COUNTY OF JACKSON, Appellant, v. J. H. FAYMAN and MASSACHUSETTS BONDING & INSURANCE COMPANY
Division One
December 21, 1931
44 S.W. (2d) 849
We do not say that reasons or conditions might not exist or could not arise which would give a court of equity a right to terminate this trust. “Equity has power to terminate an express trust in whole or in part even before the expiration of the term. . . . but the jurisdiction is sparingly exercised.” [Shaller v. Mississippi Valley Trust Co., 3 S. W. (2d) l. c. 729.] That question is not now before us. Plaintiff proceeds upon the theory that it has terminated, or that she has a right to have it terminated, as a matter of law. Our conclusion is that she does not have that right and that the trust is valid.
The circuit court should decree that defendants, who are brothers or sisters or descendants of brothers and sisters of testatrix or Lorenzo D. Evans have no interest in the land; and that plaintiff is the owner of the remainder subject to the trust provided for by the will.
The decree is therefore reversed and the cause remanded with directions to enter such a decree. Ferguson, C., concurs; Sturgis, C., dissents.
PER CURIAM:—The foregoing opinion by HYDE, C., is adopted as the opinion of the court. All of the judges concur.
Fred A. Boxley, Rufus Burrus and Elmer B. Hоdges for appellant.
STURGIS, C.—Jackson County brought this suit against J. H. Fayman, county treasurer of that county, and the surety on his official bond to recover the amount of a certain county warrant alleged to have been wrongfully paid by such treasurer from county road funds after an order not to do so. The county warrant which is alleged to have been wrongfully paid by defendant as county treasurer was issued by plaintiff to W. A. Ross in part payment for construction of a public road in Jackson County under a contract with the county. The petition alleges that the issuance of the warrant in question was procured by false representations as to the amount and character of the work performed by Ross in constructing this public road; that Ross had already been paid all that was due him for the road construction work and therefore the warrant in question was without consideration and was issued in payment for work not performed. It is further alleged that later, but before said warrant was paid by defendant, the county court on investigation discovered the falsity of the claim and that Ross had already been paid all and more than was justly due him under said road contract; that thereupon the county court, by order duly made and served on defendant, cancelled and annulled said county warrant and directed defendant as treasurer not to pay the same. The defendant disregarded this last mentioned order and paid said county warrant to Ross out of the county road funds amounting, with interest, to about $23,000. Plaintiff also alleged that shortly after
“MEMORANDUM
“The general arrangement in re compromise between Jackson County and the Messrs. Ross is as follows:
“(1) Outstanding 1920 Special Road & Bridge Fund warrant, aggregating upwards of $20,000, including interest, to be surrendered for cancellation.
“(2) Full formal release and final settlement agreement to be executed and approved. This is to cover all roads and work.”
This attempted compromise settlement was made sometime in 1922 before the order of the county court cancelling and annulling the county warrant in question was made in December of that year.
The answer in this case was a general denial, and set up an affirmative defense, but as no evidence was offered by defendant, this defense went out of the case. The court gave a peremptory instruction at the close of the case to find for defendant, and judgment went accordingly.
This case did not break in the trial court on the binding effect of the compromise agreement mentioned, made in the case then pending. While the case then pending to recover the claimed overpayment by the county to Ross, which over-payment included the amount covered by the county warrant now in controversy, was dismissed by the county on the faith of this compromise settlement, yet the defendant Ross withdrew from and refused to carry out the compromise agreement, of which fact the plaintiff had notice before dismissing the suit and its doing so was purely voluntary. Ross offered to proceed with the trial of that case, refused to surrender the county warrant in controversy for cancellation, and then and now
In the view which the trial court took of the case, the binding effect of this attempted compromise settlement was left undetermined and we have mentioned it largely to show the conditions and status of affairs with reference to this disputed warrant at the time the county court in December, 1922, made its order cancelling the warrant and ordering the defendant county treasurer not to pay the same. At the time of making such order the county court had not only investigated and caused the then highway engineer to measure and ascertain the amount of work done by Ross under his road contract, and brought suit to recover the excess paid to him for such road work, but the county court had before it the memorandum of agreement for the compromise settlement which, if carried out, would have the effect of a surrender and physical cancellation of this warrant.
