177 S.E. 452 | W. Va. | 1934
There is presented on this certification the question of the correctness of the trial court's ruling in sustaining defendant's demurrer to the special count of plaintiff's declaration. The declaration also embraces common counts, not here involved.
The plaintiff is a practicing physician. He alleges in his special count that on the 12th of May, 1933, the board of education of Charleston Independent School District, by written contract, employed him at a salary of $162.00 per month as medical officer for said board for the fiscal year beginning July 1, 1933, and ending June 30, 1934; that by legislative enactment, chapter
It is provided in section 5 of article 5 of said Act of 1933, popularly known as the County Unit Law, that a county school board "shall also be liable in its corporate capacity for all claims legally existing against the board of which it is a successor." Therefore, there arises the query whether the contract of May 12, 1933, between the plaintiff and the Independent Board was a lawful contract so as to afford legal basis for plaintiff's claim against the defendant as successor of the Independent Board.
The County Unit Law became effective May 22, 1933, ten days subsequent to the execution of the contract on which the plaintiff bases this action. The current fiscal year ended June 30, 1933.
It is provided by Code 1931,
At the time of the execution of the contract mentioned, the only exception to the said statutory inhibition was in Code 1931,
The contract of the board of education of Charleston Independent District with the plaintiff entered into six weeks prior to the expiration of the current fiscal year, for medical services to be rendered the following fiscal year, was clearly contrary to the statutory prohibition, unless the fact, as alleged in the special count, that the Independent Board at the time it entered into the contract had ample and sufficient funds to carry out and perform its part thereof, is sufficient to relieve the contract from the ban of the statute.
The interdiction of the statute lies against contracts for "the expenditure of money in excess of funds legally at the disposal of such fiscal body." The underlying purpose of the statute is to prevent the incurring of obligations which can be met only out of funds to be realized from levies of a subsequent year.
It does not follow from the fact that a fiscal body has a surplus of money at the end of a fiscal year that it may contract for the expenditure of such money from month to month through the succeeding year. Any excesses or balances should be carried into the proper funds of the succeeding fiscal year and proper credit made therefor when levies are being laid for that year. The balances operate to reduce future levies pro tanto. It follows that a contract in advance of a fiscal year for the expenditure of money, within that period, even though an equivalent amount of money be then in hand as a surplus or balance from the current year, is in reality an invasion of the funds of such subsequent year, and is in violation of Code 1931,
On these principles the trial court did not err in sustaining the demurrer to the special count, and we so respond to the certification.
*618Affirmed.