Strodtman v. County of Menard

56 Ill. App. 120, 1894 Ill. App. LEXIS 692
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedDecember 14, 1894
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 56 Ill. App. 120 (Strodtman v. County of Menard) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Strodtman v. County of Menard, 56 Ill. App. 120, 1894 Ill. App. LEXIS 692 (Ill. Ct. App. 1894).

Opinion

Me. Justice Boggs

deliveeed the opinion op the Couet.

We think the court properly refused to award judgment against the county.

The warrant upon its face was payable on demand, but if considered in connection with the order of the board under which it was issued it may well be regarded as having been drawn against taxes already levied and in the course of collection, and as falling due on the 1st day of May after its date. There was no money in the treasury when it was issued.

If payable upon demand it was drawn in flagrant violation of Sec. 1, Chap. 146 A, of the statutes, and for that reason could not be made the basis of a recovery in a court of law.

Warrants against a county treasurer payable on demand are void if drawn against an empty treasury. County of Cook v. Lowe, 23 Ill. App. 649.

This is not only true as to the nominal plaintiff, who had full knowledge of all the facts, but is equally true as to the beneficial plaintiff, for the reason 'that it received the warrant when it was past due, unpaid, and therefore dishonored, and open -to all defenses available as against the nominal plaintiff. We concede, however, the contention of the appellant that the warrant is to be considered in connection with the order of the county board directing it to be issued.

So considered, it is clear that the county board borrowed of the nominal plaintiff the sum of $2,000, and gave the warrant as an obligation of the county for the repayment of that sum out of taxes then levied' and to be afterward collected, and if this order is brought to the aid of the warrant the beneficial plaintiff must stand charged with notice of all facts disclosed in the order. The order recites that there was then no money in the treasury wherewith to defray the ordinary and necessary expenses of the county. The argument of appellant’s counsel is that as there was no money in the treasury the county board was authorized by the provisions of section 2 of said chapter 146a to borrow money to meet and defray such expenses, and to draw a warrant which would constitute a legal and valid indebtedness against the county for the amount so borrowed.

As we conceive the law to be, section 2 does not confer such power.

A county is a political division of the State organized for governmental, not commercial or business purposes. It has only such powers as are expressly conferred upon it by the statutes and constitution of the State, and such other powers as are incidental and necessary to the performance of some duty enjoined upon it by law. County of Hardin v. McFarlan, 82 Ill. 138; Law v. The People, etc., 87 Ill. 385.

It has express power to raise money for legitimate expenditures by annual levies of taxes (p. 6, Sec. 25, Chap. 34, U. S.), and may be authorized by an affirmative vote of the people to borrow money. Sec. 41, Chap. 34, R. S.

Power to borrow money is not an incident to local political government, and upon principle a county can not exercise it in the absence of express authority of law so to do. Hewitt v. School Dist., 94 Ill. 528; School Directors v. Fogarty, 76 Ill. 189; Law v. The People, 87 Ill. 385; Newgass v. New Orleans, 21 Amer. St. Rep. 368.

The statutory provision that such power may be exercised if authorized by the electors of the county is, as we.think, to be regarded as excluding the right to exercise the power except when authorized by a vote of the people. County of Hardin v. McFarlan, supra.

The mode by which a county may exact from its people funds needful for lawful expenses of the county, the purpose for which said funds may be expended, and the manner of its disbursement from the county treasury, are defined and regulated by statute, and as was said in Belts v. Menard, Breese, 395, the county is “ incapable of exerting its faculties only (except) in the manner the law authorizes.”

Appellant’s counsel urge that the power to borrow money is to be implied as incidental to the proper discharge of the powers given and duties enjoined upon counties by Secs. 23, 24 and 25 of Chap. 34, B. S. Those sections only confer upon county authorities, whether a board of county commissioners or supervisors, power to manage and control the county funds, and transact county business according to law.

And so in effect it has been ruled by our Supreme Court. Lock v. Davidson, 111 Ill. 19; Cook Co. v. McRea, 93 Ill. 236.

Mor do we think power to borrow money is expressly, or by implication, given by the provisions of Sec. 2 of Chap. 146a.

Funds raised by the county in pursuance of law are committed by the statute to the custody of the county treasurer. The power of the county board over such funds is to order it to be appropriated by the treasurer to the discharge of lawful demands against the county. This the board accomplishes by entering an order directing the clerk of the board to draw a warrant directing the treasurer to pay a person named therein an amount which the board has officially ascertained such person is entitled to receive out of the public moneys in satisfaction of a legitimate demand against the county.

Such warrants do not increase or create indebtedness against the county, but, upon the contrary, a,re intended to serve only as an official direction to the treasurer to discharge an existing indebtedness by payment thereof. In order to prevent the issuance of county warrants for other purposes, and also in pursuance of the general public policy that counties should transact their business upon a cash basis, the General Assembly, by Sec. 1, Chap. 146a, made it unlawful to issue a warrant payable on demand when the treasurer had no money which he could lawfully apply in pursuance of the directions contained in the warrant. Sec. 2 of the same chapter was enacted in recognition of the fact that the county treasurer might at times be without funds, and the county at the same time in need of materials or articles, or of the services of persons necessary to the proper discharge of its ordinary corporate functions. It was not deemed best, however, even in such instances, td grant the county authorities any greater power than they otherwise possessed to incur indebtedness or create liabilities to be met and paid by the county, but to meet such an emergency it was provided by Sec. 2 in question, that a county, if it had no money in its treasury applicable to the payment of its “ necessary and ordinary expenses,” but had taxes levied therefor and in the process of collection, might, in order to meet and defray its necessary and ordinary expenses, issue a warrant not payable on demand nor against its treasury, but against and in anticipation of the taxes to be collected.

A county having money in its treasury discharges a lawful demand against it by delivering to the persons holding such demand an order or warrant authorizing and directing the county treasurer to apply the necessary sum out of the fund in his custody to the payment of the demand.

Without money in its treasury a county can, in general, issue no warrant, but if it has levies of taxes made and in course of collection, it may, under the provision of Sec.

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56 Ill. App. 120, 1894 Ill. App. LEXIS 692, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/strodtman-v-county-of-menard-illappct-1894.