140 N.W. 246 | S.D. | 1913
In the year 1891 the electors of respondent township voted in favor of the issuance of bonds to' raise funds for the purpose of sinking artesian wells in various parts of said township. In pursuance of the authority given by said electors, the township officers, in the year 1891, issued and negotiated bonds to the amount of $3,000, which bonds are known as .the “Shreve bonds.” The township officers entered into a contract with one Mahanna for the sinking of a well, and a well was sunk by this party in the year 1892. In the beginning of the year 1893, for the purpose of raising more money for the well fund, under the authority given at said 1891 election, the trustees of 'said township issued other bonds to the amount of $5,090, which bonds were sold to one Thomas Dring, who paid-said township for the same the sum of $5,000 on January 7, 1893. Thomas Dring, dying, these bonds and the debt evidenced thereby became the property of his widow, Katharine Dring. Various sums were paid as interest upon these 'bonds sufficient to cover the interest thereon up to the year 1900. In'the year 1905 Katharine Dring brought an action upon the bonds, in which action a judgment was rendered adjudging said
Appellant’s brief was filed March, 1912, and was probably prepared in 'ignorance of the decision in State v. Doran, supra. This being true, we have seen fit, as in large number of other appeals during the past year in which no proper printed record had been prepared, to go through over 500 pages of chaff and straw in search of the grain which, when properly separated, would fill 'but a small space. The practicing attorney cannot but realize that the attorney who tries a caúse in the circuit court, thus becoming familiar with the issues of both law and fact as well as with the history of the trial and record thereof, should be better prepared to- make a statement presenting the merits of an appeal from the result of such trial than are the judges of this court, even though we give to the study of the original record, as we have done in this case, far more time than the-burdens of our labors justify. This case is a striking illustration of what we have just stated. ■ There was introduced in evidence herein the complete transcript of the evidence received on each of the former trials as well as numerous other exhibits (some of which were the subjects of expert review on the trial), one being the record from the probate coúrt in the matter of -the estate of Thomas Dring-, making in all a record which it is almost anp impossibility for any person to analyze and intelligently present other than some person who took -part in the trial at which this record was made. Certainly, in such a case, it is a duty which appellant’s counsel owes, not merely to the court, but especially to his client, to use the information which he has gained through
“Now, the burden is upon the defendant township to show you that this money loaned, or any portion of it, exceeded the constitutional limitation. In the first place, in order to determine what amount, if any, Thomas Dring or his successors could recover from the township, we will take the first proposition: What.is the limit of money the township can go in debt? We have the assessed valuation of the township, $129,501; ¡5 per cent, of that would be*204 $6,475.01. This sum, $6,475.01, was the limit, beyond which St. Lawrence township could not go on January 3 or 7, 1893. That was the limit of indebtedness beyond which she could not go, and any indebtedness or any contract or any obligation she entered into that exceeded that limit would become void. * * * $6,475 was not the amount this township might go into debt at the time she got the money from Thomas Dring, because she had incurred debts to others, and these have to be taken from her limit and the balance is * * * the net limit she could go. ' Lor instance, on January 7, 1893, or January 3d, on the assessed valuation the limit of her indebtedness was $6,475'; but, prior to obtaining this money from Dring, she had executed her bonds in the sum of $3,000, and these bonds are known in this case as the Shreve bonds. Now, gentlemen, as I have said to you, in order to find the net limit, we must add up what other indebtedness the township had. The first indebtedness we find is the Shreve bonds of $3,000. * * * Now, I instruct you that the warrant indebtedness, whether $718.75 or $700, or whatever figure it is) that must be added to the $3,000 Shreve bonds; so -that, if it was $718, it would make $3,718 of indebtedness that the township already owed. * * *
“Now, if we had no other propositions in this case than the Shreve bonds and the warrant indebtedness, it would be very easy, because we would deduct the Shreve bonds and warrant indebtedness, about $3,700, deduct it from $6,475, and that would leave our limit of indebtedness that -the township could incur. * * * And if, after deducting the $3,700 from the $6,475, we find it is less than $5,000, whatever it is less, that would be all that the township would be entitled to-borrow. But in addition to the Shreve bonds, and in addition to the warrant indebtedness we have-in this caáe another alleged indebtedness, and that is the Mahanna well contract indebtedness, claimed by the defendant to -amount to $3,012 and some cents.
“Now, gentlemen, as I have said, all prior indebtedness must first be deducted from the statutory limit of $6,475; aH prior indebtedness must be deducted, in order to find the limit that would be due to Thomas Dring; and if you find that there was a contract between Mahanna and the township * * * at -the time of the issue of -the Dring bonds, that amount, $3,012, should also be added*205 to the Shreve' bonds and warrant indebtedness, in fixing the total amount. * * *
“Now, adding these three items up, -the Shreve bonds, the warrant indebtedness of $700 to $718, and whatever you find, if anything was due Mahanna from the township on January 3d, adding these three items together, then, from the total of these three items you must deduct the cash in the treasury and the uncollected taxes.
