Powell v. Erath County

274 F. 305, 1921 U.S. App. LEXIS 1345
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedMay 31, 1921
DocketNo. 3626
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 274 F. 305 (Powell v. Erath County) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Powell v. Erath County, 274 F. 305, 1921 U.S. App. LEXIS 1345 (5th Cir. 1921).

Opinion

KING, Circuit Judge.

On December 17, 1917, Erath county filed a suit in the district court of said county, seeking to have canceled as void one issue of county warrants, for $120 000, and $18,999.14 of another issue of warrants aggregating $35,000. The $120,000 of warrants were issued to pay for certain road work done under a contract entered into between the commissioners’ court of Erath county and one Dawson. The case was removed into the United States District Court for the Northern District of-Texas at Port Worth. Thereafter Powell, [306]*306Garard & Co. filed a suit in said United States District Court to recover upon certain of these warrants which had matured.

The cases were consolidated as a single cause in equity and the parties ordered to file amended pleadings setting up their contentions, which they did. The first-named contract was negotiated with said commissioners’ court, consisting of five members, and was awarded to Dawson by the vote of three of the commissioners, Bowie, Rowe, and Miller. The sums to be paid thereon were payable in county warrants, which were issued in installments on judgments of the commissioners’ court, approving the bills rendered and ordering the warrants issued. The $35,000 issue was to refund certain previously issued warrants, including $18,999.14 of warrants issued to Dawson for additional work done on said roads.

The county claimed the $120,000 issue was void because: (1) The instruments were bonds, and not warrants, and had not been authorized by popular vote. (2) Because they included 15 per cent., added for alleged services of Dawson. (3) Because they were road and bridge warrants, and no proper provision had been made- in the contract for the payment of the interest due thereon and 2 per cent, sinking fund, as required by the Constitution of Texas; the 15 cents per $100 of the assessed taxable property in the county, authorized to be levied as a tax for road and bridge purposes, having been exhausted by previous charges thereon. (4) Because no authority to impound the revenues of future years existed. (5) Because the contract was not let on competitive bidding. (6) Because the money raised on said warrants was paid into'banks and paid out by Dawson on his checks. (7) Because Bowie, one of the commissioners, was bribed to vote for the contract and warrants by the payment of $500 to him to secure such a vote. (8) Because Bowie and Rowe, commissioners, fraudulently approved estimates under the contract in sums in excess of the true amounts earned. (9) Because warrants were issued in the sum of at least $50,-000 in excess of the value of the labor and material furnished.

As to said $35,000 of warrants the coünty insisted that $18,999.14 thereof had taken up warrants issued to Dawson for alleged additional work, when no contract had been made therefor, and no provision for the payment of the interest and-2 per cent, sinking fund on such warrants made at the time when issued; the warrants not being able to be paid out of the existing revenues. All of these warrants are owned by Powell, Garard & Co., who took the same bona fide.

■ The defendants in their answer moved to dismiss the bill because the same did not state a case, and particular^ because it showed that the plaintiff had received large values as the proceeds of said warrants and contract, and no offer to do equity, or tender of the value of such property so received, was made. They .also denied all facts attacking said warrants, and set up a counterclaim, asking to be allowed to recover the amounts then due on said warrants, or the reasonable value of the work and labor represented thereby.

The case was referred to a master. He found that the instruments were not bonds, but warrants, and as such were not negotiable instruments, but that the commissioners’ court could issue the same without [307]*307a previous popular vote; also that the commissioners’ court could impound the revenue of future years to pay the interest and principal thereof, and that such a contract did not have to be let on competitive bidding. He also found that the additional 15 per cent, for Dawson’s service did not invalidate them; further that the manner in which the money was paid out had not brought any loss to the county.

He declined, to make any finding as to the value of the improvements to the public roads of Erath. county. This finding, therefore, failed to sustain the allegations of the bill that the warrants were issued in excess of the value of the labor and material furnished under such contract. He held that the approving of the estimates as made, and the orders for the issuance of the warrants bje the county commissioners’ court, constituted judgments;, that they could only be attacked in a direct proceeding, but that the bill in equity filed was a direct and not a collateral attack.

He held that the testimony in the case convinced his mind that the contract was obtained by' Dawson, through his agents, by means of bribery of E. Bowie, at the time a member of the commissioners’ court, and whose vote was necessary to obtain the contract. He also held that no sufficient provision had been made for payment of the $120,000 of warrants, because he concluded that the existing indebtedness, with the current expenses, exhausted so much of the road and bridge fund as to leave an insufficient amount to pay the interest on the $120,000 of warrants and the 2 per cent, sinking fund. He held that, when the $35,000 of warrants were issued, they included $18,999.14 of warrants issued to Dawson, for which no attempt had been made to provide, and which had not been contemplated to be paid out of current funds, and that this rendered the $35,000 of warrants void to that extent.

It will be perceived that these findings of the master eliminate all attack upon these warrants, except the alleged bribery of Bowie and the alleged failure to make sufficient provision for the payment of interest and sinking fund, as required by Const. Tex. art. 11, § 7, which provides :

“ * * * No debt for any purpose stall ever be incurred in any manner by any city or county unless provision is made, at the time of creating tlie same, for levying and collecting a suilicient tax to pay the interest thereon and provide at least 2% as a sinking fund.”

Exceptions to so much of the report as found against the validity of the contract and warrants, and denied relief to the defendants, were filed by Powell, Garard & Co. No exceptions were filed by Erath county. There are no persons, parties to the suit, except Powell, Gar-ard & Co. and Erath county and its board of commissioners. Powell, Garard & Co.’s sole connection with the case is as owner of the warrants.

[1] 1. These warrants are based on solemn judgments of the commissioners’ court, which are binding upon the county, unless successfully attacked. Padgett v. Young County (Tex. Civ. App.) 204 S. W. 1052; Edmondson v. Cummings (Tex. Civ. App.) 203 S. W. 428; Jeff Davis County v. Davis (Tex. Civ. App.) 192 S. W. 291; Busch & Co. [308]*308v. Caufield (Mo. App.) 135 S. W. 244; Vogt v. Bexar County, 16 Tex. Civ. App. 567, 42 S. W. 127.

[2] 2. Powell, Garard & Co. insist that these judgments are not open to a collateral attack and that this proceeding is not a direct attack. We do not think that this is a collateral attack on these judgments. On the contrary, it is a proceeding brought for the express purpose of attacking and setting aside the warrants, on.

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Bluebook (online)
274 F. 305, 1921 U.S. App. LEXIS 1345, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/powell-v-erath-county-ca5-1921.