State Ex Rel. Suwannee River Bridge Co. v. Sholtz

160 So. 872, 119 Fla. 701, 1935 Fla. LEXIS 1045
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedApril 15, 1935
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 160 So. 872 (State Ex Rel. Suwannee River Bridge Co. v. Sholtz) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Ex Rel. Suwannee River Bridge Co. v. Sholtz, 160 So. 872, 119 Fla. 701, 1935 Fla. LEXIS 1045 (Fla. 1935).

Opinion

Davis, J.

Relator as holder of certain long defaulted bonds and interest coupons of Sumter County aggregating $41,430.00 is seeking to reach in the hands of the State Board of Administration certain moneys shown to be held by it for the account of Sumter County, which moneys it is alleged are within the disposing power of said State Board of i^dministration and hence applicable to being applied in discharge of relators claim.

Previous opinions heretofore filed in this cause have settled the law of the case up until the present time. See: State, ex rel. Suwannee River Bridge Co., v. Sholtz, 114 Fla. 135, 154 Sou. Rep. 871; State, ex rel. Suwannee River Bridge Co. v. Sholtz, 119 Fla. 460, 158 Sou. Rep. 812.

In ordinary legal proceedings for the collection of unpaid debt out of a presumptively solvent private debtor, the “first come, first served (paid)” rule is universally applied as between different and conflicting claims of creditors. It is normally given effect by allowing the plaintiff who first obtains a judgment to first satisfy it out of his debtor’s assets in preference to the subjection of the debtor’s assets to a judgment subsequent in point of time. So also in proceedings against a presumptively solvent public debtor, such *703 as a municipality, county or special taxing district, for the enforcement of an unpaid liquidated debt due to be paid by it out of a replenishable (inexhaustible) fund within its custody or control, the so-called “first come, first served (paid)” rule.as between the conflicting claims of different creditors is given effect by allowing the plaintiff who first obtains and serves an execution in the form' of an alternative writ of mandamus against some applicable fund in hand, to be first satisfied out of such fund in preference to the subjection of such fund to an alternate writ of mandamus served subsequently in point of time.

We thus see that the' “first come, first served (paid)” rule so sharply condemned and earnestly deprecated in the argument of the learned Assistant Attorney General (who now urges us to restrict it as much as possible if not to entirely abandon said rule in cases involving public debtors) is nothing more than the application to conflicting mandamus levies (when employed in the nature of executions to collect moneys subject thereto) of a long standing generally adhered to rule of law that has been held applicable from time immemorial to all classes of collectible legal claims when asserted by conflicting creditors against the presumptively replenishable (inexhaustible) assets and funds of a solvent debtor, whether private or public. *

Therefore, so long as a debtor (whether such debtor be a private individual or corporation, or a city, town, county or district) is presumptively solvent, i. e., possessed of re *704 plenishable (inexhaustible) resources or assets with which to ultimately pay all that is owed, on what fairer principle of distribution than “first come, first served (paid)” can the courts allow to be satisfied out of presently available funds or assets the conflicting claims of several creditors, whose rights when asserted in conflicting proceedings at law have always been held to be collectible in the order of their priority in point of time, that is to say, in the order or priority as determined by the time when the same first become enforceable by a legal process emanating from a court of law for that purpose ?

Only in cases of a debtor’s legally adjudicated insolvency, or where the fund out of which several claims must be paid has become by operation of law or force of circumstances a closed and irreplenishable fund, has any rule of pro rata satisfaction been announced or followed in the United States in dealing with the foregoing subject.

To enforce a pro rata apportionment rule in a case like the present would be to hold that the Legislature by the enactment óf Chapter 14486, Acts 1929, had the constitutional power to convert Sumter County’s existing pledge of its replenishable tax resources as security for the payment of its bonds into the pledge of an irreplenishable substitute tax resource of a different character and capable of being manipulated to the prejudice of the obligation of the bonds and coupons when whatever funds are on hand have proved inadequate to avoid defaults in payment of interest and principal when matured, and no reasonable probability of realizing payment without litigation appears to exist.

A return in a mandamus proceeding should be definite and certain in its allegations, and neither evasive nor inconclusive in its statements of grounds of defense. Traverses of alleged facts must be of material allegations and *705 not of mere matters of inducement, the failure to prove which would be of no avail as a legal defense even if such failure of proof occurred.

Thus to file a return merely denying the corporate character of the relator as a litigant in a mandamus case brought to have money paid it as the holder of bonds and coupons entitled to demand payment of same on presentation, is insufficient, since the mere presentation of relator’s negotiable bonds and coupons would per se require the respondents to forthwith pay them to the bearer regardless of the corporate status of the holder presenting them.

We have heretofore recognized that so long as ad valorem tax moneys and other moneys remitted to the State Board of Administration have been, or are being, appropriated or applied by said Board toward accomplishment of the true purpose of Chapter 14486, Acts 1929, the administrative discretion of the State Board of Administration to appropriate, allocate or pay out such funds, cannot be controlled by mandamus, at least in the absence of some clear showing of arbitrary conduct, or some plain abuse of power. Such was our holding in State, ex rel. Gillespie, v. Carlton, 103 Fla. 810, 138 Sou. Rep. 612; State, ex rel. Orrell, v. Johnson, 109 Fla. 263, 147 Sou. Rep. 254. We reaffirm and reiterate the holding of those cases in the present case.

That relator as the holder of long defaulted Sumter County bonds and coupons to the amount of $43,130.00 is entitled to employ the writ of mandamus as an execution to seize and apply to the satisfaction of its debt, any available county ad valorem tax moneys, or their equivalent, has already been declared to be the law of this case in an earlier opinion. So the proposition to be decided resolves itself into a determination of whether or not the amended returns of the respondents show such a complete disposal of the *706 moneys in controversy as will now preclude their being reached by mandamus in view of the particular manner and form in which such moneys are now being held for the account of Sumter County.

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Bluebook (online)
160 So. 872, 119 Fla. 701, 1935 Fla. LEXIS 1045, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-suwannee-river-bridge-co-v-sholtz-fla-1935.