Shinn v. Board of Education

20 S.E. 604, 39 W. Va. 497, 1894 W. Va. LEXIS 80
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 24, 1894
StatusPublished
Cited by33 cases

This text of 20 S.E. 604 (Shinn v. Board of Education) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Shinn v. Board of Education, 20 S.E. 604, 39 W. Va. 497, 1894 W. Va. LEXIS 80 (W. Va. 1894).

Opinion

Holt, Judge:

This is an injunction by and on behalf of the citizens and taxpayers of Ripley School District to restrain and enjoin the payment of three certain drafts for four hundred and twenty dollars each on the ground of illegality. On the 15th day of November, 1893, defendant Thomas E. Davis moved to dissolve the injunction, which motion the court overruled, refusing to dissolve same, from which order this appeal was allowed. Code, c. 135, s. 1, cl. 7. Stating the contract and orders as if they were valid, the' facts are as follows: On the 25th day of September, 1891, the Board of Education of Ripley District in Jackson County entered into a contract with one of the defendants, viz: the Educational Aid Association of Chicago, for the purchase of forty two sets of “Public School Study Made Practical,” to be delivered on board the cars, and shipped to J. F. Coast, Jackson C. II., Jackson county, W. Va., on the 15th day of October, 1891, in consideration of which the board of education agreed and bound itself to pay to the Educational Aid Association one thousand two hundred and sixty dollars, being thirty clol-> lars per set, to be paid in the following manner: Four hundred and twenty dollars clue 1st December, 1892; four hundred and twenty dollars due December 1,1893; and fo.ur hundred and twenty .dollars due December 1, 1894;— [500]*500and the president and secretary of the board were authorized and directed to issue, sign and deliver to the Educational Aid Association or its agents orders in due form on the sheriff of Jackson county payable out of the building fund of the said district for the said one thousand two hundred and sixty dollars payable as aforesaid, and this contract was entered on the record of the board. The president and secretary on the same day issued, signed and delivered to the agent of the Educational Aid Association orders No. 44, No. 45, and No. 46, which are .as follows :

“No. 44. Ripley District, W. Va., Sept. 25,1891. Sheriff of Jackson County: Pay to the order of Educational Aid Association, or bearer, four hundred & twenty dollars aud charge to the building fund of Ripley district. By order of the board of education. Due Dec. 1st, 1892. (Without interest.) J. E. Coast, President I. S. Little, Secretary. $420.00.”
“No. 45. Ripley District, W. Va., Sept. 25,1891. Sheriff of Jackson County : Pay to the order of Educational Aid Association, or bearer, four hundred & twenty dollars, and charge to the building fund of Ripley district. By order of the board of education. Due Dec. 1st, 1898. (Without interest.) J. E. Coast, President. I. S. Little, Secretary. $420.00.”
“No. 46. Ripley District, W. Va., Sept. 25,1891. Sheriff of Jackson County : Pay to the order of Educational Aid Association, or bearer, four hundred & twenty dollars, and charge to the building fund of Ripley district. By order of the board of education. Due Dec. 1st, 1894. (Without interest.) J. F. Coast, President. I. S. Little, Secretary. $420.00.”

They are not negotiable even apart from the fact that they lack the statutory requirement of being payable at a bank, etc. (section 7, c. 99, Code); for the intention in such case as a general rule is to authorize the payment, and furnish vouchers to the proper disbursing officers, aud> not to put negotiable instruments in circulation ; and they do not cut out equities as against the corporation, or in this case as against the resident taxpayers ; and further on the ground that there is no implied authority in such officers to [501]*501execute negotiable instruments. See 1 Daniel, Neg. Inst. (4th Ed.) § 427; Steinbeck v. Treasurer, 22 Ohio St. 144; School Directors v. Fogleman, 76 Ill. 189; State v. Huff, 63 Mo. 288; 2 Beach. Pub. Corp. § 799; Fox v. Shipman, 19 Mich. 218.

On the 14th day of November, 1891, F. M. Durbin of the city of Parkersburg for a valuable consideration sold and delivered the three orders to the appellant, Thomas E. Davis. They bear no indorsement. On the 18th day of January, 1893, the plaintiffs filed their bill and obtained from the judge in vacation on the 19th day of January, an order of injunction, as prayed for, restraining the late sheriff, James M. Poling, and the present sheriff, I. M. Adams, from paying said sum of one thousand two hundred and sixty dollars, or said orders or any part thereof.

The material grounds, upon which the plaintiffs base their right to the injunction in their original and amended bills, are as follows : (1) The order making and setting forth the contract of purchase was illegal, because Commissioner D. L. Sayreal, though present did not concur, and he was necessary to constitute a quorum. The proceedings do not show upon their face who called the meeting and directed notice to be given. That none in fact was given. That, therefore, the meeting was illegal, and its proceedings void. (2) The board had no authority under the law to use the building fund in the purchase of such things as those designated as “Public School Study Made Practical.” (8) It was a-debt directed tobe paid out of the school-money of subsequent years, and was therefore unlawfully incurred, in violation of the school-law (section 45, c. 45, Code).

The defendant, Thomas E. Davis, was made a party defendant on his own petition and answered, that he purchased the orders in controversy for a valuable consideration ; — that a levy was made for the payment of the order No. 44, duo December 1, 1892; — that plaintiffs before that time had notice of defendant’s purchase ; — that the levy was legal; — that each plaintiff had notice of the levy and had paid the assessment before the suit was brought, and they are therefore estopped as to the order No. 44, foy [502]*502four hundred and twenty dollars — that having notice they made no attempt to supersede the levy; — and that their remedy at law by writ of supersedeas was ample. Defendant denies that the meeting was illegal or irregular, but charges that the orders were legally and regularly issued in due course of business, under sanction of law, at a special meeting of the board of commissioners, regularly and duly called, a majority being present, and all having had due notice of the time and place, when the contract was made, and the order setting forth the same was entered on the record of the board; that the articles so purchased were such as the board was authorized to purchase ; that they were delivered, accepted, placed in the schools and have since been in use; that the orders were negotiable, and not in excess of the amount authorized by law ; that the board had a right to create a debt payable in one, two and three years; and that there was at least one thousand two hundred and sixty dollars in the hands of the sheriff on the 25th day of September, 1891, belonging to the building fund, not otherwise appropriated. The plaintiffs replied generally, and the issues were made up.

Several questions of pleading and practice are raised in this record and discussed by defendants’ counsel, which call for some consideration. On the 10th day of March, defendant, Thomas E. Davis, hied his petition alleging, that the agent of the defendant, the said Educational Aid Association, had placed the three orders in the bill and proceedings mentioned, amounting to one thousand two hundred and sixty dollars, the payment of which had been enjoined, in the hands of E. M.

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Bluebook (online)
20 S.E. 604, 39 W. Va. 497, 1894 W. Va. LEXIS 80, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shinn-v-board-of-education-wva-1894.