The defendant county treasurer then, as now, and doubtless at the insistence of Ross‘s attorneys and after much hesitation, took the position that the county court, after having issued this county warrant, and that term of court having passed, had no authority to make an order cancelling and declaring void this county warrant on the ground that same had been issued on false representations as to the consideration thereof, and that it was his duty to pay the warrant when funds came into his hands with which to do so regardless of such countermanding order of the county court. It should be noted that the warrant in question was not paid at once, but was protested for want of funds when first presented; that the order of the county court cancelling and annulling the warrant was not made till a year after its issuance and that such warrant was not actually paid till some four years later. During this interval one county counsellor of Jackson County took the position, and so advised the defendant, that the order of the county court recalling and annulling this warrant was valid and binding and advised defendant not to pay the same; and a later county counsellor took a different view, at least to the extent that it was defendant‘s duty “to pay this warrant on presentation unless the warrant was illegal or fraudulently issued.” This county counsellor then suggested that defendant take a good and sufficient surety bond to protect himself and Jackson County and that “upon the execution of such a bond that you pay this warrant.” The defendant acted on this suggestion, took a bond to protect himself against loss, and paid the warrant. It is not shown who furnished this bond, but presumably the contractor, Ross, did so.
The trial court heard plaintiff‘s evidence which showed the contract entered into by Jackson County with defendant, W. A. Ross,
When these and other pertinent facts were shown by plaintiff, the trial court, without waiting till plaintiff concluded its evidence, made this announcement:
“The sole question for determination in this case, it appears to the court, is whether or not the county court had the legal and lawful authority to cancel the warrant in question.
“The plaintiff‘s petition alleges, and the proof shows that the warrant in question was legally issued by the county court on the 1st day of October, 1920; that on the 20th day of December, 1922, two years later, and at a subsequent and different term of said court than the one in which said warrant was drawn and issued, said county court without having the warrant in their possession made an order sua sponte purporting to cancel said warrant. Sections 9541-2 and 3, Revised Statutes of Missouri 1919, prescribed the statutory method of cancellation of warrants, and when the county court is empowered so to do. Section 9578 provides a penalty for county treasurer failing to cash warrants when lawfully issued, and there is cash available to pay same, said penalty consisting of damages as well as forfeiture by the treasurer of his office.
“After mature consideration and investigation of the decisions and authorities, the court is of the opinion that the county court had no lawful or legal authority to cancel said warrants under the facts of the case at bar; that said cancellation was a matter for judicial determination by a regularly constituted judicial body and necessitated a trial, after the notification of the parties litigant.
“That the county court оf Jackson County had no such judicial power and the purported cancellation was of no effect.
“That the county treasurer is a ministerial officer, and that as such an officer, it was his duty under the statutes and decisions to cash said warrant upon due presentment.
“It is further the opinion of the court that the proper procedure under the facts of the case at bar would have been the institution of a suit in equity by the county court praying for a cancellation of the warrant, and an order restraining the treasurer from paying the same. Under such procedure the treasurer would have been protected as against any forfeitures or penalties provided for in the event of his failure to carry out his ministerial duty.
“To which action and ruling of the court plaintiff then and there at the time duly excepted and still excepts.”
This clearly indicated the views of the trial court as to the law applicаble to this case and put a stop to further evidence, although the court permitted plaintiff to offer to prove by the then county surveyor and highway engineer and by other witnesses that they were familiar with the road work in question, had examined and inspected the road construction work done by Ross on this road, had made measurements of the different kinds of work actually done,
We are of opinion that the trial court took an erroneous view of the law on the facts of this case and erred in giving the peremptory instruction to find for defendant. In effect, the ruling of the trial court is that when a claim against the county is presented for auditing and payment and the county court acts on the matter, allows the claim and orders a warrant issued and same is issued, such action is final, cannot be reopened or the order rescinded or modified, except perhaps at the same term of the county court, and that an order made at a subsequent term of the county court annulling the former order and cancelling the warrant issued, though same is not paid, is itself a nullity and should be disregarded by the county treasurer. If, of cоurse, the county treasurer should pay such a warrant so issued without such action of the county court, it is a complete protection to him since he is a mere ministerial officer and not required to inquire into the validity of the warrant, but that is not the question here. Here the auditing body given the power to issue the warrant as representing a just indebtedness ascertains to its own satisfaction that the warrant does not represent a just and valid indebtedness of the county and that the court in ordering same issued acted on false information or was mistaken as to the facts, rescinds its action in issuing the warrant and declares it void and not a valid obligation of the county. In doing this the county court as fiscal or auditing agent of the county treats the warrant issued as an evidence of indebtedness much like a check or promissory note of the county, which it may properly repudiate and refuse to pay for want of consideration or other valid defense. Since such county warrants are not negotiable, though assignable, the rights of innocent purchasers for value and without notice of any infirmity cannot be thereby involved. To hold that the county court cannot do this is to hold, in effect, that the action of the county court in auditing the claims against the county and ordering warrants issued in payment thereof is in the nature of a judicial hearing and the action taken is a judgment final in its nature unless appealed from or set aside and
The power and authority of county courts and the capacity in which such body acts in auditing and paying claims against the county has been before this court for decision many times. We think that it is now well settled that county courts do not act judicially in allowing, adjusting or refusing claims presented against the county or necessarily arising from managing its financial affairs. While such body does not act in a purely ministerial capacity in such matters, in the sense that they act without investigation and have no discretion in the matter, yet they do not try the merits of the claim as a court, but rather act as auditing financial agents of the county whose action is not final in the sense that a judgment of the court is final except on appeal or by other appropriate remedy.