“Now, I instruct you that counsel has admitted, and it is an established fact, that the cash in the treasury was $1,552.02, and there is no dispute about that. The uncollected tax, I also instruct yoit, was admitted in the amount of $1,238.42, so there will be no idispute about.that. 'Adding $1,238.42 and the $1,552.02 together makes a total of $2,790.44.
“Now gentlemen, the cash in the treasury and the uncollected taxes must be deducted from the total of the warrant indebtedness, the Shreve bonds and- whatever you find was due to Mahanna, if anything. Now, you understand that is very easy. You add up the Shreve bonds and the warrant indebtedness of $718', and whatever you find, if anything, was due Mahanna, and from that sum you substract $2,790.44, the amount of cash ’on hand and uncollected taxes. That gives you the net indebtedness, and you want to get the net indebtedness. * * *
“Now, you see, you have arrived at the net indebtedness in this way, and this net indebtedness must be subtracted from $6,475, the limit. Substracted from that, it gives you the balance that Thomas Dring’s money cannot exceed. Of -course, you will find it will be less than $5,000. Whatever it is, that will be the amount that the township received for which they are obligated to pay Thomas Dring. * * * When you have determined what amount the township originally was owing Thomas Dring, the next thing, of course, would be to take -this amount and figure interest on it at 7 per cent, per annurfi from January 7, 1893, up until the first payment; add the interest to the principal and subtract the second -payment from that, and so on until you have gone through, and the result will'be the amount that your verdict should be for Thomas Dring, that is; the .plaintiff, and that, together with interest at the rate of 7 per cent, from -the date of the last payment, would be the total amount due him, that is, if anything after you deduct those payments. Of course, if these payments equal and succeed in satisfy*206 ing the entire, amount as you find .it, by these figures,, then, of course, «there will be nothing due; but, if they do not, then your verdict will be for whatever amount you find-with 7 per cent, interest,” , ...
Under these instructions the jury were bound to render a verdict in favor of the plaintiff, which .verdict, even if the jury found against plaintiff upon all issues in relation to the Mahanna contract and the anrount of outstanding warrants, must of necessity be about the amount of the verdict returned. Upon the trial, the county treasurer, called as a witness by plaintiff, had testified, without objection to the amount of uncollected taxes appearing of record. His evidence was taken as conclusive upon this point; defendant making no attempt to dispute 'Same. After testifying, the treasurer ascertained that he had overlooked one item of $235 taxes due defendant county. He made an affidavit to that effect and explained therein how the oversight occurred. Upon such affidavit the plaintiff asked the trial court to reopen the case and allow the evidence of this additional amount of taxes to be received. The matter of re-opening cases is one largely within the discretion of the trial court, and its decision will never be reversed except for a clear abuse of such discretion. Work v. Braun, 19 S. D. 437, 103 N. W. 764. But when we bear in mind that the witness was a public officer who. would testify to a fact shown by the public records — thus precluding any probability that his further testimony would be else than the abso-. lute truth — and when we bear in mind that the verdict, if received without this further evidence, must give the plaintiff $235 with interest thereon at 7 per cent, for 18 years (or over $500) less than plaintiff was entitled to, certainly the court, in the furtherance of justice, should have re-opened the case and received the evidence of •this witness, and its refusal so to do was a clear abuse of the discretion in it vested.
This one error requires a reversal of the judgment, and therefore a new trial. In view of the fact that there must be a new trial, we feel justified in calling attention to some other matters appearing in 'the original record herein, as by so doing we may help to avoid further errors in this much litigated cause.
The experts, in testifying to the amount of outstanding wardants on January 9, 1913, based their estimate, at least so far as the two warrants shown on Exhibit U were concerned, upon the amount
In the case before us- the proceeds of the Dring- loan were applied to the payment of the Mahanna debt to the extent necessary to wipe out the same. To the extent to which this money was so applied in paying a valid debt of defendant, equity and good conscience require 'that plaintiff.be repaid, rather than that this amount be figured as increasing the amount of the defendant’s indebtedness. We think the following from the words- of the Supreme Court of Alabama, in the case of Allen v. Intendant of La Fayette, 89 Ala. 641, 8 South. 30, 9 L. R. A. 497, is directly applicable to the facts in the case before us: ‘ ‘But back of that contract, and back of,those warrants, there is, on the facts presented by the bill and accentuated by the answers, not only a moral but a legal liability resting- on the municipality of LaFayette, and on its officers, to repay the money which came from Mrs. Frederick and has been used by the corporation for authorized corporate purposes. In other words, the town of LaFayette is liable as upon an implied assumpsit, not under, but wholly apart from the unauthorized contract, and not for the amount its officers borrowed from Mrs. Frederick, but for the amount of her money which they received and applied to the
The judgment and order appealed from are reversed.