State ex rel. Collins v. Gardner

112 N.W. 373, 79 Neb. 101, 1907 Neb. LEXIS 332
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedMay 24, 1907
DocketNo. 14,545
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 112 N.W. 373 (State ex rel. Collins v. Gardner) 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
State ex rel. Collins v. Gardner, 112 N.W. 373, 79 Neb. 101, 1907 Neb. LEXIS 332 (Neb. 1907).

Opinion

Barnes, J.

This is an original application for a writ of mandamus. The respondents are respectively the treasurer, director and moderator of school district No. 10 of Scott’s Bluff county. It appears that the relator holds by purchase; and assignment a large number of school distinct warrants of the said district, issued at intervals between December 1, 1902, and January 31, 1905. About $2,700 worth of said warrants were issued for the payment of teachers’ wages, and the remainder of them, amounting to about $300, are for incidental expenses. Soon after the issuance of these warrants, the payees presented them to the treasurer for payment. They were not paid for want of funds, and the treasurer thereupon registered them, giving each a number in the order of its presentation. It is alleged in the petition that the treasurer of said school district is receiving, and is about to receive, in each of said funds, large sums of money from the levy of taxes for the year 1905 from the state apportionment fund, and from other sources; that the respondents, as officers of said school district, have directed its treasurer to apply said moneys tp the payment of the current expenses of said school district during the school year, commencing the first Monday of July, 1905, to the exclusion of the payment of the relator’s warrants; that the treasurer of said district refuses to .apply the said moneys, or any part of them, so coming or about to come into his hands, to the payment of the relator’s warrants; that said treasurer threatens to and will apply any and all moneys realized from said sources during the school year, commencing on the first Monday in July, 1905, to the payment of the [103]*103expenses incurred during said school year, and warrants drawn in payment therefor; and refuses to apply any of the moneys so realized to the payment of the warrants owned by the relator. It is further alleged that the taxes still outstanding for years previous to the school year of 1905, and the moneys accruing to said district from other sources for such years, are entirely insufficient to pay the warrants owned by this relator, and if the defendants are permitted to expend all of said fund received for the year 1905 for the current expenses incurred by them in conducting the school in said district for that year, to the exclusion of the payment of any part of the relator’s warrants, he will be without remedy, will have no means of collecting the moneys due him on said warrants, and his claim against the district thereon will be defeated and wholly lost.

In response to the alternative writ, respondents have answered, admitting the issuance and registration of the warrants in question and the relator’s OAvnership thereof. They'also admit that they intend to apply the revenue collected from the levy of 1905 and the state apportionment fund to the payment of the current expenses of the school year, beginning in July, 1905, and also that the revenue available from other sources consists of small amounts derived from tuition received from nonresident pupils, which has been turned into the teachers’ fund for the said school year, to be paid out on teachers’ warrants draAvn for that year. The ansAver also contains the folloAving: “Respondents, further answering, allege that at the annual meeting of the legal voters of school district No. 16, held on the last Monday in June, 1905, the trustees of said district presented an estimate showing the amount of money required for the maintenance of schools in said district during the coming year; that the legal voters at- said meeting thereupon determined the amount of money required for said school maintenance, and voted the same to the amount of $1,600, Avhich was divided as follows: Teachers’ fund, eighteen mills; incidental fund, [104]*104seven mills. That all of the money so voted and levied, together with the state apportionment and accruing money for tuition, is necessary to pay the expenses of maintaining its school for the said school year.” And the foregoing is assigned by the respondents as a justification for their refusal to pay the relator’s warrants in the order of their registration. No evidence was taken, and the case has been presented to us upon'the pleadings, oral arguments and briefs.

It is the contention of the relator that he is entitled to a peremptory writ commanding the respondents to apply all of the moneys coming into the fund in question to the payment of his warrants in the order of their registration. Sections 10850-10852, Ann. St., provide, in substance, that all warrants upon the state treasury, the treasury of any county, city or school district, or other municipal corporation, shall be paid in the order of their presentation; that each treasurer shall keep a warrant register, which shall show the. number, date and amount of each warrant presented and registered, the particular fund upon which the same is drawn, and the date of presentation. And section 10853 of said statutes reads as follows: “It shall be the duty of every such treasurer to put aside in a separate and sealed package, the money for the payment of each registered warrant, in the order of its registration, as soon as money sufficient for the payment of such' warrant is received to the credit of the particular fund upon which the same is drawn.” The relator insists that these sections, together with section 11039 of said statutes, require us to grant him the relief for which he prays. It is provided by the last numbered section that the legal voters at any annual meeting, shall determine by vote the number of mills on the dollar of the assessed valuation which shall be levied for all purposes, except for the payment of bonded indebtedness, which number shall be sufficient to maintain a school in the manner and for the time provided in section 14 of the school law (Ann. St. sec. 11042), but not exceeding 25 mills in any one year; [105]*105provided, that in districts having four children or less of school age the levy shall not exceed the sum of $400 in any year, and in districts having more than four and less than sixteen children of school age the levy shall not exceed the sum of $50 a child, in addition to the above; that the tax so voted shall be reported by the district board to the county clerk, and shall be levied by the county board and collected as other taxes. The fund thus created has been commonly known and designated a»s the general school district fund. This is the fund out of which the current expenses of the district are paid, and warrants may be drawn against it, whether there is money in the school district treasury to its credit or not.

Discussing the nature of this fund, in the case of Zimmerman v. State 60 Neb. 633, it was said: “But a different purpose is disclosed with respect to ordinary current expenses. They aré to be paid out of the taxes levied for the year in which they are incurred. The school year commences on the second Monday of July. * * * At the annual school meeting held on the last Monday in June * * the qualified voters are authorized to determine The amount necessary to be expended the succeeding year, and to vote a tax on the property of the district for the payment of the same.’ * * * This language admits of only one construction. It means thac the general expenses of each school year shall be paid out of the taxes levied at the annual meeting held just prior to the commencement of such year. The taxes so levied constitute a fund against which warrants may be (hawn; and such warrants, when presented to the district treasurer, are, in default of cash, required to be regist ored and paid in the order of their registration.

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Related

State ex rel. Hadsell v. Putnam
174 N.W. 609 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 1919)
State ex rel. McDonald v. Farrington
126 N.W. 91 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 1910)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
112 N.W. 373, 79 Neb. 101, 1907 Neb. LEXIS 332, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-collins-v-gardner-neb-1907.