State ex rel. Boynton v. Toy

23 P.2d 601, 138 Kan. 166, 1933 Kan. LEXIS 169
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedJuly 8, 1933
DocketNo. 31,514
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 23 P.2d 601 (State ex rel. Boynton v. Toy) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State ex rel. Boynton v. Toy, 23 P.2d 601, 138 Kan. 166, 1933 Kan. LEXIS 169 (kan 1933).

Opinion

[167]*167The opinion of the court was delivered by

Hutchison, J.:

This is an original proceeding in mandamus, brought by the state of Kansas on the relation of the attorney-general of the state and the county attorney of Riley county, for a writ requiring the board of county commissioners of Riley county to issue the funding bonds of the county in the sum of $103,671.76 and dispose of them in the manner prescribed by chapter 319 of the Session Laws of 1933, for the purpose of discharging and refunding the indebtedness specified in sections 3-B and 3-C of the amended notice and financial statement posted and published by the defendant board on June 19,1933. An alternative writ was issued, and the defendant members of the board have returned the writ according to the command thereof and filed a motion to quash the writ.

Chapter 319 of the Laws of 1933 is what is generally known as the cash-basis law. In the recent opinion rendered in the case of State, ex rel., v. Board of Education, 137 Kan. 451, 21 P. 2d 295, holding this act constitutional and valid, this law was described as follows:

“The act pertains to the indebtedness of subdivisions of the state authorized by law to raise money by taxation and to expend the money so raised in performing their respective governmental functions. Broadly speaking, it is designed to have such governmental units operate their respective functions on a cash basis — not to spend money they do not have or incur obligations they cannot meet promptly.” (p. 452.)

The items involved in this proceeding specified as above in sections 3-B and 3-C are described as being amounts overdrawn as therein stated, viz., county general fund $44,028.22, county poor fund, $39,355.54, and five road and benefit-district projects in the sum of $20,288, making the total of $103,671.76. These overdrafts have all been paid by the county out of two other funds in which there was money in excess of the immediate demand therefor, namely, the county road fund and the county bridge fund. There is, therefore, no outside third party holding any warrant or other evidence of indebtedness against the county or claiming anything from the county on account of such overdraft. The outside indebtedness has been paid by borrowing the funds necessary therefor from the county road fund and the county bridge fund.

It is contended by the defendants that -there is no authority vested in the board to replenish such overdrawn accounts or create [168]*168a new indebtedness; that chapter 319 of the Laws of 1933 is not a revenue-raising measure, but it limits the power and authority of defendants to paying legal debts and obligations; that overdrawn funds are not debts or obligations within the meaning of the act; that a debt or obligation must be predicated upon some sort of a contract, express or implied, in which connection there must be at least two persons or parties, whereas here we have only one involved, viz., the county.

There can be no serious contention as to the usual and general meaning of the words, “debt” and “obligation,” or the fact that they are predicated upon an express or implied contract, yet when one by check overdraws his account at the bank to satisfy an existing indebtedness, the debt is paid when the bank honors the check, but impliedly a new debt to the amount of the overdraft is immediately created, and it lacks none of the elements of an implied contract. When the debt or obligation of the poor fund in this case was by the county satisfied and paid out of the bridge fund in its hands, was a new debt or obligation created? Two strong arguments are presented in the negative, viz., that there is only one party handling the transaction, and that the constitution, article 11, section 4, requires that “no tax shall be levied except in pursuance of a law, which shall distinctly state the object of the same; to which object only such tax shall be applied.”

We are here confronted with the fact that the county bridge and the county road taxes have been misapplied. Is there anything wrong in now trying to correct that mistake? If it were a clerical mistake, it would be corrected immediately upon discovery. Here it is a deliberate misapplication attempted to be exonerated by the excuse of dire necessity. If the issuance of these bonds will make it possible to restore to these two funds the amounts wrongfully borrowed or taken therefrom, it will be in obedience to the constitutional inhibition that the funds be applied to the proper purposes only.

We think it is not clear or conclusive that there is only one party here concerned, or that the county has been dealing with itself in reaching the present status of the several funds here concerned, three of them being overdrawn to the amount here involved, the overdraft being taken from two others having a surplus. Are not each of these separate funds integral units of the whole financial [169]*169system of the county? They are each sustained by separate proportions of the general levy, or by specifically separate levies, and each, while a part of the whole, is a separate unit.

In the recent case of State, ex rel., v. State Highway Comm., 132 Kan. 327, 295 Pac. 986, where the state highway commission objected to reimbursing McPherson and other counties for funds paid out by them for the construction of highways, because the outstanding debts and obligations had already been paid by the counties, it was held:

"... A resulting duty devolved upon that body to adjust and settle with the counties for moneys expended by them on roads of the state system, which moneys had been advanced from miscellaneous county funds when the fund properly chargeable therewith was temporarily depleted. . .” (Syl. ¶ 1.)

This was not by way of approval of such misappropriation of funds, but was only to uphold the new highway act as a means to avoid the predicament in which many counties found themselves with temporary overdrafts in some of their funds to pay warrants properly chargeable to other funds. This decision frequently refers to these previous transactions as resulting in the making of overdrafts, oi” borrowing from one fund'for the use of another. In the case at bar, as in that case, we cannot and do not approve such misappropriation of funds, but this refunding act, like the highway act, seeks to remedy the present existing situation in which these funds are found and prevent the recurrence of such a predicament.

If there has been a borrowing of one fund for the payment of the debts of another fund, there is certainly such a separate entity in the right to the use of the particular fund as to support the relation of one to the other as that of borrower and lender and create a debt or obligation, although doné irregularly and without legal authority. We cannot, therefore, concur in the contention of the defendants that the overdraft sought to be paid or refunded in this case by the issuance of bonds is not a debt or obligation within the general meaning of those words.

It was said in the case of State, ex rel., v. Saline County Comm’rs, 128 Kan. 437, 278 Pac. 54, that “each of the funds is distinct from the others.” At the same time the court condemned and disapproved the practice of loaning to or borrowing from one or the other as being in violation of the constitutional provision above cited.

Under the provisions of this act we are not confined to the matter [170]

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Related

Board of County Commissioners v. Board of Education
51 P.2d 973 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1935)
Lathrop v. Hall
44 P.2d 201 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1935)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
23 P.2d 601, 138 Kan. 166, 1933 Kan. LEXIS 169, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-boynton-v-toy-kan-1933.