65 Ala. 461 | Ala. | 1880
— This is a summary proceeding under the statute, which reads thus : “ If any county treasurer fails, on demand, to pay an allowed claim against the county, when there are funds in the treasury to pay the same, judgment may be obtained against him and his sureties^ or any or either of them, having five days’ notice, by motion in the name of the party to whom the claim is payable, his legal representatives, or assigns, for the amount of the claim, with interest from the demand, ten per-cent, damages and costs.” — Code, § 3395.
It is a well-settled rule, that statutes of this character, authorizing summary proceedings, in derogation of the common law, are strictly construed. — Sedgwick on Stat. & Con. Law, 299. They are not by construction extended, so far as to include any other state of facts, or any other causes of action, than such as may be expressed in them. — Nations v. Roberts, 20 Ala. 544; 2 Brickell’s Digest 464, §§ 1 — 9. It is not every claim against the county, which it may be the duty of the treasurer to pay, that can be enforced by this_ remedy. The statute confines and limits the remedy, by its own words, to an alloioed claim against the county. The first instruction given the jury by the Circuit Court raises directly the question, whether the claims on which the motion is made, are claims upon which this remedy can be pursued.
Originally, the statute formed a section of the part of the Code devoted to counties, their organization, powers, duties, and liabilities, and of the article prescribing the duties of county treasurers. — R. C. 1867, § 930. The Commissioners’ Court is the agency, through which the county acts, and it is clothed with a general authority “ to examine, settle, and allow all accounts and claims chargeable against
The claims, upon which the motion in this case is founded, are bonds of the county, signed by the judge of probate and the county treasurer, for the payment of specific sums of money, at a designated time, issued in pursuance of an act of the General Assembly, approved December 28th, 1868. Pamph. Acts 1868, p. 505. The second section of the act, which alone it is material now to consider, conferred on the Commissioners’ Court authority to issue bonds for the liqui
As the appellant could not, in any event, pursue this remedy, if there are errors in the other rulings of the Circuit Court, they are not of injury, and would furnish no cause of reversal; and ordinarily, we would not be inclined to inquire into them. It is obvious, however, that the contention between the parties is confined to the single point, whether the bonds bear interest after their maturity; and it is better, as this point has been fully argued, that it should now be settled, than left open for future litigation. Upon this point, there is no room for reasonable doubt. The statute authorizing the issue of the bonds provides expressly for interest-bearing obligations, and prescribes the rate of interest. There is no intimation of a purpose to limit the bearing of interest to the period of five years, the maturity of the bonds. Interest is an incident to tlie debt — compensation for its detention beyond the period appointed for its payment. Each coupon attached to the bonds, for the payment of interest, was, of itself, a separate contract for the payment ot money at a particular time ; and if it was not paid at the time appointed, interest followed as an incident. So, of the principal; if not paid at the time appointed, interest attached. Wherever there is a contract for the pay