the statute.” (Cooley, Const. Lim. 77, 78, and authorities there cited.)

In determining this question, as Avell as every other that involves a construction of the statute, we must carry into effect the intention the legislature had in víoav in adopting it, in order to secure, if possible, the object intended to be secured by the statute. It Avill be observed that no negative words are used which forbid the detaching of the coupons from the bonds by any other person than the treasurer. We think it is clear that the legislature, in adopting the provision, inserted the clause requiring the treasurer to detach the coupons as a mere matter of form. The real object to be accomplished Avas the surrender of the coupons and the delivery of the same to the auditor, to be by him filed as pr-ovided in said act, and it Avas immaterial by Avhose hands they were detached. The act of detaching the coupons from the bonds was not of the substance of the law. Upon this [115]*115ground, sanctioned as it is by eminent authors, and approved by numerous judicial decisions, this provision of the act must be considered and treated as directory.

2. It is contended by appellant that the act is obnoxious to sections twenty and twenty-one of article IY of the constitution of this state.

Whatever views we might entertain upon this question if it was res integra, need not be here expressed. -We think the constitutionality of the act must be sustained upon the authority of Youngs v. Hall, 9 Nev. 212.

As the bonds of Lincoln county, from which the coupons were detached, are negotiable, and rights of property therein may have been acquired by the transfer thereof, since the decision in that case was rendered; and as the legislature of 1875, relying upon the correctness of that decision, passed certain acts that would be subject to the same objection, even if we entertained the opinion that Youngs v. Hall was erroneous, the consequences of a reversal would unquestionably prove of greater evil than to allow it to remain. In such a case we conceive it to be our duty to- adhere to former decisions. The question whether the act impairs the obligation- of contracts is not presented by this appeal. That could only be raised by a party holding outstanding warrants against the county which were issued prior to the passage of the act and have-not been funded under the provisions of said act.

3. Appellant argues that it was the intention of the legislature to keep the financial transactions of the county on a cash basis if possible, and not to strip the county of the means provided to meet its current expenses; that the holders of the legal outstanding claims against the county had a vested right to all the money in-the general fund sufficient to pay their claims, and that the only money subject to the treasurer’s draft for the payment of interest is the surplus over and above the legal outstanding claims against said general fund.

The conclusion we have reached after a thorough examination of this case, renders it unnecessary to notice in detail the several 'points presented by appellant’s counsel in sup[116]*116port of this position. That the object of the legislature in funding the indebtedness of Lincoln county .was to place all of its financial transactions upon a cash basis there can be no doubt, for such is the express language of section one of said act.

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Bluebook (online)
11 Nev. 109, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/odd-fellows-savings-commercial-bank-v-quillen-nev-1876.