State ex rel. Helter v. Zeeb

6 Ohio Cir. Dec. 70
CourtTuscarawas Circuit Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1894
StatusPublished

This text of 6 Ohio Cir. Dec. 70 (State ex rel. Helter v. Zeeb) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tuscarawas Circuit 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. Helter v. Zeeb, 6 Ohio Cir. Dec. 70 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1894).

Opinion

Jenner, J.

The relator, G. W. Helter, filed his petition in the circuit court, averring, among other things, that on the 22d day of May, 1893, the clerk of the township of Goshen, in Tuscarawas county, issued to him an order for services rendered as teacher in subdistrict number ten in said township from the first day of April, 1892, to the 29th day of April in the same year, in all twenty days; that the order was issued in pursuance of a peremptory writ of mandamus, allowed by the court of common pleas in a case pending wherein the state of Ohio on relation of G. W. Helter, was plaintiff, and the clerk of said township was defendant; that the said relator, on the 23d day of May, 1893, presented said order to L,. P. Myers, who was then the treasurer of said township, for payment, but payment was refused; that said relator again, on the 7th day of May, 1894, presented said order to the defendant for payment, and payment was again refused, notwithstanding that ample funds were in the hands of said treasurer at the date of each presentment, and still is, with which to pay said order, and notwithstanding said court of common pleas had adjudicated and determined in said action the amount of said order, and that ample funds were in the hands of said treasurer with which to pay the same. The plaintiff prays that a writ of mandamus may issue against said John A. Zeeb, the present treasurer of said township, commanding him to pay said order.

On motion of said relator, an alternative writ of mandamus was issued, requiring the defendant to show cause for refusing payment of said order.

The defendant has filed his answer, and the defense is substantially this: That when said order was presented for payment, he had not funds of such township in his hands or under his control applicable to the payment of said order, and he denies that the court determined any question arising in this action.

2d. He avers that at the time said order was presented to the treasurer, the fund applicable to the payment of teachers was overdrawn, and entirely exhausted. . - -

[71]*713d. He avers that the board of education of said township of Goshen apportioned to said district number ten for continuance of its schools during the year for which relator contracted to teach said school, $785.00 of the contingent fund, and the relator and directors of said district well knew at the time of making the contract to teach said school, that the funds legally apportioned and applicable to the use of said district were not sufficient for the continuance of said schools for seVen months, at the wages per month agreed upon between said relator, as teacher, and the directors of said subdistrict, and said contract for the month of April, 1892, was in excess of the amount legally apportioned for the use of said district, and was void.

The relator, in reply, admits that the contingent fund apportioned to the said district number ten was entirely exhausted, as alleged in • said defendant’s answer, but he denies that there were no funds in the treasury of said township applicable to the payment of relator’s order at any time, and is not now, as the same is alleged in said defendant’s answer. He avers that there is now in the hands of the said township treasurer a sufficient and ample amount of the state common school 'fund applicable to the payment of said relator’s order to pay the same in full. The relator denies that he knew or had any knowledge at the time of making his said contract to teach said school that the funds applicable to the use of said district were not sufficient for the continuance of said school for the time mentioned in said contract, at the wages per month therein specified, or that he had any such knowledge at any time during said term of service.

The evidence shows that in April, 1891, Geo. W. Helter entered into a contract with the directors of said subdistrict number ten to teach their school for a period of seven months, at the agreed price of $50.00 per month. In the building in which he taught there were four schools; he taught one, and was the superintendent, by the terms of his contract, of the four; there were about fifty pupils to each school-, and a larger enumeration of youth of school age in said subdistrict. In the month of February, 1892, while he was engaged in the performance of his contract, he received notice from the board of education of the township that there were not sufficient funds in the treasury to continue the school at the salary he was to receive for the full term of seven months, and not more than sufficient for the term of six months. That he performed the terms of his contract, taught and superintended said school for the full term agreed upon; that thereupon an order was issued to him for six months’ service; that the clerk of the township refused to include in said order the last month, which would have been fifty dollars additional. Thereafter he made application to the court of common pleas for a writ of mandamus to compel the clerk to issue an order for the last month’s service performed by him. This matter was heard in the common pleas court, and a peremptory writ of mandamus awarded to the relator. In pursuance of said mandate, on May 22, 1893, the clerk of said township issued an order to said Helter. It is claimed on this hearing that the order made by the court of common pleas settles the questions arising in the case at bar, but we decline to take that view of the case. The township treasurer, defendant herein, was not a party to said proceeding, and while it may fairly be argued that the court below would not have granted a peremptory writ of mandamus requiring the clerk to issue said order, unless he was satisfied there were funds in the township treasury applicable to the payment of this claim, yet we think that the treasurer, now being brought in for the first time, has the right to made the defense that there are no such funds in the treasury applicable to the payment of this order. We think that the defense set up in the answer, if sus-taiúed by the evidence, would defeat the claim of the relator.

It appears from the evidence that for the school year commencing September 1, 1891, and ending September 1, 1892, the treasurer of Goshen township received from, all sources, school funds to the amount of $7,811.69; it further appears that he received state common school funds to the amount of $1,255.50, and from a tract of land known as the Moravian tract, the sum of $90 00; and from the military lands $56.80, so that said total of $7,811.69 received by the treasurer, [72]*72less $1,402.30, was the contingent fund provided for the board of education of said township. A settlement was' made September 19, 1892, between the treasurer of said township and the auditor, at which time it was found there was $3,389.32 of a balance of school funds in the hands of said township treasurer. It is contended by the relator that this clearly shows there were funds in the hands of the township treasurer subject to the payment of said order. It is contended on the other side that, although there was this balancean the treasury, it was not subject to the payment of this order. The difficulty that arises in determining this question is occasioned by the manner in which the business pertaining to the state common school fund has been managed between the county auditor, the township treasurer, and the board of education.

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Bluebook (online)
6 Ohio Cir. Dec. 70, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-helter-v-zeeb-ohcircttuscaraw-1894.