56 Ga. 674 | Ga. | 1876
This is a case of first impression. None like it has been cited by counsel, and none has been discovered by our own research since the argument. We shall confine our opinion to a very narrow'range, keeping in view the one practical question for decision, which is, whether the remedy of mandamus is available to the petitioner on the state of facts in the record. We do not find it necessary to rule whether a valid appropriation of money for the payment of the claims which he seeks to collect from the state has been made or not. For the purposes of our decision, it may be conceded that the appropriation is regular, and in all respects legal. It may also be conceded that the executive warrants were duly issued, and that it was the legal duty of the treasurer then in office to pay them. The further concession may be made that mandamus might have been evoked to compel payment. But the writ was not applied for on the refusal of that officer to act as the warrants directed him to act. He went out of office leaving the money unpaid, and the governor, by whom the warrants were issued, went out also. These warrants descended upon their successors as outstanding; and, so far as appears, no successor in either office has recognized them as entitled to payment. On the contrary, the governor has approved the joint resolutions of the general assembly, passed in August, 1872, instructing the treasurer not to pay them. These resolutions have been acted upon and obeyed both by the present incumbent of the treasury and his immediate predecessor. No money can be paid out of the treasury before it is appropriated. Neither can it be paid out after it is appropriated without more. There must be either express legislative authority to pay without the governor’s warrant, or the governor’s warrant must be produced: Code, sections 5064, 76, 92. Appropriation casts no duty upon the treasurer to pay. His duty arises from the conjunct operation of the appropriation and the warrant. One is as indispensable as the other. And it admits of grave doubt whether a warrant issued by a gov
1. But we need not hold that the treasurer must have the co-operation of the governor for the time being to enable him to deliver money from the treasury. That point can be treated as not necessarily involved here; for if executive warrants are subject to revocation, these have been revoked. Are they subject to revocation? What are they? Not bills or notes. The governor has no power to execute bills or notes and bind the state. Are they contracts at all, or in the nature of contracts? We think not. They are not engagements between party and party, but the mere license of the governor, authorizing the treasurer to pay money. The creditor need not have possession of them at all. He need never see them. They
2. It may be that the governor alone cannot revoke it. But undoubtedly the state can. There would seem to be much reason for holding that the governor retains power over the public money, to preserve it until it is actually paid out. After issuing a warrant he may discover that he has erred or been imposed upon. He may have been grossly defrauded. To deny him power to revoke his warrant, or to prevent payment by a counter-order, would be to cripple his department. He is undoubtedly invested by law with a discretion in issuing warrants. He can be put under no direct compulsion to issue. Then why may he not be trusted by law to recall any that may be issued improvidently ? But the power of the state itself is represented by the governor and the general assembly together, in measures of legislation. And the warrants now in question have been virtually revoked by the joint resolutions above referred to. The treasurer, by these resolutions, is instructed riot to pay them. The reasons that moved to this action are not set forth, further than that a joint committee had investigated the subject and reported adversely to the warrants. We are bound to presume, as the tribunal was competent, that the decision was right. We
3. Unless the element of contract was in the warrants themselves, and we have said it was not, whether they should live or die was for the state to decide. We think a legislative direction, by joint resolution approved by the governor, not to pay them, is to be complied with by the treasurer; and that the judiciary should not command him by mandamus to do otherwise.
Judgment affirmed.