Robertson v. Town of Englewood

123 S.W.2d 1090, 174 Tenn. 92, 10 Beeler 92, 1938 Tenn. LEXIS 68
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 21, 1939
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 123 S.W.2d 1090 (Robertson v. Town of Englewood) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Robertson v. Town of Englewood, 123 S.W.2d 1090, 174 Tenn. 92, 10 Beeler 92, 1938 Tenn. LEXIS 68 (Tenn. 1939).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Cook

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The town of Englewood was incorporated by Chapter 30, Private Acts of 1919. By sections 9 and 10 of the Act, the town was declared to be a special school district under control of a Board of Education elected as other municipal officers. Under supervision of the Board of Education, buildings were erected and schools maintained in the town of Englewood by the proceeds of a municipal tax and with revenue allotted by the State and county under general laws.

The bill was filed against the town of Englewood, November 3, 1933, to recover for money advanced by the Bank of Englewood for the use and maintenance of the schools. The evidence of debt, as shown by the bill, is *96 ■two orders of the school board addressed to the recorder of the town and accepted by the bank as evidence of the loan. One order for $6,200, reduced by credits to $5,050’.-36, dated April 25, 1930', was the balance on a loan of nine thousand dollars for use in building an addition to the school house. The other, for three thousand dollars, dated July 2, 1930, was for money used in payment of teachers’ salaries.

The town of Englewood denied liability, saying’ (1) that the order dated April 25, 1930, is void because not signed by the chairman of the board; (2) that the Board of Education was not authorized by the charter to borrow money; (3) that the town is not liable for indebtedness incurred by the board.

January 20, 1938, the complainant filed an amended and supplemental bill making McMinn County a party defendant. It was shown that by Chapter 435> Private Acts of 1937, the charter of the town of Englewood was amended by repealing sections 9 and 10, which erected the town into a special school district. It was charged that thereupon McMinn County, with knowledge of the indebtedness of the school district of the town of Engle-wood, assumed possession and control of the school buildings and burdened itself with the duty of maintaining the schools, and thereby became jointly liable for the indebtedness due complainant which was incurred for erecting, equipping and maintaining the school.

February 28,1938, the town of Englewood filed an answer to the supplemental bill and a cross bill against McMinn County. It is shown by the cross-bill that the town of Englewood supplemented revenues derived from the school fund by a tax levy and at an expense of more than twenty thousand ($20,000) dollars, erected a school *97 building and at additional cost equipped it; and, to pay for the building, tbe town borrowed twenty thousand ($20,000) dollars, for which its negotiable bonds were issued and are outstanding; for the maintenance and operation of the schools of the special district, the town of Englewood incurred other sundry debts which are outstanding; and when the special district was abolished by amendment to the charter and McMinn County took over the schools, it became liable for the aforesaid obligations. It is alleged that the twenty thousand dollars of bonds outstanding and the other obligations constituted an indebtedness for which the county became liable upon abolition of the special district, and that the county is also liable for $1,405 interest paid on the bonds by the town of Englewood. The cross-complainant prayed for a judgment against the county for the amount of the bonds and other debts incurred in maintenance and operation of the schools.

The defendant McMinn County demurred to the cross bill, among other grounds because (1) the town does not own the bonds and warrants, and for that reason cannot maintain the action to recover them; (2) having charged in its answer to the bill that the debts were incurred by the Board of Education without authority to bind the town, it cannot, by contradictory statements of the cross bill, assert the right to recover from the county; (3) the town cannot recover the item of $3,136.27, the amount of school warrants issued for operating the school, because the facts are not shown upon which defendant would be liable; (4) the Private Act repealing sections 9 and 10 of the charter of Engle-wood imposes no obligation upon the county for the debts of the town, and the county is not liable for debts *98 contracted by the town for the erection of buildings and the maintenance of schools; (5') Chapter 435, Private Acts of 1937, is unconstitutional because it suspends the general law contrary to Article 11, section 8, of the Constitution.

The chancellor overruled all the grounds of the demurrers filed by McMinn County. The county stood upon its demurrers and refused to plead over. Thereupon the chancellor heard the cause upon the pleadings and proof and decreed that Chapter 435, Private Acts of 1937, was constitutional and effective to abolish the special school district in the town of Englewood. He found from the evidence that the town of Englewood had ratified the loan made on orders of the board of education and that ■complainant Robertson could recover the balance due from the town. A decree was accordingly entered against the town of Englewood for the sum advanced by the Bank of Englewood upon the two orders, with interest from the date of their issuance. He sustained a motion of the complainant Robertson, Receiver, and the town of Englewood to amend their pleadings so as to pray for declaratory relief determinative of the rights of all the parties; and thereupon entered a decree declaring that McMinn County was not only liable for the sum adjudged against the town of Englewood in favor of Robertson, Receiver, but also for other indebtedness incurred by the town on account of the school. By the declaratory decree, he fixed liability upon McMinn County for interest paid on the twenty thousand dollars outstanding school bonds from the date of their issuance, and added interest on payments of interest. The county was also declared liable for outstanding warrants of the town of Englewood issued for maintenance of schools, amounting *99 to $3',136.27, and for the twenty thousand dollars of bonds issued by the town of Englewood. This was coupled with the declaration that the chairman of the county court issue warrants upon the trustee and the county trustee pay warrants issued in payment of interest on the bonds and to pay the bonds, upon maturity.

' The town of Englewood appealed from so much of the decree as charged it with liability to Robertson, Receiver, for the two warrants described in the bill.

The county appealed from the decree declaring it liable for the obligations of the town of Englewood, and from the action of the chancellor in overruling its demurrer.

Through assignments of error the town of Englewood insists that the chancellor erred (1) in holding it liable for acts of the town board of education because the board had no authority to issue the warrants and borrow money on them; (2) in finding that the town ratified the acts of the school board in issuing orders on the town recorder in anticipation of revenues; (3) in permitting witnesses to testify that the town levied a tax for payment of debts incurred for the school and made payments on the loan procured by the Board of Education; (4) in allowing interest on the indebtedness in favor of Robertson, Receiver.

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Bluebook (online)
123 S.W.2d 1090, 174 Tenn. 92, 10 Beeler 92, 1938 Tenn. LEXIS 68, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/robertson-v-town-of-englewood-tenn-1939.