Voorhees v. Morse

34 P.2d 153, 1 Cal. 2d 179, 1934 Cal. LEXIS 347
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJune 29, 1934
DocketS. F. 15114
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 34 P.2d 153 (Voorhees v. Morse) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Voorhees v. Morse, 34 P.2d 153, 1 Cal. 2d 179, 1934 Cal. LEXIS 347 (Cal. 1934).

Opinion

CURTIS, J.

On January 17, 1934, the city council of the City of Long Beach passed and adopted ordinance No. C-1244, entitled, “An Emergency Ordinance Providing for the Registration and Redemption of Warrants Drawn upon the City of Long Beach; Providing for the payment of Interest upon Such Registered Warrants, and Providing for the Priority of the Payment of Such Registered Warrants.” On February 17, 1934, said city council passed and adopted Ordinance No. C-1251, amending Ordinance No. C-1244, which later enacted ordinance was entitled: “An Emergency Ordinance Amending Section One of Or *183 dinanee No. C-1244 Providing for the Registration and Redemption of Warrants Drawn upon the Treasurer of the City of Long Beach; Providing for the Payment of such Registered Warrants, and Providing for the Priority of the Payment of such Registered Warrants.”

Ordinance C-1244 provided that whenever the city auditor of the City of Long Beach draws his warrant upon the City Treasurer of said city payable out of any fund in the city treasury and such warrant represents an amount in excess of the unapplied money in said fund, the city auditor shall, upon the date that such warrant is drawn, present such warrant to the City Treasurer, who shall indorse upon the back thereof the date of presentation by the city auditor and that the same is not paid for want of money in the fund upon which such warrant is drawn, and bears interest at the rate of six per cent per annum from date of registration to and including the date upon which the City Treasurer advertises that such warrant is payable upon presentation, after which indorsement the City Treasurer shall return such warrant to the city auditor for distribution. Thereafter whenever the city auditor deems that there are sufficient moneys in any fund in the city treasury upon which warrants have been drawn and registered to pay in the order of their priority, all or some of the registered warrants outstanding against said fund, together with interest thereon as provided, the city auditor shall notify the treasurer of such fact and of the number of warrants which can be redeemed. The City Treasurer shall immediately publish notice that such warrants are redeemable by advertising one time in the official newspaper of said city. Warrants registered in accordance with the provisions just recited shall cease to bear interest -on the date following said publication. Warrants registered as provided in said ordinance, together with interest thereon as provided in said ordinance, shall constitute a prior lien, in the order of registration of said warrants on any moneys thereafter received into the fund in the city treasury upon which such warrants are drawn, and such warrants and interest thereon as provided in said ordinance shall be paid in the order of their registration. It is further provided that such registered warrants shall not take priority over *184 unregistered warrants drawn upon the same fund and outstanding at the time of such registration, and that the auditor shall furnish the treasurer a list of all unregistered warrants drawn and unpaid prior to the effective date of said ordinance. Upon the presentation of any registered warrant to the City Treasurer for payment, after said City Treasurer has published notice that such warrant is redeemable, the City Treasurer shall pay to the payee of said warrant, or his assignee, the amount for which said warrant is drawn, together with interest thereon at the rate of six per cent per annum from date of registration of said warrant to and including the date upon which said City Treasurer advertised that such warrant would be payable upon presentation, said interest to be paid from the city fund. It is further provided that “unapplied money” as used in said ordinance means money in any fund in the city treasury for which outstanding warrants have not been already drawn, and which would remain in such fund if all outstanding warrants drawn upon such fund were paid. Section 2 of said ordinance purports to set forth a statement showing that said ordinance was an emergency measure, and section 3 thereof provides that the city clerk should cause the same to be posted in three conspicuous places in said city and that it should thereupon take effect.

Ordinance No. C-1244 was amended by Ordinance No. C-1251 in two respects. The provision in Ordinance No. C-1244 that “whenever the city auditor deems that there are sufficient moneys in any fund in the city treasury upon which warrants have been drawn and registered to pay in the order of their priority, all or some of the registered warrants outstanding against such fund, he shall notify the city treasurer which warrants are to be redeemed,” was amended to read as follows: “Whenever from time to time, there are sufficient moneys in any fund in the treasury upon which warrants have been drawn and registered, to pay in the order of their priority, all or at least five or more of the registered warrants outstanding against such fund, together with interest thereon as herein provided, the city auditor shall notify the city treasurer of such fact and of the number of warrants which can be redeemed.” The other change made in Ordinance No. C-1244 by the amend *185 ment thereof by Ordinance No. C-1251 related principally to the fund out of which the interest on registered warrants should be paid. By Ordinance No. C-1244 this interest is to be paid by the City Treasurer from the city fund. By Ordinance No. C-1251 this provision was changed to read as follows: “ . . . said interest to be paid from the same fund out. of which the principal of said warrant is paid, and the city treasurer shall be entitled to credit for the amount of the interest so paid.” Section 2 of Ordinance No. C-1251 as to the emergency of said ordinance, and section 3 as to the effective date thereof are the same as those contained in Ordinance No. C-1244.

The petition herein set forth three distinct causes of action based upon three separate warrants drawn by the city auditor against the public welfare fund of said city and registered by said City Treasurer. The warrant set forth in the first cause of action was issued and registered under Ordinance No. C-1244, and those set forth in the second and third causes of action were issued under Ordinance No. C-1251. By her first cause, of action the petitioner seeks to compel the City Treasurer to pay the amount of said warrant out of the public welfare fund, together with interest thereon out of the city fund. By her second and third causes of action the petitioner seeks to compel the payment of two of said warrants, together with interest on the first of said warrants from the respective dates of their presentation, out of the public welfare fund of said city. The facts under which the petitioner asks payment of the warrant upon which the third cause of action is based differ materially from those under which payment of the other two warrants is demanded. This difference in the facts involving these warrants will be considered in detail when we come to the discussion of the third cause of action. A return of the alternative writ issued by the court on the filing of the said petition makes no denial of any of the alleged facts. The questions therefore presented for decision are purely questions of law.

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Bluebook (online)
34 P.2d 153, 1 Cal. 2d 179, 1934 Cal. LEXIS 347, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/voorhees-v-morse-cal-1934.