72 Tenn. 28 | Tenn. | 1879
delivered the opinion of the Court.
These are agreed cases, gotten up for the purpose of testing the liability of the couuty of Davidson for interest upon couuty warrants, under orders of the Couuty Court, intended to confer upon the holders of the warrants the right to demand and receive interest. The judgment in each ease was in favor of the claim of the warrant
Taking the warrant and'the facts agreed in the first of these cases as fairly presenting the question sought to be raised, we find that Thos. S. Marr, for whose use the suit is brought, is the owner of a county warrant, bfo. 2,518, dated January 25, 1877, duly issued and made payable to P. Olwill, on account of St. Mary’s Orphan Asylum, and by him transferred to 'Marr, for $240. This warrant was presented to the County Trustee for payment, and stamped with the date of presentation, thus: “ Registered March 5, 1877, Trustee’s office, Davidson County, Tenn.”
On January 6, 1880, the County Court made the following order, which was duly entered on its minutes:
“ State of Tennessee, Davidson County. At the January Term of said County Court, on the first Monday of said month, the following proceedings were had:
“ Whereas, about four years ago the County Judge was instructed by this Court to obtain from Judge Baxter an opinion on the question as to whether county warrants draw interest;. and
“ Whereas, Judge Baxter did give an opinion in which he decided that county warrants drew interest from date of demand and registration; and
“ Whereas, the Justices of the County Court then assembled, iu order to stop numerous lawsuits
“Whereas, parties then about to bring suit stopped ail proceedings against the county by reason of the said understanding and agreement; and
“ Whereas, numberless suits are being brought against the county on county warrants; therefore,
“ Be it resolved, by the County Court of the County of Davidson, That all legally issued county warrants now outstanding, and all county warrants hereafter issued, shall bear interest at the rate of six per cent, from the date of registration by the County Trustee.”
It is agreed that in 1875, it being disputed whether county warrants bore interest, Thos. S. Marr brought suit against the county on a county' warrant in the Circuit Court, of which the Hon. E". Baxter was then the Judge, as a test suit, and on the trial, after argument, recovered a judgment for the amount of the warrant with interest thereon, at the rate of six per cent per annum, from the date of its presentation to the County Trustee for payment. The Circuit Judge was of opinion, and so held, that the warrant would bear interest after presentation. This suit was accepted as a test case by the county, and to avoid similar suits, the County Court, at a subsequent quarterly term, during the y7ear 1875, ordered that thereafter the Trustee of the County allow interest accordingly, and that he
In order to prevent the accumulation of costs by suits, and in justice -to those persons who had forborne to sue in consequence of the previous order of 1875, the order of January, 1880, was passed.
The holders of the warrants now in controversy claim interest on the same from the date- of presentation to the Trustee, being subsequent to the passage of the order of 1875, and at any rate from the 6th of January, 1880, the date of the last order.
The Court below gave judgment for interest from the date of the presentation of the warrant.
In the case of Camp v. Knox County, this Court held, that the warrant of the Judge, or Chairman
“ Every county,” says the Code, “ is a corporation, and the Justices in the County Court assembled are the representatives of the county, and authorized to act for it.” Code, 402.
By the next section it is provided that suits may be maintained against a county for any just claim as against other corporations, the process to be served upon the presiding officer.
Section 404 is: “ Each county may acquire and hold property for county purposes, and make all
These provisions clearly confer upon the county corporate existence, with the right to sue and be sued, and hold property, and with power, through the Justices in County Court assembled, to make contracts touching its property, or for the better exercise of its civil and political powers. Unless controlled by other legislation, the authority would be ample to cover the action of the County Court in the present case, treating what is done as in the nature of a contract in .the exercise of its civil power.
By the Code, 4190, 4191, the number of Justices required to make appropriations of public money is prescribed. Section 4215 enumerates the purposes for which appropriations may be made, and section 4216 directs that no appropriation shall be made for any other purpose unless specially provided for by law.
By section 4195 it. is enacted: “ In making appropriations of money, the vote of the justices present shall be taken by ayes and noes, the Clerk calling and recording the name of each Justice, together with his vote, aye or no, as it ■ is given, which shall be entered on the minutes, together with the items of allowance.”
The County Court, as the representative of the county, cannot go beyond the authority delegated to it by the law. The question, therefore, comes to this, can the county, upon a sufficient consideration, contract for the payment of interest on any claim against it for which it is authorized to make an appropriation, and has made the appropriation ?
Interest for money as a legal consequence was unknown to the common law: Cherry v. Mann, Cooke, 268. It has, however, been given by statute on judgments, and on a large class of assignable and negotiable instruments, and upon liquidated accounts signed by the parties: Code, 1942, 1945. It is defined by the Statute to be the compensation which may be demanded by the lender from the borrower, or the creditor from the debtor, for the use of money: Code, 1943. In all cases which are left as at common law, the jury has an equitable power, and may, in the form of damages, gi?e interest, if they think justice demands it: Cole v. Sands, 1 Tenn., 106. Under our statutes and decisions interest has become an incident of debt after maturity, because either given by positive law, or in the absence of countervailing equity, by the inevitable verdict of the jury, or by the court acting in the place of the jury.
The power to sue and be sued, it has been
With these principles in view, let us see how the case before us stands. The County of Davidson is largely in debt, beyond its present means .to pay, and liable to be sued upon demands, which have been legally allowed by its representative, the County Court, properly audited, and for whose payment warrants have been issued. If sued, the expenses' of suit must be borne by the county, and the judgment which will be recovered will certainly bear interest, and the creditor may be also entitled to interest on his demand by law, or the jury may allow him interest by way of damages. The county might compromise the debt or the litigation. Why may it not in advance avoid the expense of litigation by stipulating that it will pay interest in consideration of the creditors’ forbearance to sue? The costs of suit would be an incident of the demand for which the county would be liable, and the County Court would be compelled to appropriate the public money. So, interest on the debt would be an incident for which an appropriation must necessarily be made • if given by law, or the verdict of a jury. An amicable adjustment by which interest is conceded in consideration of forbearance is within the competency of the County Court, whenever it is authorized ■ to levy a tax, or appropriate the public money to pay
It is obvious, however, that the County Court cannot, by a general order or resolution, make all county warrants bear interest indefinitely. That would be to nullify the decision of this Court, and the policy of requiring the prompt payment of county debts. Moreover, the power to bind the county for the payment of interest is not general, but special, and must be sustained by a consideration. It is, therefore, limited to the forbearance demanded by the public exigency. Strictly speaking, there should be a specific contract upon a definite consideration in each . case. The difficulty and expense of a rigid enforcement of this rule in the case before us would neutralize the benefit sought to be obtained. The circumstances may justify a liberal construction of the order of the County Court, with a view to do equity as to the past transactions, where all parties have acted in good faith upon the same conception of their relative rights, and yet no t throw open too wide a door for unwarranted license in the future. The County Court can only contract for the payment of interest on the county debt, in consideration of the creditor’s forbearance, so long as that forbear-
The resolution alleged to have been passed by the County Court in 1875, though never entered on its minutes, was simply void. The County Court must act in the mode prescribed by law. The fact can only be looked to as explanatory of the conduct of the county and its creditors, and as an inducement to the passage of the order or resolution of 1880.
The result is, that the latter resolution or order may be treated as a contract, with existing and
In this view, the judgments in the two cases before 'us are not erroneous, and will he affirmed.