Pomona City School District v. Payne

50 P.2d 822, 9 Cal. App. 2d 510, 1935 Cal. App. LEXIS 1178
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 17, 1935
DocketCiv. 10459
StatusPublished
Cited by43 cases

This text of 50 P.2d 822 (Pomona City School District v. Payne) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pomona City School District v. Payne, 50 P.2d 822, 9 Cal. App. 2d 510, 1935 Cal. App. LEXIS 1178 (Cal. Ct. App. 1935).

Opinion

GOULD, J., pro tem.

Pursuant to sections 4.280 and 4.991 of the School Code (Deering’s Gen. Laws, 1931, vol. 3, p. 3959), plaintiff school district, in common with other school districts, within the county of Los Angeles, maintains its school funds on deposit in the treasury of said county. The county treasurer, acting under the provisions of section 16% of article XI of the state Constitution as amended, the Depositary Act of 1927 (Stats. 1927, p. 1389), as amended, and the Depositary Act of 1933 (Stats. 1933, p. 642), follows the administrative practice of depositing in state and national banks funds in the county treasury, regardless of the source from which said funds are derived. Such sums so deposited for the period from January 1,1932, to January 1,1935, were in excess of the moneys in said treasury derived from sources of revenue solely for the use of the county of Los Angeles, and necessarily at all times included school funds placed in the custody of the treasurer by various school districts. No part of the interest received from banks acting as depositaries of said funds is credited to any school district, but the whole thereof is placed in the general fund of the county exclusively for the use and benefit of said county.

Plaintiffs brought this action for a writ of mandate against the auditor and treasurer of Los Angeles County, asking that said officers be directed to credit to Pomona City School District such interest as may have been earned by the funds of said district in the custody of said treasury and deposited in banks. Before the trial court the facts were presented by stipulation, it being agreed that for the three years in question certain average daily balances were maintained by Pomona City School District in the county treasury ; that during said period certain interest earnings were received by the county treasurer from funds deposited in banks, and that the total bank deposits bore certain ratios to the total funds in the treasury. Applying a simple mathematical formula to these figures, the deduction followed that had Pomona City School District been credited with its proportionate share of the interest earnings, its funds would have been enriched by the sum of $4,551.06, and its prayer in this *512 proceeding is that defendant county officers be compelled to make such manual and bookkeeping transfers as to place such sum to the use and account of plaintiff school district. Appeal followed the trial court’s denial of relief.

Decision of this case we believe rests upon the determination of the status of the school funds while they are in the custody of the county. Is the county the owner of such funds, or is the county simply the trustee for the benefit of the school district? If the county is the owner, obviously the interest accretions belong to such owner; but as a trustee, the county would have no ownership in the funds or in their interest increments.

The matter has never been before the California courts for decision, but from appellate utterances in related or analogous cases both parties herein may derive solace for their divergent views. Thus in Buena Vista Water Storage District v. Shields, 126 Cal. App. 241 [14 Pac. (2d) 559, 15 Pac. (2d) 861], where it was held that the county and not the district must stand the loss of robbery of funds from the county treasury, it is said that a certain argument, advanced “pre-supposes that the money stolen from the county treasurer was the particular property of this district, a premise which we cannot accept”. Such a statement, it is argued by respondents, necessarily repudiates the claim of joint interest in a common fund; and in the same decision the court by analogy compares the district depositing funds in the county treasury to a depositor in a bank.

Opposed to such cases as the foregoing, appellants point to holdings that swamp land district funds are “held by the state in trust” and that the officers of the county in handling such funds are mere agents of the state “and had no property right in the fund” (Miller & Lux v. Batz, 142 Cal. 447 [76 Pac. 42]); that excess unsecured property collections “are no part of the moneys of the city and county . . . and it is in no sense a public fund of the city and county ’ ’; that “it is a trust fund” and “the treasurer is but a bailee” (Corbett v. Widber, 123 Cal. 154 [55 Pac. 764]) ; that “the funds of the school district are not subject to the control of the county” (Pacific Mutual etc. Co. v. County of San Diego, 112 Cal. 314 [41 Pac. 423, 44 Pac. 571]), and that “the county, as such, has no interest in the funds of a high school *513 district” (Elberg v. County of San Luis Obispo, 112 Cal. 316 [41 Pac. 475, 44 Pac. 572]).

Conflicting authorities are gleaned from other states. State ex rel. School District v. McGraw, 74 Mont. 152 [240 Pac. 812], holds flatly that school district funds on deposit with the county treasurer “lose their identity as school district funds, and all that the school district thereafter has is a credit on the books of the county treasurer for the amount or amounts paid into the county treasury to the credit of the district; the money itself becomes the property of the county, or ‘county funds' ”. Directly contrary are such cases as Drainage Dist., etc., v. Ada County, 38 Idaho, 778 [226 Pac. 290], emphatically declaring that “it is certainly not the intent of this statute, and not in accordance with justice, that the county should receive and retain interest on funds of the drainage district”. Many of these out-of-state cases, however, arise under statutes dissimilar in many respects to those governing in California, and must be read with the statutory divergence in mind.

Until the constitutional amendment of 1906 (sec. 16½, art. XI) and the subsequent legislative act (Stats. 1907, p. 974), public funds were required to be held intact in public treasuries. By the 1907 statute it was provided that moneys belonging to any county or municipality might be deposited at interest in banks. Section 16% of article XI of the Constitution was again amended in 1922, and in 1923 a new Depositary Act was adopted (Stats. 1923, p. 25) permitting the deposit of “all moneys belonging to or in the custody of any county or municipality”. The scope of the act was enlarged in 1927 (Stats. 1927, p. 1389) to include “all moneys belonging to or in the custody of any county, city a/nd county, city, town, municipality or other political subdivision within the state”; and in 1933, pursuant to the 1932 amendment to section 16%, changes in the Depositary Act (Stats. 1933, p. 642) further broadened the classification by the use of the additional words “or other public or municipal corporation”. The acts of 1927 and 1933 governed the deposits in question in this proceeding. In the latter act it specifically provides that “interest on all moneys deposited as herein provided for shall belong to and shall be paid quarterly into the general fund of the county, city and county, city, town, municipality *514 or, other public or municipal corporation represented by the officer making such deposit”.

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Bluebook (online)
50 P.2d 822, 9 Cal. App. 2d 510, 1935 Cal. App. LEXIS 1178, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pomona-city-school-district-v-payne-calctapp-1935.