170 Ga. 654 | Ga. | 1930
Citizens Bank of Coolquitt, Georgia, filed its petition for the writ of mandamus against Seminole County Board of Education and the members thereof, and later by amendment and order of the court made the superintendent of schools of the county a party defendant in the proceeding. The petition sought to recover against the defendants $4500, with interest and attorneys’ fees, as the funds of the plaintiff, which it alleges were received by defendants. The petition was in three counts. The first count was an action on a promissory note; the second, for money had and received; the third, for cash received under a certain cashier’s
At the trial the plaintiff amended the three counts, in substance as follows: Otho Benton, while superintendent of schools of Seminole County, and in the year 1927, made application to the plaintiff for a loan of $3500.00, and at the same time presented what purported to be a resolution of the Board of Education of Seminole County, but which did not appear to have been signed by any member-thereof, authorizing said loan, and presented a note for-such sum, which purported to have been signed by the president of the board of education and the superintendent of schools. The resolution presented purported to be a certified copy of an original resolution, and the county superintendent of schools attached the seal of the county board of education to the purported certified copy, but the resolution certified by him did not show a purported signature of a single member of the county board of education. The loan was made, and the county superintendent of schools used the money for his oto personal use. At maturity this note was paid by another loan obtained from the Citizens Bank & Trust Company at Bainbridge, Georgia, the loan having been obtained by Benton in a manner similar to the one above mentioned. Subsequently, on March 6, 1928, Benton obtained a $5,000 loan from the plaintiff, and the funds derived from this loan were used by Benton, $3500 of it to pay Citizens Bank & Trust Company of Bainbridge, and $1500 for his personal use. This third loan matured on December 31, 1928. On December 28, 1928, Benton procured from the plaintiff a loan of $4500 in the same manner as above described, and the money thus obtained was applied on this last-mentioned loan of $5000, Benton paying individually $500, and this, with the $4500 thus borrowed, retired the indebtedness on the $5000 loan. The plaintiff, in count 1 of its petition, sued on the last-mentioned note for $4500.
The defendants demurred generally to the petition. The demurrer was sustained and the petition dismissed, and the plaintiff excepted.
The court properly sustained tlie general demurrer and dismissed the case. On neither of the counts was the plaintiff entitled to a judgment in its favor. The note given for the money which the
While Oth'o Benton, who executed the note in question in this case, was a county school superintendent and secretary of the board of education, he had no authority to contract a loan without action taken by the board and embodied in a proper resolution properly signed to obtain it, even if he had intended it for proper purposes. “When a signature is forged or made without the authority of the person whose signature it purports to be, it is wholly inoperative, and no right to retain the instrument, or to give a discharge therefor, or to enforce payment thereof against any party thereto, can be acquired through or under such signature, unless the party against whom it is sought to enforce such right is precluded from setting
In this casé the certified copy of the resolution set out in the record did not show that the resolution was ever passed by the board or signed by any of the members of the board, or that it had ever been entered on the minutes of the meetings of the board of education. Although it has been held that “An action for money had and received may be maintained by one who has loaned money to a county, and which has been used by it to discharge a legally incurred liability for a current expense, although the governing official or officials of a county have no authority to borrow the money or to give a note therefor” (Butts County v. Jackson Banking Co., 129 Ga. 801, 60 S. E. 149, 15 L. R. A. (N. S.) 567, 121 Am. St. R. 244), this case does not fall within that ruling, because the money was not used to discharge a legally incurred liability, and in fact was not used by the board at all. In the brief of counsel for the plaintiff is quoted the substance of the rule stated above; and it is added that “this rule has been extended and adhered to.” It has been adhered to, but it has not been extended to cover a case like the instant case. The opinion delivered in the case cited set forth fully the reasons and equitable principles upon which the case was decided; in the course of the opinion it was said: “The prin
The reading of these extracts and a consideration of the comprehensive reasoning there stated, with the necessary deductions therefrom, shows conclusively that the plaintiff can not enforce the' demands which are made in this suit against the county board of education. Outside authorities are to the same effect. In 19 R. C. L. 1066, it is said: “A municipal corporation is not bound by a contract made in its name by one of its officers or by a person in its employ, though within the scope of its corporate powers, if the officer or employee had not authority to enter into such a contract on behalf of the corporation. The principle by which a private employer is held liable for unauthorized acts of his agents on the ground that he has impliedly held them out as having a general authority to act for him has a much more limited application to
Judgment affirmed.