Slaughter v. Knight

184 S.W. 539, 1916 Tex. App. LEXIS 295
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 17, 1916
DocketNo. 78.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 184 S.W. 539 (Slaughter v. Knight) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Slaughter v. Knight, 184 S.W. 539, 1916 Tex. App. LEXIS 295 (Tex. Ct. App. 1916).

Opinion

MIDDDEBROOK, J.

This is , a suit, brought in the district court of San Augustine county, Tex., by the county treasurer, against W. K. Knight, county commissioner of precinct No. 1, said county, and the sureties on his official bond, as county commissioner of precinct No. 1 of said county, alleging unlawful collection and holding of money belonging to said county by said commissioner. The suit is brought under special road law for said county, enacted by the Twenty-Eighth Legislature.

The charges are: (1) That he collected $30 at the end of each quarter, or $120 for the year 1911, as county commissioner of said county for reviewing, etc., the public roads of said county, when under the special road law for said county, he could collect only $30 for the entire year; (2) that he collected $78 for work done on roads by Teel and Hanks, and that such collection was without warrant of law; (3) that he collected $12 for letting and receiving bridges, and such collection was without warrant of law. Plaintiff also alleged presentation by said Knight of these different claims to the commissioners’ court of said county, the approval of said claims by the commissioners’ court, issuance of warrants by said court on the county treasurer, and payment of the same by the county treasurer . of said county. The total amount charged to have been illegally collected is $120. The petition alleges, also, the election of said Knight as commissioner of precinct No. 1 for said county, his qualification as such official, and the execution of the statutory bond by him for the sum of $3,000 as such officer, with Sam Parker and John Thompson, Jr., sureties on the bond, and the approval of the bond by the commissioners’ court, and pleaded the' bond in hare ver-ba. The bond is for the faithful performance of his duties as county commissioner.

Defendant Knight answered by general and special exception and' general denial. The exceptions are to the effect; (1) That defendant is charged with liability as a road commissioner under act of the Twenty-Eighth Legislature, but the petition fails to show that he qualified as such commissioner; (2) that under the special road law for San Augustine county, county commissioners are made ex officio road commissioners, and such commissioners are required to qualify and give bond in the sum of $1,000 for faithful performance of duty and properly accounting for all moneys, tools, and property of the county coming into the possession of such ex officio road commissioner; (3) that the petition fails to show lack of authority of the commissioners’ court to pay the sums of money charged to have been illegally received; (4) that the petition fails to show wherein or how the defendant is liable to the county for the money claimed; (5) that the petition showed voluntary payment by the commissioners’ court of the money charged to have been illegally collected; (6) that the petition showed payment of the various sums by the commissioners’ court, but failed to charge the receipt of such money as a part of the defendant’s special duty, and that he violated, the conditions of his official bond to faithfully perform his duty as county commissioner, as required of him under the law.

Defendants Parker & Thompson adopted the answer of defendant Knight, so far as applicable, and urged further special exception to the effect that the petition charged them as sureties on said Knight’s bond as county commissioner, etc., and as such sureties liable for. said money, but that the Twenty-Eighth Legislature had made a special road law for San Augustine county, which was then in force, and said law created the office of road superintendent for said county, and, in the absence of appointment of such superintendent, making the county commissioner ex officio road commissioner of said county, and requiring them to give bond as such in the sum of $1,000 for faithful performance of duty and properly accounting for all property of the county coming into the possession of such ex officio road commissioner; and that such bond was another different and additional bond to the bond as required under the law, in the sum of $3,000 for a county commissioner, and that suen bond as ex officio road commissioner was made payable to the county judge of San Augustine county for the benefit of the road and bridge fund of said county; and that the petition failed to show the qualification of said Knight as such ex officio road commissioner and his execution of bond as such commissioner ; and that the petition sought to hold them liable for acts of the county commissioner, which could have been performed, under the law, only in his capacity of ex offi-cio road commissioner.

The honorable trial court sustained the *541 exceptions to the petition, and the only assignment of error presented for our consideration is:

“The court erred in sustaining the general exceptions of the defendant to the plaintiff’s petition.”

But one proposition is presented under this assignment, which is as follows:

“The facts set out in plaintiff’s petition show a good cause of action against appellees, and the cause should have been heard on its merits.”

To support this proposition, appellant cites Special Laws of Texas, Twenty-Eighth Legislature, 1903, p. 149, §§ 14, 16.

“See. 14. Each county commissioner,_ when acting as road commissioner, shall be entitled to $2.00 per day for services actually performed; provided, that he shall not receive more than $30 per quarter. Said per diem shall be paid out of the road and bridge fund, when the account shall have been approved by the commissioners’ court, and the court shall not approve said account unless the commissioner presenting,it shall make oath that the account is just, due, and unpaid, and said account shall specify the number of days’ work actually performed by him, and that it was necessary to be done under the circumstances, and if he worked only a part of a day, the number of hours worked shall be stated, and no commissioner shall be entitled to pay as road commissioner, either for himself or deputy, while he is performing the duties of county commissioner, nor shall he receive any additional pay than that provided by this section for inspection of his road, or other road service.”
“Sec. 16. The office of county superintendent of public roads and bridges is hereby created, and the commissioners’ court of San Augustine county may at its first regular term after this law shall have taken effect appoint a county superintendent of public roads and bridges, who shall hold his office until removed by said court, in which case there shall be another appointed to fill such vacancy. Such county superintendent' of roads and bridges shall be a person of good character, executive ability, and versed in road working, and shall be a freeholder in the county of San Augustine. Such superintendent shall have charge of, shall direct the labor of county convicts when doing road duty, and all the hands placed under him, and may through the direction of the commissioners’ court employ other hands to labor on the public roads, provided, that such hand or hands shall not cost at the rate of more than $1.00 per day.

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41 S.W.2d 989 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1931)
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
184 S.W. 539, 1916 Tex. App. LEXIS 295, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/slaughter-v-knight-texapp-1916.