By our
The court then reviewed the Missouri cases on this subject up to that date, among them Reppy v. Jefferson County, 47 Mo. 68, where it was held that the rejection of a claim against the county was not binding on the claimant in a suit brought on the rejected claim, and to be res adjudicata both parties must be bound or neither. The court in that case said: “The county court, in auditing claims against the county, is but its financial agent, and not a judicial body. It represents the county, and in the numerous prosecutions against it, from the earliest times, it has never been held that a rejected claim was res adjudicata. [Cases cited.]”
And the court mentioned Gammon v. LaFayette County, 79 Mo. 223, where this court had said: “It [the statute] constitutes the county court the agent of the county to audit and settle demands against the county, and, although an appeal is allowed to the circuit court from the rejection by the county court of a demand against the county, yet, in the first instance, it is not strictly speaking a suit in the county court.”
And in Railroad v. St. Louis, 92 Mo. 160, 165, it is said: “These [county] courts are but the agents of the counties in the allowance of accounts.”
“In auditing accounts there is no part of the proceeding which takes the form of a judicial proceeding. ‘No petition is filed, no parties are summoned to answer the demand and no issues are triable by a jury, except in the court‘s discretion.’ [Gammon v. LaFayette County, supra.] It is true, in a certain sense, they act judicially, when they decide upon claims against the counties, but not more so than the auditor or financial agent of a corporation or firm when he passes upon an account presented. It is true also that the right of appeal is given in case the account presented against the county or any part thereof be rejected. . . . This appeal is specially provided and would be altogether unnecessary if the rejection of an account constituted a judgment. . . . The statute allowing appeals from their action in rejecting accounts could only have been intended to provide a convenient and inexpensive method for having a judicial determination of a matter about which the parties are unable to agree. That could hardly be called a judicial proceeding, in which the agent of one party sits in judgment upon the rights of the others.
“It has been held by this court through an unbroken line of decisions since the case of Marion County v. Phillips, 45 Mo. 75, that the action of the county court in making settlements with county officials is not judicial, but that, in such cases, the judges act merely as the fiscal or administrative agents of the counties. [State v. Roberts, 60 Mo. 402; State v. Roberts, 62 Mo. 388; Cole Co. v. Dallmeyer, 101 Mo. 57; State v. McGonigle, 101 Mo. 353.] The action of county courts in auditing accounts is given no more sanctity by the law than that exercised in making settlements with county officers, and their orders are not entitled to be clothed with superior verity. . . .
“We are well satisfied that the protection of the public from the mistakes, carelessness, incompetency or misconduct of public auditing boards is best subserved by an adherence to the rule which has been
This case has not been overruled, but approved many times, and the same doctrine was restated in State ex rel. v. Diemer, 255 Mo. 336, 351, in this language: “In the allowance of claims against a county or in settling with county officers, county courts do not act so strictly as a court, or in the performance of a judicial function, and their allowance or disallowance of a claim is res adjudicata. Something of substance might be said in favor of the contrary theory, but at an early day this court considerеd our statutes and announced the doctrine, on the reason of the thing and because of a good public policy, that county courts in the allowance of claims, as in settling with officers, acted as a mere public board of audit, as ministerial, administrative or fiscal agents for the county and not strictly as a court, hence we have uniformly refused to apply the doctrine of res adjudicata to their orders allowing or disallowing claims against the county, or to their settlements with county officers. That doctrine has always been adhered to and must be accepted as settled.” Many cases are cited. And at page 354 the status of a county court in auditing, adjusting and allowing claims against the county is aptly defined thus:
“The premises considered it becomes apparent that, although we have held that in the matter of allowing claims against the county they act in a public ministerial, administrative, or auditing capacity, yet in their performance of ministerial duties in allowing claims their acts partake of the nature of judicial acts and are so related thereto in color and substance that they may be deemed not inaptly quasi-judicial.”
