Wilkinson v. Poag

181 So. 27, 1938 La. App. LEXIS 213
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 1, 1938
DocketNo. 5701.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 181 So. 27 (Wilkinson v. Poag) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wilkinson v. Poag, 181 So. 27, 1938 La. App. LEXIS 213 (La. Ct. App. 1938).

Opinion

DREW, Judge.

This is an appeal by P. A. Poag, treasurer of the city of Monroe, from a judgment rendered by the Fourth judicial district court in and for Ouachita parish, La., on a rule nisi ordering a preliminary injunction to issue restraining said treasurer from paying out of the city’s funds a voucher which had been issued to the Progress Publishing Company, Inc., for a full-page advertisement of the city of Monroe, La., which appeared in said paper on May 14, 1937.

For a cause of action, the plaintiff herein, L. L. Wilkinson, filed the following petition on February 1, 1938:

“1. That he is a person above the age of 21 years, is a resident of the City of Monroe, and is a taxpayer of the said City and has been for years past.
“2. That he is a resident of the Parish of Ouachita, State of Louisiana.
“3. That he appears herein and files this action solely for the benefit of himself and for the benefit and protection of the other taxpayers of the City of Monroe, who may be similarly situated.
“4. That the City of Monroe is a municipal corporation, situated in the Parish of Ouachita, State of Louisiana, and existing by reason of a legislative charter granted by the Legislature of the State of Louisiana.
“5. That H. H. Benoit is a resident of the said City of Monroe and is Mayor thereof; that C. R. Tidwell is a resident of the said City of Monroe, and is Commissioner of Public Parks and Streets; and that W. D. H. Rodriquez is a resident of the said City of Monroe and is commissioner of Finance and Utilities; and that the said named Mayor and said commissioners constitute the governing authorities of the said municipal corporation of the City of Monroe, Louisiana.
“6. That P. A. Poag is the Treasurer of the said municipality and as such receives and pays out the funds of the said municipality on orders of the said Mayor and said commissioners.
“7. Petitioner now avers that the said governing authorities of the City of Monroe allowed the Progress Publishing Company, Inc., of Hammond, Louisiana, to insert in the Daily Progress, a newspaper published by the said corporation at Hammond, Louisiana, a full-page advertisement of the City of Monroe, for a price and sum of $500.00, insertion of said advertisement being without the authority of law, any contract for such advertisement being ultra vires, and one that the said Mayor and said commissioners are^ not authorized by the law to make, insertion of the said advertisement for publication not being a municipal function.
“8. Petitioner now files herewith and makes a part and portion of this suit, as if ■ the same were herein fully written, the issue of The Daily Progress, published by the Progress Publishing Company, Inc., of Hammond, Louisiana, on or about the 14th day of May, 1937, which said issue contains the advertisement of the City of Monroe, as well as advertisements of various other cities, bureaus and departments of the State Government of the State of Louisiana.
“9. That insertion of the said advertisement in the said publication called, and calls for, the expenditure of public moneys paid in to the Treasurer of the said City by the taxpayers thereof, and that the expenditure of the said taxpayers’ moneys for the use and purposes contemplated by insertion of the said advertisement in the said publication is an unauthorized use and is ultra vires.
“10. Petitioner now avers that the insertion of the said advertisement was not for a public purpose, nor for a municipal purpose, and was therefore illegal and ultra vires.
“11. Petitioner now avers that the said newspaper, The Daily Progress, is a political newspaper, owned mostly by and controlled entirely by the Honorable Richard W. Leche, Governor of the State of Louisiana, who dictates its policies; and in support of this allegation petitioner hereto makes a part and portion hereof, by reference, the published affidavit of ownership made by the owners and publishers of The Daily Progress, as is required by the law.
“12. Petitioner avers that it is currently reported, and generally believed/and therefore, from such information and upon the belief of your petitioner, it is alleged, that the said newspaper, so controlled by the said Richard W. Leche, is used for the advancement of the political destinies of him, the said Richard W. Leche, and of his associates in politics.
“13. That the said newspaper is financed partly by advertisements such as the one inserted by the City of Monroe, inserted by other municipalities throughout the state, *29 and inserted by persons who have contracts, or who hope to have contracts or deals with the various departments of the state of Louisiana, all of which departments are under control of him, the said Richard W. Leche, who is Governor of the State of Louisiana.
“14. Petitioner now shows that Act No. 47 of 1900 requires that municipalities advertise all contracts in which it proposes to enter, and by which public moneys will be expended, and that such proposed expenditures of moneys by inserting the said advertisement in The Daily Progress was not so advertised.
“15. Petitioner avers that the said Richard W. Leche, using the power of his office, has influenced the insertion of the said advertisements, and in particular the advertisement of the City of Monroe, and that he exercised such influence by directly appealing to the then Mayor of Monroe, at the time the insertion of the said advertisement was authorized in May, 1937, or thereabouts.
“16. Petitioner avers that upon the appointment of H. H. Benoit as Mayor of Monroe by Richard W. Leche, and acceptance of said appointment, the said H. H. Benoit approved for payment, and has ordered the said P. A. Poag, Treasurer, of the City of Monroe, to pay the costs of inserting the advertisement in The Daily Progress, which said costs are illegal, ultra vires, unconstitutional, and the payment of which, having been ordered by H. H. Benoit and approved by C. R. Tidwell, will render irreparable injury to the taxpayers of the City of Monroe and to your petitioner.
“17. Petitioner now shows that the budget of the City of Monroe is today excessive, and that there are not any funds properly available for payment of such ultra .vires and illegal contracts, and that the Charter of the City of Monroe, which is hereby specifically plead, and made a part and portion hereof by reference, pledges the revenues of the City of Monroe, to which your petitioner, as a taxpayer, contributes, for Governmental expenses, and that the insertion of the said advertisement is not a governmental function or expense, and is therefore ultra vires and illegal.
“18. Petitioner avers that the said advertisement was and is of no benefit to the City of Monroe, nor to the taxpayers thereof, nor to your petitioner, and that the use of the public moneys to pay for the said advertisement was and is unauthorized and is ultra vires as aforesaid, and is a disguised political contribution.
“19.

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Bluebook (online)
181 So. 27, 1938 La. App. LEXIS 213, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wilkinson-v-poag-lactapp-1938.