Roberts v. Thompson

118 N.W. 106, 82 Neb. 458, 1908 Neb. LEXIS 298
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 22, 1908
DocketNo. 15,732
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 118 N.W. 106 (Roberts v. Thompson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Roberts v. Thompson, 118 N.W. 106, 82 Neb. 458, 1908 Neb. LEXIS 298 (Neb. 1908).

Opinion

Epperson, C.

The courthouse of Thurston county was, in the opinion of the county commissioners, defendants herein, insufficient for the accommodation of the county officers and the courts, and an insufficient protection of the records against fire. In January, 1908, a resolution was passed by the county board providing that they should enter into an agreement with one Severson to procure by lease additional offices and vaults in what is known as the ^Palace Hotel Block” for the use of the county officers and the protection of the records. It is the defendants’ purpose to rent said additional office rooms and vaults for a period of five years for the specified rental of $60 a month. The plaintiff herein instituted this action March 2, 1908, and obtained a temporary restraining order which enjoined the defendants, as county commissioners, from entering into a contract of lease for office purposes of any portion of the Palace hotel block, and from disposing of the county courthouse and the fire-proof safes belonging to the county. The defendants appealed from a judgment making the temporary order perpetual.

The courthouse is a frame building built in 1889 at a cost of $1,500. There is no office room therein for the county attorney. The county superintendent and assessor occupy one small room. The county clerk and clerk of the district court occupy one and the same office room, the dimensions of which are 18 by 30 feet, one-half of which is occupied by furniture. The county commissioners also hold their meetings here. There is a very small court room. The county clerk is the only county officer who has Ire-proof safes for the protection of his records, . On one side and adjoining the courthouse is a frame printing office in which a gasoline engine is operated.' Sessions of the district court, and at times sessions of the county court, are held in another building, although with little or no expense to the cq »nty. It would seem from these facts that the county board has good reason to take- some [460]*460steps to provide better offices and better protection of tbe records against fire.

The plaintiff contends that the financial condition of the county is such that the county board is not justified in now providing the additional offices, and that the contemplated action of the county board is arbitrary and an abuse of discretion. There are outstanding claims and warrants against the county aggregating $25,000. The maximum levy authorized has heretofore been exhausted. However, a part of the 1907 levy was used in reducing the indebtedness. If $720 is expended annually for the payment of rent, there will, of course, be less each year to apply upon the indebtedness. By section 4441, Ann. St. 1907, the county boards of the several counties are given the charge and custody of all real and personal estate owned by the county, the management of the county funds and county business, except as is otherwise specifically provided. Section 4443 makes it the duty of the county board to erect or otherwise provide a suitable courthouse, jail, and other necessary county buildings, to keep such buildings in repair, and to provide suitable rooms and offices for the accommodation of the several courts of record, the county board, clerk, treasurer, sheriff, clerk of the district court, county superintendent, county surveyor, and county attorney (provided the county attorney shall hold his office at the county seat), to provide and keep in repair, when the finances of the county will permit, suitable fire-proof safes for the county clerk and county treasurer. By these statutory provisions the county board is given the power' to provide the necessary offices for the use of the county, and, if the finances will permit, to provide suitable vaults for the records of the county clerk and the county treasurer. If funds are not available for the construction of the necessary buildings, or if for any reason the county has not a sufficient building of its own and cannot construct or purchase the same, or if . the county board considers it inadvisable to construct or purchase, they may provide offices and vaults or safes [461]*461by lease. It is left to the county board to determine what are suitable rooms and offices,,and also to determine when the finances of the county will permit suitable fire-proof safes for the county clerk and the county treasurer. Its judgment, however, must be exercised in good faith. The court undoubtedly would have jurisdiction over the county board in the event that it acted wantonly or fraudulently, or exceeded any of the limitations placed upon the exercise of such powers. But, where funds are available which may be expended for one of two or more purposes, the judgment of the county board appropriating such to one legal purpose will not be set aside by the court, although the funds might legally have been expended in the payment of general indebtedness. If the board, acting in the manner authorized, in good faith determine that such available funds should be used in furnishing protection against fire of the records of the county, a court of equity will not interfere. This court has frequently refused to interfere with the administrative or political powers conferred upon county boards. Howard v. Board of Supervisors, 54 Neb. 443; Dodge County v. Acom, 61 Neb. 376; Otto v. Conroy, 76 Neb. 517; Tyson v. Washington County, 78 Neb. 211. The county commissioners act in an administrative capacity, and the legislature has conferred upon them the duty of deciding how the affairs of the county shall be managed, and, unless there is a gross abuse of their discretion, or unless they act fraudulently, or contrary to some express provision of the statutes, or beyond some limitation, a court cannot interfere.

It was the intention of the framers of our constitution that in the administrative affairs of the government the courts should not substitute their judgment for that of the administrative officers, although the courts might disagree with them as to what business policies should be adopted. But it is the contention of the plaintiff that the defendants threaten to step beyond the limitation fixed by statute, in that they propose to create a liability for rent where no funds are provided wherewith to meet such ob[462]*462ligation. Section 4443, Ann. St. 1907, among other things, provides that the county commissioners at their regular meeting in January shall prepare an estimate of the necessary expenses of the county during the ensuing year, the total of which shall in no instance exceed the amount of taxes authorized by law to be levied during that year, including the amounts necessary to meet outstanding indebtedness as evidenced by bonds, coupons or warrants legally issued; and no levy of taxes shall be made for any other purpose or for more than is specified in such estimate at the time levy is made. Pursuant to this section the defendants in January made an estimate of expenses for the current year and published the same according to law. Many of the estimated expenses were itemized, but the estimate for rent appears as follows: “Unforeseen expenses, rent, repairing, $5,000.”

The plaintiff contends that the said estimate of expenses is void, in that the amount which the board proposes to expend for any of the unforeseen expenses cannot be ascertained. The statute does not provide that the estimate shall contain a separate statement of each item which it is estimated would be required. It is not intended by the legislature that the estimate should contain only such items as the county commissioners then knew would be required.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
118 N.W. 106, 82 Neb. 458, 1908 Neb. LEXIS 298, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/roberts-v-thompson-neb-1908.