See State ex rel. v. Hamilton, 312 Mo. 157, 172.
State ex rel. v. Williams, 232 Mo. 56, is in point in that after the county court had issued a salary warrant “the Attorney-General of the State was called upon and gave a written opinion to the County Court of Nodaway County, which was the fiscal agent thereof, to the effect that the act in question was unconstitutional, null and void, and that said court informed relator (county treasurer) of said opinion, and notified him not to pay the warrant mentioned in the pleadings; and that if he did so, he would be held liable upon his bond for the amount so paid thereon.” The county treasurer obeyed this last order and refused to pay the warrant. Being a suit in mandamus, this court said: “In the light of those disclosures, the respondent not only had the lеgal right to raise the
It will be noticed that the courts have frequently likened the orders of county courts allowing claims and the county warrants issued thereunder to checks, drafts or promissory notes of the county, the enforcement or collection of which may be resisted by the county for good cause, such as want of consideration. We think that from the reason of the thing and the analogy of such warrants to checks or drafts drawn by the county, the formal action of the county court in ordering a warrant cancelled, at least where a third party such as the county treasurer is concerned, on information that such warrant does not represent a valid indebtedness of the county and should not be paid, would be, when necessary to protect such third party or the funds in his hands, рerfectly proper, and has the same effect as stopping payment of a check or draft by notice to the party called on to pay same.
Such also is the rule of courts in other jurisdictions whose laws are similar to ours in relation to handling county finances—auditing, allowing and paying claims by a constituted body, whether called county supervisors or county courts, by issuing warrants on the county treasury. The language of the court in Harrison County v. Ogden, 165 Iowa 325, is so apt that we quote therefrom:
“The board of supervisors are the financial agents of the county, charged, under the statute, with general care and management of the county property, funds, and business. The county treasurer, under Section 482, is charged with the duty of receiving money payable to the county and disbursing the same on warrants drawn and signed by the county auditor, and not otherwise, and it is his duty to keep a true account of all receipts and disbursements and hold the same at all times ready for the inspeсtion of the board of supervisors. The basis for the warrant is the order of the board. It is but the evidence of indebtedness. It is prima-facie evidence that the county is legally indebted to the holder of the warrant, but is not conclusive upon that point. They are not negotiable, but may be assigned under the statute, but, in the hands of the assignee, are subject to all defenses which exist in favor of the county. The money in the hands of the treasurer is subject to the order of the board. He is only a disbursing officer. The warrant is his authority for disbursing, but, before the disbursement has been made, the order for disbursement may be recalled, and, the warrant being based upon an order of the board of supervisors, the board, having control of the funds out of which the warrant may be paid, may prohibit the treasurer from using the funds for that purpose by proper order made upon him. This does not destroy the debt, if any, legiti-
“This order for the payment of money having been rescinded by the board of supervisors, under whose control the property and money of the county is, the right of the treasurer to pay the county‘s money upon the order so rescinded ceased as soon as he received notice of such order. His authority to pay upon the warrant was taken away by the board, from whom he, in the first place, obtained the authority to pay.”
In the State of Oregon where the functions and duties of the county court and treasurer are similar to those of Missouri, the county court ordered the treasurer not to pay a warrant which had been issued, giving no notice whatever to the holder of the warrant. The holder of the warrant then brought an action in mandamus to compel the payment of the warrant. The treasurer set up the order of the county court as a defense. The court sustained him and refused to issue the writ, saying (Frankl v. Bailey, 50 Pac. 187, l. c. 188):
“The county court is charged, under the statute, with ‘the general care and management of county property, funds, and business where the law does not otherwise expressly provide.’ [
See also People v. Klokke, 92 Ill. 134.
In State v. Cook, 43 Neb. 318, 324, involving the payment of a warrant drawn on a city treasurer and later annulled by a like order, the court said: “This must be true when the body allowing the claim has not been given authority to act judicially in determining the legality of the claim. While money remains in possession of the treasurer, the authorities having the power of disposing of the same have entire control of it, and the rescission of an order directing its payment before the payment is in fact made is, as between the holder and the treasurer, a defense to the latter.”
