116 Ind. 329 | Ind. | 1888
In this case the State of Indiana, on the relation of its attorney general, for the use of its common school fund, presented to the board of commissioners of Bartholomew county, for allowance and payment, a claim in two paragraphs. This claim was disallowed and rejected by the county board, and the State appealed from such action to the circuit court of the county. There the county board, as de
Errors are assigned here by appellant, defendant below, which call in question the overruling of its demurrer to the State’s claim or complaint, the sustaining of the State’s demurrers to each of the special paragraphs of defendant’s answer, and the overruling of its motion for a new trial.'
It is manifest, we think, from what we have already said, that this case is presented for our consideration solely upon the pleadings. No evidence was introduced in the court below, and none was needed, if the.court did not err in its rulings upon the demurrer to the claim or complaint, or upon the demurrers to the several paragraphs of defendant’s answer.
In its claim or complaint herein the State alleged that, on the 5th day of June, 1873, in an action then pending in the court below, wherein the State of Indiana, on the relation of said board of commissioners of Bartholomew county, was plaintiff, and Joel S. Davis and others were defendants, on the bond of said Joel S. Davis, as trustee of Sand Creek township, in Bartholomew county, the State of Indiana, by the consideration of said court, recovered of defendants, Joel S. Davis and others, for the use of the common schools of the State and as belonging to the school revenue for tuition thereof, the sum of $8,270.68; that afterwards, on the 7th
In the first paragraph of its special answer to the State’s claim or complaint herein, the board of commissioners of Bartholomew county, defendant below and appellant here, alleged that section 16 of township 8 north, of range 6 east, known as the Congressional School Section, was situate in Sand Creek township, in Bartholomew county, and, for sixty-five years last past, had been held, leased and managed by the trustee of said township ; that during all those years it was necessary from time to time to make and erect necessary improvements on said section, such as buildings, fences, etc., to enable said trustee to lease the same; that, during said time, said trustee had paid for said improvements out of the rents derived from said land, and had leased the land, receiving rents payable in money, property, or improvements on such land; that, during all of said time, said trustee had been required and compelled, from time to time, to employ attorneys to institute actions in the several courts of this
Defendant further averred that Joel S. Davis was duly elected and qualified as trustee of said Sand Creek township, on the — day of-, 1868, and held said office continuously thereafter, as his own successor, until the — day of -, 1874; that said Davis, as such trustee, collected the rents of said school section 16, and failed and refused to report annually the income derived from said school land, and to pay into the county treasury all rents collected by him, but held and retained the same, and it became the duty of defendant to institute an action against said trustee Davis and the sureties on his official bond to recover the same, and, for the proper and successful prosecution of said action, it became and was necessary that defendant should employ competent and skilful attorneys; that the defendant, who was authorized and required to collect said fund, employed Simon Stansifer and Francis T. Hord as its attorneys to institute and prosecute such action against said trustee Davis and the sureties on his official bond to a final determination; that the attorneys so employed by defendant, under its order and direction, on the — day of-, 1873, commenced such
And defendant further averred that the defendants in said judgment afterwards appealed therefrom to the Supreme Court of this State, by which court, at its November term, 1873, said judgment was in all things affirmed; that thereafter a writ of error was sued out of the Supreme Court of the United- States by the defendants in such judgment, t whereby it was sought to have the judgment of the Supreme Court of this State reversed, for alleged error therein; that afterwards, at the October term, 1876, of the Supreme Court of the United States, the judgment of the Supreme Court of this State was in all things affirmed; that the above named attorneys, employed as aforesaid by defendant herein, attended to the conduct and management of said action in the court below, in the Supreme Court of Indiana and in the Supreme Court of the United States, and until the final de
We have given a full summary of the facts alleged by defendant in the first paragraph of its answer herein, for the purpose of showing the real point in controversy herein between it and the State’s relator.
In section 6 of an act of Congress approved April 19th, 1816, “to. enable the people of the Indiana territory to form a Constitution and State government,” etc., certain propositions were offered to the Convention of such territory, “ when formed, for their free acceptance or rejection, which, if accepted by the Convention, shall be obligatory upon the United States.” Of these propositions the first reads as follows : “ That the section numbered sixteen, in every township, and when such section has been sold, granted or disposed of, other lands, equivalent thereto, and most contiguous to the same, shall be granted to the inhabitants of such township for the use. of schools.”
By this acceptance of the first proposition of Congress, above quoted, section 16 described in the first paragraph of of defendant’s answer herein was granted to the inhabitants ■of congressional township 8 north, of range 6 east, “ for the use of schools.” This section, as we have seen, was situate in Sand Creek civil and school township, of which township Joel S. Davis was trustee from 1868 to 1874, inclusive.
By section 4328, R. S. 1881, in force at the time, the care and custody of all lands belonging to the congressional township fund were given to the trustee of the civil township, in which the same were' situated, who should report annually to the auditor, by the fourth Monday in March, the annual income derived therefrom to the township; which report should contain a fully itemized statement of his rent account of such lands, to whom and for what amount the same were rented to ■each tenant, and whether such rents had been collected or not; and it should be “the duty of such trustee to pay into the county treasury all rents collected and reported by him .as aforesaid.”
