53 Ala. 589 | Ala. | 1875
Appellee, Barber, contracted in Febru
After giving this assent, and authorizing the judge of probate to enter into the contract for the county, and requiring of Barber a bond with sureties for the performance of his part of the agreement, the minute entry of the commissioners court proceeds as follows : “It is further ordered that the judge of the probate court issue to the said Robert Barber, monthly, a warrant on the county treasurer for the amount due him for such month, upon said judge being furnished by him with a statement in writing and under oath of the amount of his claim for such month.” This latter clause was not a stipulation of the contract, either as proposed or as finally written out, but an order on the minutes of the court of county commissioners.
That court, at the time, had authority with respect to the poor (R. C. § 1446), and the judge of probate was the proper officer to draw warrants on the county treasury for the payment of county debts — but not until the claims out of which they grew had been audited by the commissioners’ court in term time. This the law expressly provides, and also that “every claim or such part thereof, as is allowed, must be registered in a book kept for that purpose.” R. C. § 907. These regulations prescribed by law for the protection of the public from peculation could not be set aside either by the contract, or an order of the court of county commissioners; which in such matters, was not a judicial tribunal but an administrative body, like a board of directors, whose duty it was to manage the affairs of the county according to law.
Notwithstanding, therefore, the above order of this commissioners court, the probate judge had no authority to issue a warrant upon any claim until it had been audited as aforesaid, nor for any other sum than “for the amount so allowed.” (§ 907, supra). No man is permitted to obtain the public moneys or to dispose of them, except as the law prescribes. The matter is too clear for dispute.
By a subsequent act of March 19th, 1875, “in relation to the finances of Montgomery county,” it was enacted: “That said board of revenue shall have all the power and authority in reference to the levy and collection of taxes, the custody and control of the funds or property of the county and the control and provision for the paupers of said county, and in reference to claims against the county heretofore exercised by the court of county commissioners of said county,” &c.
The appellants in this cause, five citizens of Montgomery county, appointed in pursuance of said act of March 11th, by the governor, compose said board of revenue, and having organized and entered upon the performance of their duties as such, afterwards, on the 12th of April, 1875, by order enterened on the minutes of the board and served upon F. Wolffe, the county treasurer, required him to render to the board his accounts up to the 19th day of March, 1875, showing what amount of money he had on hand that day, and to furnish the board a statement of all the moneys received by him as such treasurer after that time, from whom obtained and in what kind of money received,'1 and warned him not to pay out any moneys as treasurer afterwards, unless by order of the board, through the direction of the clerk or president thereof. And on the 26th of the same month, April, appellee, Barber, was in like manner required by the board to report to it, what number of paupers he had in charge, the name, age and condition of each, and how long, and by whose order, and whether such order was verbal or in writing, each pauper had been kept at the expense of the county, and to take notice that he should not thereafter re
It does not appear that any attention was paid to these requisitions and notices. And on the 1st of May, after-wards, Judge Buckley, judge of probate of Montgomery county, issued to appellee Barber a warrant on the treasurer of the county for $1,261 70, payable-to Barber on his contract aforesaid for the support of paupers during the month of April, without the claim therefor having been examined or audited or allowed by either the board of revenue or the court of county commissioners.
This warrant the treasurer declined to pay upon the ground only, that he had received the notice before referred to from the board of revenue, whereupon application was made by Barber to the Hon. James Q,. Smith, judge of the 2d judicial circuit, complaining of this interference of the board of revenue, charging that its proceedings and existence were without warrant of constitutional law, and praying that a writ of prohibition issue to restrain its action. The cause was determined upon a demurrer of appellants to the petition or application of Barber, and a demurrer by Barber to an answer of appellants, setting up their appointment by the governor and their organization and authority as a board of revenue under and by virtue of said acts of March 11th and 19th, 1875. The former demurrer was overruled and the latter sustained by the court, and appellants declining to answer over the court adjudged that appellants “had no jurisdiction or authority as a board of revenue, or as members of such board, or otherwise, to interfere with or hinder the performance of the contract between said Barber and the court of county commissioners,” and ordered a writ of prohibition to be issued to them commanding them to refrain from all such interference “either past, present, or future,” and that they pay the costs of the proceedings. From which judgment and orders an appeal was taken to this court.
On behalf of Barber, the appellee, it is contended that the act establishing the board of revenue is not valid, because it violates the constitution in providing that the members thereof may be appointed by the governor, instead of being elected by the people of the county in which the board is to exercise authority, and because it embraces more than the one subject mentioned in the title.
In reference to the first point, no section of the constitution is designated with which the act is supposed to be in conflict. And we cannot better express our own views
It must be a matter of profound regret to every patriotic and thoughtful citizen that a state of things should exist which seems to the legislature to require, as in this case, that the people of a county or city should not be entrusted with the election of officers who are to have charge of its local affairs. But it is well settled that the courts must conclude that “a regard to the general well-being has demanded the change,” and justifies the law in creating it.
The second objection to the act establishing this board of revenue was, that it is in conflict with the clause of the constitution : “Each law shall contain but one subject, which shall be clearly expressed in its title;” which clause is supposed to be violated by the 4th section of the statute, enactr ing: “That the said board shall exercise the same supervising control over the tax collector and tax assessor of said county, their bonds and removal from office, as is now required by law of the commissioners of said county.”
The objections urged against the validity of the act creating the board of revenue of Montgomery county are not sound in law, and are overruled.
The only other point insisted on by counsel for the appellee, Barber, is one before glanced at, that one of the terms of his contract with the court of county commissioners was, that the judge of probate should “issue to him monthly a warrant on the county treasurer, for the amount due him for such month, upon said judge being furnished by him with a statement in writing and under oath, of the amount of his claim for such month.”
We have seen before that not only was the latter part of this order not a stipulation of the contract in fact, but that xinder the law no such contract could be made. The judge of probate had at that time no more right to issue a warrant for the amount of a claim not examined, audited and allowed by the court of county commissioners, than the treasurer had to pay it without its having been allowed, or a warrant issued for it. Nobody can contract to pay out, or issue warrants for public moneys, except as authorized by law; and especially not upon a mere written statement of the amount, (without items) under oath, (whose oath?) of the claim. The duty of examining, auditing, and being satisfied of the correctness of a claim against the county treasury, before allowing it, is one not to be lawfully shunned or bargained away.