67 Tenn. 329 | Tenn. | 1874
delivered the opinion of the court'.
This action was brought upon a number of warrants upon the county treasury issued by the chairman in pursuance of appropriations made by the county court at the July session, 1864. The language of the order making the appropriation is, that “on application of L. M. King for an allowance for provisions furnished indigent soldiers’ wives, to-wit,” setting
The defense was, first, that the county court had no power to make the appropriation; and, second, that the contract or appropriation was made to aid the rebellion! then flagrant, and was therefore against public policy and void.
The county court has power to levy and collect and appropriate taxes for county purposes. One of these purposes is to support the poor of the county. If the persons for whose benefit the appropriations were made were, “poor persons” in the sense of the law, and the appropriations were made for that reason, then it was clearly within the power of the court.
Whether they were such persons or not the county justices were the exclusive judges,- and we have said in a similar case that if the persons were poor persons, and proper objects of support by the county, it was the duty of the court to provide for their support, although the persons to ' whom the aid was granted might be the wives or families of men then in the rebel army. Public policy or principles of humanity did not require that women and children should be suffered to starve in order to force the husbands and fathers to desert the rebel cause. Adams v. Hardeman County, MS.
The order making the appropriation assumes that the persons to whom the aid was granted were “in
Judgment reversed and new trial awarded.