Defendants have cited a number of cases, most if not all of them being suits in mandamus to compel ministerial officers to pay county warrants, in which it is claimed that this court hаs held that the issuance of such warrant by the county court involves a judicial finding of its validity binding on the county court and which cannot again be opened up or inquired into. Mandamus is a short cut in legal procedure where the ordinary procedure is less adequate and therefore held inadequate, but in such procedure questions of fact going to the merits may be inquired into as well as questions of law. The case most relied on by defendant is State ex rel. v. Treasurer of Callaway County, 43 Mo. 228. In that case the county court had allowed a claim and issued a warrant. Later the county court made a further order reducing the amount of the claim and ordering only the reduced amount to be paid. The amount deducted was a definite amount for a distinct item of service
State ex rel. v. Adams, 161 Mo. 349, does not involve the power of the county court to annul by later order its former order to issue a warrant. An examination of that case shows that the county treasurer of his own motion refused to pay a county warrant and when sued in mandamus set up a number of reasons why the county court should not have issued the warrant. So far from holding that the mere issuance of the warrant precluded any inquiry into its justness or validity, this court fully considered the objections raised and ordered the warrant paid only after determining that such objections were without merit.
Nor do we find State ex rel. v. Nelson, 310 Mo. 526, in conflict with what we decide here. As we understand that case, a drainage district had contracted to pay certain engineers for certain work, one-half to be paid “upon acceptance and adoption by the board of the report of the engineer as the plan of reclamation.” The board of
The trial court expressed his views that the plaintiff, instead of making the order annulling the warrant and stopping payment, should have instituted a suit in equity to have the warrant cancelled for fraud and restraining its payment. This is based on the idea that the allowance of the claim and issuance of the warrant by the county court was a judicial act final in its nature, unless corrected by appeal or set aside in equity for fraud. Such view is erroneous, as we have seen.
Insistence is made that our statute,
Much is said by respondent to the effect that fraud is the basis of this action, and that in no event is the county court justified in cancelling a warrant already issued by its order except on proof that the same was procured by actual fraud, and that no such proof is made here. What the plaintiff (county) desired to show, and what the trial court refused to hear, was that the contractor (Ross) had not performed the work and furnished the materials in the road construction work covered by the account presented to the county court and which it paid by issuing the warrant in question under the implied representation at least that same was correct. Such action by Ross amounts to fraud in law if not
Much is also said as to the heavy penalties imposed on county treasurers as ministerial officers in refusing to pay county warrants regularly issued by the county and presented for payment. It is true that such ministerial officers are not and should not be required to investigate and determine for himself the legality or validity of such warrants and should ordinarily pay sаme without question. Here, however, the constituted authority which had caused this warrant to be issued, and whose order gave it birth and vitality, had taken on itself the responsibility of annulling its action and stamping out its life. The whole trouble here arises from the fact that this ministerial officer undertook to decide for himself that the action of the county court in issuing this warrant was a judicial act and a finality and that such court did not have the judicial power to set aside or modify its judgment after the term. That ministerial officers are not generally visited with penalties or held personally responsible when acting in good faith is held in State ex rel. v. Diemer, 255 Mo. 336. That they must at times assume some risk in the performance of judicial duties is unavoidable, and we commend defendant‘s action in taking a bond for his own protection on paying this warrant.
It is urged that on our finding that the defendant county treasurer wrongfully paid the warrant in question out of the county funds, we should enter judgment for the recovery of the amount so paid out with interest. This, however, is not the theory on which plaintiff tried the case. It not only alleges defendant‘s wrongful payment of the warrant after its annulment, but that at the time of its issuance the county court was not indebted to Ross and that this warrant does not evidence a valid indebtedness due him; that his claim for road work done and material furnished was false and excessive, and that plaintiff was wrong-
To that end the case should be reversed and remanded and it is so ordered. Ferguson and Hyde, CC., concur.
PER CURIAM:—The foregoing opinion by STURGIS, C., is adopted as the opinion of the court. All of the judges concur.
GEORGE J. DREW, ANNE LEWIS DREW, ALEXANDER C. DREW, DOROTHEA BARNETT ARMES and KATHERINE H. DREW, Appellants, v. ANN DREW PLATT, MARGARET DREW WILSON, EMMA DREW CATLIN, FRANCIS A. DREW, ELIZABETH DREW BROWN, MARY ANN DREW, WILLIAM MCREE DREW, TANKERVILLE J. DREW and DOROTHY DREW GREEN.
Division One
December 21, 1931
44 S. W. (2d) 623
