Pollock v. Lawrence County

19 F. Cas. 946, 3 W.L.M. 68, 7 Pitts L.J. 373, 1860 U.S. App. LEXIS 621

This text of 19 F. Cas. 946 (Pollock v. Lawrence County) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Western Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pollock v. Lawrence County, 19 F. Cas. 946, 3 W.L.M. 68, 7 Pitts L.J. 373, 1860 U.S. App. LEXIS 621 (circtwdpa 1860).

Opinion

McCANDLESS, District Judge.

This case was tried by jury at the November term of the circuit court, and a verdict and judgment rendered in favor of the plaintiff for the sum of $1,811.30. On the 4th day of January last, the counsel for the plaintiff issued his writ of special fi. fa., authorized by the act of the legislature of Pennsylvania of 1834. and adopted by this court as part of its final process against counties. To this writ the marshal made return that on the 12th of January he had duly served the same [947]*947on Isaac P. Cowden, Robert Fullerton and Tiros. Cairns, commissioners of the county •of Lawrence, and also upon tlie treasurer thereof. The commissioners having failed to pay any portion of the judgment, on the 7th of April plaintiff’s counsel presented his petition to the court, charging that at the •date of the service of this writ, “there were moneys in the treasury of said, comity, and subject to the order and warrant of said commissioners, to the amount of $5,800. unappropriated.” That since the said service, "there has been received into the treasury, and subject to the warrant-of the commissioners, the further sum of $2,000.” Nevertheless that the said commissioners “being minded to evade the payment of the said judgment, and set at naught the process of this court,'although often requested, have refused to pay, to the great wrong of the plaintiff, and the contempt of this court.” He then prays the court for a rule on the said commissioners, to show cause why an attachment should not issue against them according to law. The rale was granted returnable at the first Monday of May. On that day the commissioners appeared by counsel, and put in their answer. After admitting the service •of the writ upon the 12th January, they say that, at that date, “there were no unappropriated funds of said county under the flower and control of these respondents, and for further answer they show that before the judgment in this case was obtained, and before these respondents knew that the said county would be liable to pay the debt for which it was rendered, the county commissioners of said county had made their estimates of the probable expenses of the said county for the ensuing year, and to the speeifie purposes embraced in said estimates, and, according to the laws of the state of Pennsylvania, all the revenues of the said county were appropriated.” They further state, “that the whole receipt of moneys which have come under the control and power of the respondents, as the money of the county, is $1,727.48, and these moneys were solely provided for the purposes of the county, incident to the public weal and the administration of justice.” An answer ■should be, what its name purports, a counter statement of facts, a confutation of what is alleged by the other party, and should be neither evasive nor argumentative. This is not a plain, direct statement of facts, responsive to the petition. It is evasive in not stating the amount of money in the treasury at the date of the service of the writ — that we have to glean from the statement of the treasurer. And to support the allegation that there was no money “under their control,” it is argumentative in construing the annual estimate of the probable public expenditures to be a specific appropriation to each object,

By the act of 15th of April, 1S34 (Purd. Dig. 777), “the commissioners of every county shall, at their first meeting, after the general election in every year, proceed to make an estimate of the probable expense of the county for the ensuing year.” This is no appropriation. It is merely to calculate or compute what will be the probable expenses of the county for the next year, and to levy their tax accordingly. They cannot anticipate the public expenditure precisely, and hence they are to “estimate” the “probable” amount. They cannot foresee the exact amount required for each municipal purpose, and hence they cannot make a specific appropriation. An appropriation is to set apart, or vote a sum of money, for a particular object. And such appropriation, at the date of their annual estimate, would be impracticable for the reason that a considerable portion of the taxes assessed for the current year are not collected for years after, and much of the ordinary expenditure is paid out of funds which accumulated from the taxes of previous years. There is no appropriation of any part of the common fund, until the commissioners, by their warrant on the treasurer, indicate the specific object to which it is to.be applied or set apart. It is then severed from the mass, and “appropriated,” and not before. The treasurer is the mere custodian of the public money. The commissioners have the control of it; for none can be lawfully drawn from the treasury without their warrant. To them is confided the high prerogative of taxation, and the failure to exercise it, by them or their predecessors, is no legitimate answer to an execution. They are required by law to provide for certain municipal objects, to support their convicts, to build bridges, to maintain their courts of justice; but as the supreme court of Pennsylvania says in 4 Casey [28 Pa. St.] 210; “When unfortunately the current expenditures exceed the current income, and all cannot be promptly paid, to the vigilant must be given the first products of the treasury.” And again: “No statutory regulation or appropriation by the city councils can give a higher sanction to the liquidation of a debt, than the judgment of a court of justice, in pursuance of law, that the debt is due and must be paid.” So no capricious application of the public funds by the commissioners, in the face of a debt solemnly adjudicated, and after-notice of an execution commanding its payment, can be held guiltless in sight of the law. The execution is an injunction upon the commissioners, restraining them from drawing any warrant, or making any payment for .any purpose whatever, until the judgment is satisfied. If there are no unappropriated moneys, it is to be paid “out of the first moneys that shall be received for the use of said county.” The language of the act is plain, and the duty of these officers imperative. They have no option or alternative, and a disregard or disobedience of the writ is followed by attachment.

By the county auditor’s report for the year 1S59, there appears to be a balance in -.he [948]*948hands of the treasurer of $0,478.42. This is only constructively so, for a large proportion of this sum is in the custody of his predecessors in office, who have not yet accounted for the same. We cannot hold the commissioners responsible for a contempt in refusing to apply what is not actually in the treasury. But the proofs before the court show, that at the date of the service of this writ of execution, on the 12th day of January last, there was in the treasury in money $630.8(1. The treasurer testifies that since that date he has received moneys of the county from other sources than his predecessor, $1,559.78, and from him $23S.45, making in the aggregate $2,438.09, applicable to this execution, and more than sufficient to satisfy the same. The proofs further show, that, disregarding the command of the writ, from the date of service, to the 11th of May, the commissioners have drawn warrants on the treasurer to the amount of $3,997.74. Thus in violation of law, and to the prejudice of a judgment creditor refusing to pay his debt “out of the first moneys that shall be received for the use of such county.” We are not here to en-quire into the consideration of this judgment. It has received the sanction of a court of competent jurisdiction, and the creditor is entitled to its fruits, as if predicated of a cause of action the most meritorious.

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Bluebook (online)
19 F. Cas. 946, 3 W.L.M. 68, 7 Pitts L.J. 373, 1860 U.S. App. LEXIS 621, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pollock-v-lawrence-county-circtwdpa-1860.