Walker v. Gladish, County Judge

134 S.W.2d 541, 199 Ark. 580, 1939 Ark. LEXIS 1
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedDecember 18, 1939
Docket4-5868
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 134 S.W.2d 541 (Walker v. Gladish, County Judge) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Walker v. Gladish, County Judge, 134 S.W.2d 541, 199 Ark. 580, 1939 Ark. LEXIS 1 (Ark. 1939).

Opinion

Baker, J.

From the chancellor’s refusal to enjoin officers from holding a special election December 30, 1939, Walker has appealed.

The county court found that on November 6, 1928, valid county warrants amounting to $68,864.68 were outstanding; that such warrants were issued subsequent to December 7, 1924, to pay for two jails, but that they had been paid. It was further found that action of the collector in receiving some of the warrants from taxpayers in lieu of cash, and payment of others by the treasurer, had resulted in a deficit of $57,376.18 at the time the court’s findings were made November 2, 1939, and that the deficit [was] . in effect an indebtedness of Mississippi county existing at the time of the adoption of Amendment No. 17; . . . that under [the amendment] the county is authorized to issue jail funding bonds to take up said indebtedness ... if a majority of the electors authorize such bonds at an election duly held for that purpose.” . .

Appellant’s contention is that the deficit Avas not caused by payments from the county general fund nor by acceptance of warrants on taxes.

Evidence upon which the county court made its finding is a letter from accountants other than those attached to the state auditorial department. It was stipulated that this exhibit be introduced “. . . without the formality of calling either of said accountants to testify.”

The letter, although signed by men of high repute and known ability, does not purport to impart information gathered from original sources. It is copied in the margin. 1 The hearsay nature of this communication as evidence is shown by its recitations.

The record justifies belief here that the county court used the term “valid warrants” in reliance upon the accountants’ letter, there being no reference to other evidence. Nor was there reference to any evidence.

Amendment No. 17, adopted November 6, 1928, authorizes issuance of bonds to fund any indebtedness existing on the effective date.of the amendment “. . . incurred in building, constructing, or extending any county courthouse or jail.”

It was decided in Kirk v. High, 169 Ark. 152, 273 S. W. 389, 41 A. L. R. 782, that Amendment No. 10 2 did not prohibit counties from incurring obligations in excess of the year’s revenues; that if construction costs of jails and courthouses should be extended in such manner that interest and maturities payable in any designated year would not, when added to necessary governmental expenditures for such year, exceed the revenue, the fact of future obligation would not render the contract void. The illustration in the opinion is: “For instance, if Lonoke county has revenues not exceeding $60,000, and proposes to spend $10,000 a year on a court house, then all bther expenditures must not exceed $50,000 per year.”

The restrictions upon counties imposed by Amendment No. 10, as ameliorated in Kirk v. High, were met by adoption, of Amendment No. 17. In Carter v. Cain, 179 Ark. 79, 14 S. W. 2d 250, it was said that “Amendment No. 17 was evidently adopted for the very purpose of meeting the decision of this court and accomplishing what [the people] thought was accomplished by Amendment No. 11. That is, to prevent counties from going into debt, and provide a method for building and paying for courthouses and jails.” See Boydstun v. Condray, 183 Ark. 336, 36 S. W. 2d 64; Irwin v. Alexander, 184 Ark. 572, 43 S. W. 2d 85.

Amendment No. 10 was followed by a legislative enabling or facilitating act 3 which gave to an aggrieved taxpayer the right to question correctness of the county court order. No such accommodation seems to have been extended in respect of Amendment No. 17, although the constitution of 1874 (art. 7, § 33) allows appeals to the circuit court from all county court judgments, to be taken under such regulations as may be prescribed by law. See Pope’s Digest, § 2913.

In the absence of authority in Amendment No. 17 fox-appeal from the county court’s adjudication of outstanding indebtedness — -a requirement precedent to calling an.election — it follows that the court’s determination of the amount of the indebtedness it is proposed to fund goes to the electors unchallexxged, unless resort is had to injunction. In this situation reviewing courts must scrutinize the record for evidence to sustain processes by which determination of the fact has been arrived at.

■ The first error apparent oxx the face of the record 4 is the conflict between the county court’s finding that an indebtedness- of $68,864.68 existed November 6, 1928, and the opinion of accountants that this was the deficit December 31. The accountants attest an indebtedness of $57,331.93 November 1Ó.

The accountants say (on information and belief)-: that jail warraxxts outstaxxding November 10th were $28,693,99, a sum less by $40,170.69 than that ascertained by the county court to have been outstaxxding on the sixth. ..

■' The audit shows outstanding general warrants to have been-$16,212.09 November 10th, an increase of $14,-279.59 between that date and the 31st of December.

Approved claims November 10th were $12,425.85. That class of obligations December 31st was $9,679.01, a decrease of $2,746.84.

The three items — general warrants, approved claims, and jail warrants, listed by auditors and classified outstanding November 10th, amount to $57,-331.93. The same items December 31st were $68,864.68, a net increase of $11,532.75.

If, as the county.court found, $68,864.68 of jail warrants were in existence November 6th, then, in view of the auditors’ statement that on November 10th only $28,693.99 in warrants of this class of indebtedness was outstanding, it follows that during the intervening four days payments were $40,170.69; and yet, the accountants on December 31st say the entire county debt, inclusive of general warrants, approved claims, and jail warrants, was $68,864.68 — tlxe exact figures the county court used ixx determining the November 6th indebtedness.

Hagler v. Arkansas County, 176 Ark. 115, 2 S. W. 2d 5, overruled Airheart v. Winfree, 170 Ark. 1126, 282 S. W. 963. In the Hagler Case it was held that under act 30 of 1927 a county which had issued bonds to pay an indebtedness existing prior to October 7, 1924, was entitled to pay any indebtedness existing prior to December 7, 1924, such phyment to be made from a surplus in the bond account; or, in the alternative, supplemental bonds might be issued to retire the indebtedness if funds in the surplus account proved insufficient. The legislative act was intended as a relief measure covering the period from October 7, when Amendment No. 10 was adopted, to December 7, its effective date. See Matheney v. Independence County, 169 Ark. 925, 277 S. W. 22.

Appellees insist that the Hagler case is authority for issuance of bonds in the instant case to fund jail warrants outstanding November 6, 1928.

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154 S.W.2d 4 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1941)

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Bluebook (online)
134 S.W.2d 541, 199 Ark. 580, 1939 Ark. LEXIS 1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/walker-v-gladish-county-judge-ark-1939.