State v. Conley

190 S.E. 908, 118 W. Va. 508, 1937 W. Va. LEXIS 44
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedApril 3, 1937
DocketCC 574
StatusPublished
Cited by37 cases

This text of 190 S.E. 908 (State v. Conley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Conley, 190 S.E. 908, 118 W. Va. 508, 1937 W. Va. LEXIS 44 (W. Va. 1937).

Opinions

Fox, Judge;

This case involves the personal and individual liability of the members of “The Board of the School Fund” for losses sustained by the plaintiff on account of a loan made by said Board to the Consolidated Fruit Company, a private corporation, on the 21st day of November, 1929. By reason of the nature of this controversy, involving as it does an interpretation of the constitution and statutes of the state, with respect to a matter of public importance, it is deemed appropriate, as a background for our decision, to give a brief history of the establishment and development of the fund, and the various constitutional and statutory provisions made with respect thereto, prior to the date of the loan.

Section 1, Article 10, Constitution of 1863, provides that all moneys accruing to the state from the proceeds *510 of forfeited, delinquent, waste and unappropriated lands and other sources of revenue therein particularly mentioned,

“shall be set apart as a separate fund, to be called the School Fund, and invested under such regulations as may be prescribed by law, in the interest-bearing securities of' the United States, or of this state: and the interest thereof shall be annually applied to the support of free schools throughout the state and to no other purpose whatever. But any portion of said interest remaining unexpended at the close of a fiscal year, shall be added to, and remain a part of, the capital of the School Fund.”

Chapter 137, Acts of the Legislature, 1863, provides for the establishment of a system of free schools, and Section 53 of said chapter provides:

“The governor, auditor, treasurer, secretary of state, and the general superintendent of free schools, shall be a corporation under the name of ‘the board of the school fund/ and shall have the management, control and investment of said fund, under the first section of the tenth article of the constitution.”

Section 58 provides:

“The board shall from time to time invest all the uninyested capital and interest of the school fund in interest-bearing securities of the United States or of this state, as provided for in the constitution.”

The general law governing free schools was amended by Chapter 74, Acts of 1866; also, by Chapters 66 and 98, of the Acts of 1867; and was embodied in Chapter 45 of the Code of 1868. No change was made by any of said enactments, or in the Code, from the sections of the sta-stute above quoted, so that the law remained as it was until the adoption of the new constitution in 1872.

Section 4, Article 12, of the Constitution of 1872 provides that the existing permanent and invested school *511 fund and all money accruing to this state from forfeited, delinquent, waste and unappropriated lands, and from other sources specifically set out therein,

“shall be set apart as a separate fund, to be called the ‘School Fund,’ and invested under such regulations as may be prescribed by law, in the interest-bearing securities of the United States, or of this State, or if such interest-bearing securities cannot be obtained, then the said ‘School Fund’ shall be invested in such other solvent interest-bearing securities as shall be approved by the Governor, Superintendent of Free Schools, Auditor and Treasurer, who are hereby constituted the ‘Board of the School Fund’, to manage the same, under such regulations as may be prescribed by law; and the interest thereof shall be annually applied to the support of free schools throughout the state, and to no other purpose whatever. But any portion of said interest remaining unexpended at the close of a fiscal year, shall be added to, and remain a part of, the capital of the ‘School Fund:’.”

This section of the constitution was amended by vote of the people in November, 1902; but the amendment only applies to the accumulation of the fund, and provides that such accumulation shall cease when the fund amounts to the sum of one million dollars, and that thereafter, the interest on said fund, and moneys accruing to the state required to be transferred thereto, shall be paid into the treasury to the credit of the general school fund, for the support of free schools.

After the adoption of the Constitution of 1872, the statutes were amended to conform thereto, and Section 69, Chapter 123, Acts 1.872-73, provides:

“The governor, state superintendent of free schools, auditor and treasurer shall be a corporation under the name of ‘the board of the school fund,’ and shall have the management, control and investment of said fund, under the fourth section of the twelfth article of the constitution.”

Section 73 of said chapter, provides that:

*512 “All such sums as have accrued, or shall hereafter accrue to this state, from the several sources enumerated in the fourth section of the twelfth article of the constitution, shall be set apart as a separate fund to be called ‘The school fund’, and it shall be the duty of the auditor to ascertain from time to time what sums have so accrued, or may hereafter accrue, and to pass the same to the credit of said fund; and it shall be the duty of the board of the school fund, from time to time, to invest the same in interest-bearing securities of the United States, or of this state, or otherwise, as provided for in said fourth section of the twelfth article of the constitution. And it shall be the duty of said board to sell any investments on account of the school fund now made in other securities than those required in said fourth section of the twelfth article of the constitution, and invest the proceeds thereof in the interest-bearing securities of the United States, or of this state, or otherwise, as provided in the constitution aforesaid.”

The last provision of section 73 may be explained by the fact that Chapter 66, Acts 1867, and Chapter 6, Acts 1889, transfer to the school fund certain stocks in banks and improvement companies, at that time held by the state; and the provision of the statute, last above quoted, was evidently meant to require the sale of such securities and the investment of the proceeds thereof in the character of securities provided for in the constitution.

Chapter 15, Acts 1881, amends Section 69, above quoted, by adding thereto a provision that a majority of the board shall constitute a quorum to transact business; and Section 152 of Chapter 27, Acts 1908, amends Section 69, Chapter 123, of the Acts of 1872-73 by putting into eifect the constitutional provision limiting the school fund to the sum of one million dollars. Aside from these changes, the statute remained in the form in which it was written in 1873, until changed by Section 195, Chapter 49, Acts of the Legislature, 1925. This act reads as follows:

“All such sums as have accrued to this state from the several sources enumerated in the *513

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Bluebook (online)
190 S.E. 908, 118 W. Va. 508, 1937 W. Va. LEXIS 44, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-conley-wva-1937.