delivered the opinion of the court.
This is a proceeding by mandamus against the treasurer of Lake County, Oregon, to compel him to pay three certain county warrants issued by the clerk upon the order of the county court. The alterna-' tive writ contains a separate count upon each warrant, identical in form, but involving claims for different amounts, the first of which is, in substance, as follows: That on July 7, 1896, the defendant was, ever since has been, and now is, the treasurer of Lake County; that on June 27, 1890, W. T. Boyd presented to the county court for said county, then sitting as a board of commissioners for the transaction of county business, a claim for services rendered the county, amounting to $1,150, and that there arose between said court and Boyd a dispute and controversy touching the amount justly due thereon; that, in order to settle the contention, and to prevent litigation, a compromise was effected, whereby it was agreed that:the county court should audit and allow, and the said Boyd should accept and receive, $800 in full settlement and satisfaction of the claim; that the said county court thereupon approved it, and ordered and directed that a warrant be drawn upon the county treasurer in
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”: Hill’s Ann. Laws, subdivision 9, § 896. By section 2460, Id., it is provided that “the county treasurer shall receive all moneys due and accruing to his county, and disburse the same on the proper orders issued and attested by the county clerk.” The warrant in question was directed to be issued by the county court, and the legitimate basis for such warrant was the order of the court settling and allowing plaintiff’s demand against the county. As we have seen, the alternative writ shows that the court was acting merely as the fiscal agent of the county in making the settlement and entering the said order. Such being the ease, the order cannot be said to rise to the dignity of an adjudication as between the claimant and the county. While the orders of the court acting in such a capacity may have the force and effect of accounts stated as against the county, and absolutely — perhaps irrevocably — fix its liability, when acting within its jurisdiction and prescribed powers, and not vitiated by fraud or mistake (Cook County v. Ryan, 51 Ill. App. 190; Hall v. Inhabitants of Holden, 116 Mass. 172), yet, they not having the binding effects of judgments (Nelson v. Mayor, etc. 131 N. Y. 4, 29 N. E. 814), the court could, if it saw fit, as an individual might, refuse to observe the obligations thereby imposed; in which case the only
Affirmed.