Ramage, Parks & Co. v. Folmar

108 So. 580, 214 Ala. 661, 1926 Ala. LEXIS 121
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedApril 15, 1926
Docket4 Div. 260.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 108 So. 580 (Ramage, Parks & Co. v. Folmar) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ramage, Parks & Co. v. Folmar, 108 So. 580, 214 Ala. 661, 1926 Ala. LEXIS 121 (Ala. 1926).

Opinion

*662 SAYRE, X

Motion against W. B. Fol-mar as county treasurer of Pike county and the sureties on his bond for. summary judgment, as provided ■ by section 10265 of the Code of 1923. The office of county treasurer for Pike county was abolished by the act of September. 15, 1915 (Laws 1915, p. 348), but the record shows that defendant Polmar was appointed to act as county treasurer under the terms of section 322 of the Codé of 1923. The motion was maintainable against defendant Folmar and his bond according to the provisions of section 319 of the Code of 1923, whereby the law, as laid down by a majority of the court in Compton v. Marengo County Bank, 203 Ala. 129, 82 So. 159, was changed.

Movant owned warrants drawn against the general road fund of the county for the sums of $980, $474.62, $2,976.34, $2,610, and $1,689.83, duly registered and numbered respectively as 830, 827, 848, 849, and 863. These warrants were presented for payment February 25, 1925, and again on March 2d, next thereafter, and payment refused by defendant. At that time there remained in the keeping of defendant to the credit of the road fund the sum of $19,447.68, against which there were outstanding prior warrants to the amount of $16,496.97. This, without more, would have required the payment of the first two or three warrants. White v. Mayor, etc., 119 Ala. 483, 23 So. 999. But, further, defendant had paid to holders, other than movant, warrants of later registration than any or all of the warrants presented by movant, aggregating the sum of $18,000 and more, so that, but for defendant’s unauthorized preference of junior warrants to that amount (Code 1923, § 303, subsec. 4), he would have been in ample funds to pay all the warrants here in suit. There is an element of contract in movant’s claim of priority over junior warrants that cannot be overlooked or evaded, as this court held on good authority in Rhodes v. Marengo County Bank, 205 Ala. 667, 88 So. 850.

Defendant’s answer to movant’s whole case is that, on January 1st preceding the date of presentation by movant, the court of county commissioners had adopted a budget for the year 1925, showing, among other things, an item of mbre than $18,000 reserved for the payment of interest on the bonded debt of the county, a copy of which budget had been lodged with defendant, and in this connection defendant showed the'court that, if movant’s warrants were paid, there would not be funds in his hands sufficient to meet the estimated expenses of the county for the current year. In Rhodes v. Marengo County Bank, 205 Ala. 667, 88 So. 850, we held that, with or without the act of September 25, 1919, section 6789 of the Code. of 1923, providing for the budget system of finance, the entire county revenue may be devoted to- the payment of current governmental expenses when necessary, and that other claims, though passed and allowed, must be deferred until there is a surplus in the treasury over and above the amount necessary to meet such current expenses. But this contention obviously fails to answer the two propositions heretofore stated, viz.: (1) That, notwithstanding' the transfer, in effect, of some $18,000 from the road fund to the general fund, there remained in the road fund enough to pay several of movant’s warrants; and (2) that, if there had been no preference of prior ■warrants, defendant would have been in funds to pay movant for all his warrants, notwithstanding the transfer 'of funds.

But, further, the propriety of thus in effect transferring funds from the road fund to the general fund of the county is justified by defendant on the ground, if we read the record aright^ that such transfer was necessary “to ■pay the actual expenses of the county as shown by the budget so adopted.” Code, § 6789. The budget, in and of itself, accomplished nothing in the way of affecting movant’s right to be paid in the order of his warrants after provision made for the payment of the governmental expenses of the county for the current year. But subsection 6 of section 231 of the Code of 1923, prescribing the order of payment among pre-, ferred claims against the county, and the act of September 29, 1923, amending section 146 of the Code of 1907, now section 224 of the Code of 1923, are more to the point. 'Subsection 6, added by the act of September 29,1923 (Acts, p. 634), provided'that—

“Interest on bonds heretofore and hereafter lawfully issued by the county, in the order of their issuance, as evidenced by the interest coupons attached to such bonds or by the bonds themselves. For the payment of the above recited claims, in the order named, it shall be the duty of the county treasurer or custodian of the county funds to set apart a sufficient fund from the monies of the county and he and his official bond shall be held liable for a failure so-to do, in so far as the funds of the county make it possible for him so to do.”

And section 224 provides that—

“The court of county commissioners must,’ in term time, audit all claims against their respective counties; and every claim, or such part thereof as is allowed, must be registered in a book kept for that purpose; andjthe judge of probate must give the claimant a warrant on the treasury for the amount so allowed; but bonds and interest coupons evidencing interest on such bonds, lawfully issued by the county, shall-not be required to be registered or to-be proved, nor shall warrants be required to issue therefor, but in addition to all other privileges, shall be held to enjoy all the privileges of registered warrants from the date of their lawful issue, and shall be held to be allowed claims, from the date of their lawful issue.”

This statute law, if there were no other of immediate bearing on the question at issue, would justify the transfer of the fund of *663 $18,000 or more to the general fund in order to meet the payments required by the interest coupons falling due during the year, if, as we think should he conceded, the other items of charge shown by the budget witness legitimate actual expenses of the county government for the year.

Movant insists that no part of the road fund could be lawfully transferred to the general fund. The road fund was derived from a tax of one-fourth of 1 per centum levied and collected under section 215 of the Constitution of 1901, 'to be appropriated, in the language of the Constitution, “to pay any debt or liability * * * that may hereafter,” that is, after the adoption of the Constitution, “be created for the erection of necessary public buildings, bridges or roads, any county may levy and collect such special'taxes, not to exceed one-fourth of one per centum, as * * * may hereafter be authorized by law [Acts 1903, p. 412], which taxes so levied and collected shall be applied exclusively to the purposes for which the same were so levied and collected.” The bonded debt of the county—some of it dating as far back as 1905, and all of it incurred to pay for public buildings, bridges, and roads, though some of it appears to have been diverted to other purposes—was secured, principal and interest, by a pledge of “the full faith, credit, and resources of the county.”

The above-quoted provision of the Constitution warranted, indeed, required, the application of the funds derived from the tax of one-fourth of 1 per centum authorized by section 215 to the payment of interest on the bonded debt of the county.

But moneys collected from other sources go into the road fund.

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Bluebook (online)
108 So. 580, 214 Ala. 661, 1926 Ala. LEXIS 121, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ramage-parks-co-v-folmar-ala-1926.