During his term of office, Joel S. Davis, trustee of Sand Creek township, failed and refused to make such report of the annual income derived from said congressional school •section 16, and to pay into the county treasury all rents collected by him from said section. It then became the duty of defendant herein to employ counsel and institute a suit on the official bond of said Joel S. Davis, against him and his sureties therein, to recover damages for the aforesaid breach of his official duty; and in such suit judgment was rendered and affirmed in favor of this defendant, as described in the
Out of the proceeds of such judgment the sum of $2,000 was applied, with the consent of this defendant, to the payment of the fees of its attorneys for their services in the prosecution of its aforesaid suit against trustee Davis and his sureties in the Bartholomew Circuit Court, in this court, and in the Supreme Court of the United States. The sum thus applied to the payment of such attorneys’ fees, in the suit aforesaid, is the sum for which defendant is sued in this action.
On behalf of the State, it is claimed by the attorney general that all the moneys recovered by defendant herein of trustee Davis and his sureties in the judgment aforesaid, under the Constitution and laws of this State, were income from ■a part of the principal of the common school fund, which was a “ perpetual fund,” and were “ inviolably appropriated to the support of common schools, and to no other purpose whatever.”
On the other hand, defendant’s counsel contend with much learning and ability, that the necessary and reasonable fees of the attorneys of such county board, for their services in the prosecution of its suit against trustee Davis and his sureties, were a proper and lawful charge upon the moneys collected by means of such suit, and were rightfully withheld and retained by said attorneys, with defendant’s consent, out of such moneys.
In section 2 of article 8 of our State Constitution of 1851 (section 183, R. S. 1881), it is declared that “The common school fund shall consist of the congressional township fund, and the lands belonging thereto,” etc.
Section 3 of the same article of the State Constitution (section 184, R. S. 1881), declares as follows: “ The principal of the common school fund shall remain a perpetual fund, which may be increased, but shall never be diminished; and the income thereof shall be inviolably appropriated to the
Section 6 of the- same article of the State Constitution (section 187, R. S. 1881), reads as follows: “The several counties shall be held liable for the preservation of so much of the said fund as maybe intrusted to them, and for the payment of the annual interest thereon.”
In Davis v. State, ex rel., supra, the right of the board of commissioners of Bartholomew county to bring and maintain the action against trustee Davis and his sureties, for the recovery of the rents of said school section, was vigorously questioned here by appellants’ counsel. But the court there held that, “ by the act of March 7th, 1873 ” (section 4328, supra, the substance of which we have heretofore given), “ the money derived from the rent of the unsold sixteenth section is intrusted to the counties within the meaning of section 6 of article 8 of our Constitution,” section 187, above quoted. And the court there said : “ We think there is no doubt as to the power of the board of commissioners to bring this action on their relation.” We go further, and say that the board of commissioners not only had the power, but, under the Constitution and laws of this State, it was the duty of such board to bring and prosecute that action to a final judgment in the court of last resort.
In the discharge of such duty it was necessary, of course, that the board of commissioners should, as it did, employ attorneys learned in the law to bring and prosecute that action ; and it was eminently right and proper, we think, that such board should pay its attorneys their reasonable fees for services in that action. But such payment ought to have been made by the board of commissioners out of any moneys in the county treasury not otherwise appropriated, and not out of the moneys collected on the judgment against Davis and others. For, all the moneys collected on that judgment were income from lands belonging to the congressional town
In the early case of State v. Springfield Tp., etc., 6 Ind. 83, it was held by this court, after a careful and exhaustive examination of the question, that the General Assembly of this State had no power to divert the congressional township fund, derived from the sale of the sixteenth section, in the several congressional townships, or the income from such fund, from the use of schools for “ the inhabitants of such townships” respectively, to the use of the common school system of the State at large. The doctrine of the case cited has never since been doubted or questioned, but the correctness of such doctrine is recognized and acted upon by all the departments of our State government, legislative, executive and judicial. Sections 4328, et seq., R. S. 1881; Quick v. White- Water Tp., 7 Ind. 570; Quick v. Springfield Tp., 7 Ind. 636 ; Davis v. State, ex rel., supra.
