67 Neb. 62 | Neb. | 1903
This is an action begun by W. S. Bartlett in the county court of Dakota county to recover from that county the sum of $515 and interest, alleged to be due upon three warrants for the sum of $200 each, all of the same date and in the following form:
“$200. Amount levied 189- $-
“Amount issued $848.70
“County Warrant.
“State of Nebraska. Treasurer of Dakota County.
“Dakota City, Dec. 4,1895.
“Will pay W. T. Bartlett or bearer two hundred dollars and charge to account of county.
“No. 4.
“T. Y. Brannan, Thos. Sullivan, Jr.,
“County Clerh. Chairman County Commissioners.
“Advertising fund.”
Plaintiff in error alleges that there was no jurisdiction in the district court, for the reasons that no summons in error Avas ever served upon the county and its issuance and service was Avaived by the county attorney. Counsel cites and relies upon the case of Chicago, B. & Q. R. Co. v. Hitchcock County, 60 Nebr., 722, and its holding that an attorney has no authority to Avaive service of summons and enter a voluntary appearance in an action on behalf of a municipal corporation simply by reason of his powers and functions as an attorney. The summons in this case, however, Avas not the commencement of an action, and the statute makes*the ser a-ice of summons upon the attorney good, whether he still retains any authority from his principal or not, if he appeared at the trial. The right to serve sum
The only question in the matter is the interpretation to be given to section 585 of the Code of Civil Procedure. That section is as follows: “The summons mentioned in the last section shall, upon the written precipe of the plaintiff in error, or his attorney, be issued by the clerk of the court in which the petition is filed to the sheriff of any county in which the defendant in error or his attorney of record may be; and if the writ issue to a foreign county, the sheriff thereof may return the same by mail to the clerk, and shall be entitled to the same fees as if the same had been returnable to the district court of the county in which such officer resides. The defendant in error, or his attorney, may waive in writing the issuing or service of the summons.” It seems clear that “his attorney,” referred to in the last clause of this section, means the same party as “his attorney of record” in the early part; that is, that it is only necessary that the party served, and waiving service, shall have been his attorney at the time of the trial as to which a complaint is made. The objection to jurisdiction was properly overruled.
It remains to consider the sufficiency of these warrants to constitute a cause of action when coupled with the allegations that they were delivered in payment for the publication of the county’s delinquent tax list for 1895 under a valid contract, and that when the warrants were drawn there was money in the county’s general fund sufficient to meet them, and that they are unpaid. There is an allegation in the petition that the words “advertising fund,” at the bottom of the warrants, were added subsequently to their issuance and without authority, but
There is a question as to the fact in reference to there being general funds of the county from which they might have been paid at the time. The county clerk swears that the levy of 1895 was exhausted in November, and the last warrant drawn on it was in that month. This general conclusion clearly seems insufficient to do away with the presumption that the officers did their duty, and if these are to be considered as general fund warrants, the claim of lack of authority to issue them can hardly be sustained. In State v. Weir, 33 Nebr., 35, 37, a precisely similar statement, only in a form of a certificate, is held to be a mere conclusion, and no sufficient evidence of a lack of funds at a given subsequent time. It is hard, too, to see how the expense of publishing the tax list is any more an indebtedness incurred by the county board than is the salary of the clerk. Such salary in the case last cited is held not to be subject to the limitations permitting no incurring of indebtedness, nor allowance of claims in excess of the levy, and forbidding warrants in excess of eighty-five per cent, of the levy in the absence of funds.
The real difficulties in the way of plaintiff’s recovery are three: The claim of plaintiff was not allowed generally against the county and its general fund, but against the “advertising fund”; the warrants are drawn against an “advertising fund”; they bear no seal. Plaintiff cites Kane & Co. v. Hughes County, 81 N. W. Rep. [S. Dak.], 894. as conclusive of the proposition that allowance against the advertising fund is equivalent to an allowance against the general fund. Such is the holding in that case. The statute in South Dakota, however, provides in terms, for a payment by the county, in the first instance, for the publication of the delinquent tax list. That is the sole difference in the statutes that is pointed out.
These warrants are not in the form prescribed by law and are without a seal; but it is admitted in the record that they were issued by the proper county authorities. We suppose the seal is attached merely to authenticate that fact. While the county seal is expressly required by section 33, chapter 18, Compiled Statutes,
It is recommended that the judgment of the district court be affirmed.
For the reasons stated in the foregoing opinion, the judgment of the district court is
Affirmed.
Cobbey’s Annotated Statutes, sec. 4451.