51 Mo. 205 | Mo. | 1873
delivered the opinion of the court.
The objections, made on the argument of this cause, to the action of the court in admitting testimony, cannot be noticed here. All the objections made by both parties at the trial were general in their nature; no specific reasons were given why the evidence was inadmissable, and where such- is the case, the objections will not be considered in this court.
The real question underlying the whole casé, is the power of a County court, in fulfillment of a contract, to discount county warrants so as to make them equivalent to cash’.
A certain proportionate part was to be paid as the work progressed, and the balance in a certain specified time after its completion. It appears from the record, that cash was paid up to the time specified in. the contract for completing the work, and the County court informed the plaintiff that they could obtain no more money, and that they could only pay in county warrants, and desired him to give up the contract; but this he refused to do, and went on with the work receiving warrants from time to time.
Though he did not waive his right to insist on cash payments, he received in payments $29,039.97 in cash, and $12-594.83 in county warrants. These warrants were at 30 per cent, discount.
Plaintiff then presented his claim to the County Court for the balance due him, including therein, the sum of $3,778.45, being the amount of discount on the warrants he had received.
The court refused to allow this item, and on a settlement, issued to him warrants for the balance found due. He presented these warrants to the Treasurer of the county for payment, who endorsed thereon that there was no money in the treasury, and then he left them with that officer and presented his demand against the county, for the amount of the warrants, as also for thé amount which he claimed he had lost by reason of discounts as above stated.
The County Court refused the allowance of the claim and their judgment was affirmed in the Circuit Court.
I know of no law in this State, which would authorize a County Court to discount its warrants, in payment of a county debt.
The 52d chapter of the General Statutes, which was in force when this contract was entered into, is cited to support this power. But it must be seen at a glance, that it has no application to this ease, and is utterly opposed to the doctrine contended for.
In the present case, the County Court did not attempt to proceed in accordance with the statute. No bonds were issued, and if they had been, they could not have drawn more than six per cent., and could only have been negotiable for their par value.
Had they proceeded under the statute, or had the statute imposed no limitation on the amount for which the bonds should be sold, we apprehend that no court of justice would sanction the exorbitant discount of thirty per cent. Such a waste of the people’s money for making a county road, would be intolerable. .
Admit that the County Court may at their discretion, sell the county credit for whatever price they please, and the most flagrant abuses would follow. But the statute gives them no such power in the payment of the county indebtedness. It invests them with authority when the county is a party, to audit, adjust and settle all accounts, and to order the payment out of the CQirnty Treasury of any sum of money found due by the county) and the only means they can resort to upon such adjustment or settlement is to order their clerk to issue a warrant. (1 Wag. Stat.,414,415, §§ 28, 31.) When thisis done their power is extinct, and they have no right to give an additional sum to raise the warrants to a cash standard.
The County Court in making contracts is the agent of the county, with express limited and defined powers, and any one contracting with it, must take notice o£ its authority.
This necessarily leads to an affirmance of the judgment. But the court at the end of the judgment appended an order that the last warrants issued t-o the plaintiff, and to which he was entitled as being the last payment, should remain in the care and custody of the Clerk of the County Court. Ve do not understand this to be intended as a denial of the plaintiffs right to them ; but only as a means of keeping them safely till the plaintiff called for .them. They are without doubt the property of the plaintiff, and should be delivered up to him on demand.
Judgment affirmed;