28 Colo. 73 | Colo. | 1900
delivered the opinion of the court.
1. Ordinarily, such a request for permission further to plead or answer should be granted, but we cannot say that
2. Our statute (Session Laws, 1897, 157) provides, inter alia, that if a foreign corporation, having capital stock divided into shares, fails to pay a prescribed fee to the secretary of state, it shall not “have or exercise any corporate powers or be permitted to do any business in this state until the said fee shall have been paid.” It is contended that petitioner, being a foreign corporation, even though the particular business of buying these warrants was transacted outside the state, may not maintain this action to compel the treasurer to pay them, because it has not paid the prescribed fee.
Similar provisions have been construed by this and other courts. In Miller v. Williams, 27 Colo. 34, the same question was raised but not decided. The authorities are there collected. The attorney general concedes that the decisions of this and other courts are against his position, but maintains that they are wrong in principle, and particularly under our present act which, he argues, is a more stringent measure than our previous enactments.
We think a fair construction of this statute is that it was thereby intended to prevent foreign corporations from trans • acting business in this state, as a domestic corporation is authorized to do, except upon compliance with the statutory conditions. We do not think the single act of bringing suit by such corporation in this state to enforce the collection of warrants bought at its place of business such an exercise of corporate power as comes within the inhibition of the statute.
While appreciating the force of the argument made by the attorney general in support of his construction, at this late
3. Under the decision in Nance v. The People, 25 Colo. 252, the petition for the writ and the alternative writ itself do not warrant the granting of any relief. The allegations in the above excerpt are upon information and belief. The treasurer’s office is a public one; his books and accounts relating to warrants are open to the inspection of the public, and what they contain is presumptively within the knowledge of warrant holders. Statements and denials in a mandamus proceeding must be specific, definite, and not upon information and belief. To say the least, if averments are on information and belief, there must be a showing why they are not positively stated. In re Freel, 38 N. Y. 143; In re Guess, 38 N. Y. 91.
Our statute requires the state treasurer to countersign all warrants issued by the auditor, and maintain a separate register wherein he shall keep the number of all warrants issued, to whom and when issued, and the amount of each one. The auditor is required to present all warrants issued and drawn by him to the state treasurer, and the latter must record the same in the register referred to. Warrants which are not so recorded and countersigned shall be of no value, or in any way binding upon the state. The treasurer must pay warrants in the order in which they are drawn and presented for payment.
The revenues of any particular year must be devoted to the payment of the expenses of that year, and it must be shown that there is money in the hands of the treasurer belonging to the particular fund out of which this warrant is payable, and which may properly be applied to its payment. Unless the money in the hands of the treasurer came from the revenues of 1889, it is not properly applicable to the
In Vincent v. The Board, 12 Colo. App. 40, our court of appeals has thus spoken: “Mandamus lies to compel the performance of some specific duty enjoined by law. The party applying for the writ must be able to show clearly that he has a legal right to the performance of the particular act for which compulsory process is sought, and his averments must embrace every fact necessary to entitle him to the desired relief.” People v. Spruance, 8 Colo. 307.
The same doctrine has been established by the courts of many states, and by this court in a large number of cases, and it is unnecessary to burden the opinion with their citation. The alternative writ must clearly allege all the facts which make it the duty of the treasurer to pay a state warrant. And when put in issue by the answer, the burden of proof is on relator affirmatively to establish these facts, and not on the treasurer to negative their existence.
The averment in the writ that money in the treasury is applicable to the payment of the warrant, and that it was the duty of the treasurer to pay the same, is but a mere conclusion of the pleader, If, in some cases, it is difficult, if
We are constrained to add that in too many cases have the trial courts, without sufficient showing, sometimes in the face of clear and convincing proof that the treasurer, by complying with their mandates, would violate plain statutory provisions, ordered the state treasurer to pay outstanding warrants. That this warrant is a valid debt of the state is unquestioned. That it should be paid is clear. That it has not been paid long ago is a reflection on the financial integrity of the state, or its promptness in paying its debts. Some such outstanding warrants may be illegal, because in excess of the constitutional limit, but it would seem some legal ones are unpaid. An adequate method of ascertaining which are legal, and which void, should be adopted by our general assembly, if none such now exists, and if there is money in the treasury from the revenue of 1889 properly applicable to the payment of the valid warrants, or some of them, issued during that fiscal period, they should be taken up and interest thereon saved. Meanwhile, it is too much to demand that the treasurer, at his peril, make this ascertainment for himself.
•The judgment is reversed and the cause remanded.
Reversed.