81 Minn. 55 | Minn. | 1900
This is an action to restrain and enjoin defendants the board of county commissioners of Blue Earth county, and the auditor and treasurer thereof, from allowing or paying a claim asserted against the county in favor of defendants Fleener and Saylor, and from issuing or delivering to them a county, order or auditor’s warrant therefor. Plaintiff had judgment in the court below, and defendants appeal from an order denying a new trial.
The facts are as follows: In May, 1899, defendant board of county commissioners made and entered into a contract with one Welman, whereby and by the terms of which Welman undertook and agreed to perform certain services in behalf of the county of Blue Earth, in discovering and bringing to light unassessed personal property properly taxable in said county, but which had escaped such taxation during 1899 and prior years, in consideration of which labors and services the board of county commissioners, by resolution, promised and agreed to pay him (said Welman) a compensation equal to one-half of all taxes paid into the county treasury as the result of his labors. The contract was entered into in good faith by both parties, and the defendants sought to be restrained intend to carry the same out, and will do so unless they are restrained.
The court below held the contract absolutely void, and ordered judgment, as we before stated, restraining and enjoining the board ■of commissioners and the other county officers from further performance thereof, a part payment having been made under the terms ■of the contract. The validity of the contract is assailed by respondent on several different grounds, but as our conclusion is that the •same was beyond the power and authority of the commissioners to make, and consequently ultra vires and void, we will consider no ■other question.
Each organized county in this state is declared by statute to be a body politic and corporate, and, as such, through its board of county commissioners, empowered to make all contracts and do all other acts in relation to the- property and concerns of the county necessary to its corporate powers. The county commissioners have, as agents of the county, general charge and supervision of its affairs, and general control over its finances, and care of its property and rights. It is contended by counsel for appellants that a contract of the nature of the one here under consideration is fairly within the powers of the county, and within the authority of its ■agents, the county commissioners. They insist that the contract'is in no sense illegal or immoral, and is not obnoxious to principles of public policy, and should be sustained. We cannot concur with them, — at least, not in the contention that the contract is within either the express or implied power of the county.
Counties of this state are quasi municipal corporations, and it is elementary that they can exercise only such powers as are expressly granted them by the legislature, or such as are fairly implied as
There can be no question as to the right of plaintiff to maintain the action. He is a taxpayer of the county, and the funds of the county are threatened to be diverted from the proper channel, and his interests are such as to sustain the action. Rogers v. Le Sueur
The purpose of this action is to restrain the officials of the county from carrying out the terms of the contract, by paying Fleener and Saylor the agreed compensation, and the judgment ordered below was no broader. The question whether Fleener and Saylor are entitled to compensation from the county on quantum meruit is not involved in the issues, and we do not consider it.
Order affirmed.