But if it be true, as surely it is, that the Legislature has no power to divert the congressional township fund, or the income therefrom, from the uses or purposes to which they are inviolably appropriated by our State Constitution, it can not be claimed that the board of commissioners of Bartholomew county could appropriate, directly or indirectly, any part of the moneys collected on the judgment against Davis and others to the payment of the fees of its attorneys for their services in procuring such judgment, and escape liability for the amount so appropriated. The entire amount collected on that judgment, whether paid to the attorneys of the county board or paid into the county treasury, was intrusted to the county within the meaning of section 6 of arti
In the case in hand, judgment was rendered against the appellant, the board of commissioners, for the amount received by its attorneys from trustee Davis, and applied by such attorneys, with appellant’s consent and approval, to the payment of their fees in the aforesaid suit against Davis and the sureties in his official bond, as township trustee. This judgment was rendered against appellant because the payment to its attorneys was a payment to appellant, and as the money applied to such payment was income from lands belonging to the congressional township fund, and, as such, was inviolably appropriated for the use of schools for the inhabitants of such congressional township, and was intrusted to appellant to be applied to such use, it could not be diverted lawfully from such use to the payment of attorney’s fees. It behooves the appellant, therefore, to pay the entire amount of the judgment in the case under consideration, and the interest thereon, into the county treasury of Bartholomew county for the use of schools for the inhabitants of congressional township 8 north, of range 6 east. ISTo part of such amount can be applied lawfully to the payment of fees and commissions to the attorney general or to his associate counsel; but the whole amount is inviolably appropriated and must be applied, under our Constitution and laws, to the use of schools for the inhabitants of said congressional township 8.
We are of opinion that the facts stated by appellant, in the first paragraph of its special answer herein, the substance of which we have heretofore given, are wholly insufficient to constitute a valid defence to the State’s cause of action, as set forth in its complaint, and that the demurrer to such paragraph of answer was correctly sustained.
In each of the second and third paragraphs of its special answer herein, appellant pleaded substantially the same facts as in the first paragraph of such answer, with some changes in phraseology, and also of the order in which such facts
It will be observed that, in each of the first three paragraphs of such answer, the compact between the Government of file United States and the people of Indiana territory, in convention assembled, whereby “ the section numbered sixteen in every township” was “granted to the inhabitants of such township for the use of schools,” is entirely ignored. Under that compact, the sixteenth section in every township, and the proceeds thereof when sold, constitute the congressional township fund, and the income thereof, whether interest on money or rents of such lands, is inviolably appropriated by and under the Constitution and laws of this State to the use and support of schools for the inhabitants of said congressional township, and to no other use or purpose whatsoever. The board of commissioners of Bartholomew county had no power, directly or indirectly, to divert any part of such income from the use and support of such schools to the payment of the fees of its attorneys. The congressional township fund is one of the trust funds referred to in section 7 of article 8 of the State Constitution of 1851 (section 188,
The demurrers to the second and third paragraphs of such special answer were correctly sustained.
In the fourth paragraph of its special answer the appellant averred that the judgment described in the complaint herein was for the rents and profits accruing on school section 16, township 8 north, of range 6 east, in Bartholomew county, which had been collected by Joel S. Davis, trustee of Sand Creek township, and for which he failed to account with the county board, and pay the money into the county treasury; that such section 16, known as the school section, and the congressional township of which such section was a part, were situate within Sand Creek civil township, in said county, and the trustee of said civil township had, for sixty-five years last past, held, possessed and managed said section 16; that, at the June term, 1880, of the board of commissioners of such county, one Calder Newsom, then trustee of Sand Creek township, filed with such county board, on behalf of said township, a claim for the same $2,000 in controversy in this action, wherein he asked the county board to pay said sum of $2,000 into the county treasury to the credit of school revenue for tuition for the inhabitants of congressional township 8 north, of range 6 east, etc.; that, upon due consideration, said board of commissioners disallowed and rejected said claim, and rendered judgment thereon against said trustee, and that such judgment has never been.annulled nor appealed from, but is in full force. Wherefore, etc.
It needs no argument, we think, to show that the facts; stated by appellant in the fourth paragraph of its special answer are wholly insufficient to constitute a good plea of former adjudication in bar of the State’s cause of action set. forth in the complaint herein. The parties to the two pro
In the proceeding described in the fourth paragraph of the answer, the township trustee simply requested appellant to do what it ought to have done without such request, but which the trustee, as such, had no legal right to require it to do. When the board of commissioners denied the prayer of the trustee’s petition, he could go no farther, because, as such township trustee, he had no legal title to or claim upon the sum of money mentioned in his petition, until after such sum had been paid into the county treasury and been apportioned by the county auditor to Sand Creek township.
On the other hand, the State prosecuted the pending action to secure the preservation of a portion of one of the trust funds held by the State, the management of which fund the State had intrusted to the board of commissioners of Bartholomew county, and to compel such board to make good and properly apply so much of the income from such trust fund, as the board had consented to the diversion of from the use and purpose to which such income was inviolably appropriated by the Constitution and laws of the State, to the payment of the fees of the board’s attorneys in the prosecution of its aforesaid suit against Joel S. Davis and others. In the very nature of things, the refusal of the county board, to grant said petition of the township trustee can constitute no valid defence in bar of the State’s pending action. Moore v. State, ex rel., 114 Ind. 414 (421), and the cases there cited.
The theory of the fifth paragraph of answer is that appellant was liable for interest on the sum of money it suffered to be diverted as aforesaid, only from the date the payment of such money into the county treasury was demanded of appellant. As applied to this action, this theory was wrong. Appellant was chargeable with interest from the date of such, diversion.
We have found no error in the record of this cause.
The judgment is affirmed, with costs.