53 Ala. 25 | Ala. | 1875
Counties are not only mere local sub-divisions of the territory of the State, but civil or political organizations, with limited and defined powers, and are agencies or auxiliaries in the administration of civil government. Dillon Munic. Cor. § 10; Webster County v. Taylor, 19 Iowa, 117. Every county in this State is by statute declared a body corporate, capable oí sueing and being sued. Like other corporations, the power with which it is clothed is exercised by officers. The court of county commissioners is entrusted with the authority and jurisdiction, whether legislative, judicial or executive, committed to the county. This body is entitled a court of record. R. C. § 825. Yet the statute in declaring its powers distinguishes those which are judicial, or in their nature judicial, from those which may well be regarded as merely executive or ministerial. In the words of the statute it has original jurisdiction, in x’elation to the establishment, change or discontinuance of roads, bridges, causeways and ferries, within its coxxnty, to be exercised in conformity with the provisions of the Code. R. C. § 831. The jurisdiction thxxs conferred is in its very nature legislative and judicial. So long as its action is not productive of private individual injury, it has a wide discretion, and is guided only by its knowledge of public necessity and convenience. No other tribxmal can intervene to revise or control its action. If its action is productive of private injury, or interferes with private property, it is then judicial, and the subject of revision by the ti'ibunals clothed with revisory power over inferior tribunals. Thus far the statute clothes it with jurisdiction in express terms. The succeeding section of the Code changes its phraseology, and declares this court has authority, among other things, “to examine, settle and allow all accounts and claims chargeable against the county,” and “to make such rules and regulations for the support of the poor in the county as are not inconsistent with any law of the State.” R. C. § 832. By another section it is provided: “the court of county commissioners must, in term time, audit all claims against their respective counties; and every claixn, or such part thereof as is allowed, must be registered in a book kept for that pux’pose,” &c. R. C. § 907. In’the exercise of this authority, the act of the court is not judicial, but executive. If it audits and allows a
While this is true, after the commissioners’ court has audiited and allowed a claim it has not capacity to retract. It may not recall the admission of the indebtedness it has made, and deprive the pai’ty holding the claim of the force the law attaches to its audit and allowance. It is an elementary principle, that admissions or declarations made by an in