50 Ind. App. 337 | Ind. Ct. App. | 1912
— This action was brought by appellants against appellees to enjoin them from taking steps to carry out an order and judgment of the Board of Commissioners of the county of Bartholomew, purporting to establish a. certain highway and to order it opened and kept in repair. The complaint proceeds on the theory that such order is void. The trial court sustained a demurrer to the complaint, and the plaintiffs stood on the demurrer, refusing to amend or plead further, whereupon final judgment was rendered against them, and the temporary restraining order granted in their favor was dissolved. On appeal the only errors assigned are the rulings of the court in sustaining the demurrers to the complaint and dissolving the restraining order. These questions may be considered together.
The allegations of the complaint, in so far as they are necessary to an understanding of the questions decided in this appeal, are, in substance, that appellants are the owners of land in Bartholomew county, Indiana, and that in the year 1909 James Golden and others filed in the office of the audit- or of that county a petition for a certain highway, described in the complaint, which proposed highway, described in said petition, passed over and upon the lands of plaintiffs; that such proceedings were had as resulted in a favorable report
In the ease of Helms v. Bell (1900), 155 Ind. 502, 58 N. E. 707, the board of commissioners decided that the proposed highway was not of sufficient public utility to warrant the payment of the damages allowed to the remonstrators out of the county treasury. The board made an order establishing the highway, and directing that it be opened and kept in repair, and further ordered that the petitioners pay the damages as a condition precedent to the road being opened. The petitioners within thirty days after this order was entered, paid into the auditor’s office an amount of money sufficient to pay the damages awarded to the remonstrants, and the auditor offered to each of them the amount of damages awarded, but they refused to accept the damages so tendered, and brought a suit to enjoin the opening of the road, on the ground that the order establishing it and directing that it be opened was void. In passing on this question the court said: “When they had adjudged that the damages could not be paid out of the county treasury their power to proceed with the establishing of the road was suspended until actual payment of such damages had been made from
In the case of Rudisill v. State, ex rel. (1872), 40 Ind. 485, the board of commissioners ordered that the damages be paid out of the county treasury, and it was held that the money to pay the damages was, in presumption of law, already in the county treasury, and the auditor of the county was authorized by order of the board of commissioners to draw warrants in favor of the persons to whom damages had been awarded in the amount allowed to each. The opinion proceeds as follows: “We are of the opinion that, when the amount of damages is ordered to be paid out of the county treasury, as in this case, the commissioners may treat the ease as one where the amount is deposited in the treasury for the use of the parties entitled to the same, and proceed to order the road to be opened and kept in repair.”
These eases are not in conflict with each other, and neither is decisive of the precise question involved in this case, but they have the effect of narrowing the controversy in this
The second case cited holds that in a case where the damages were ordered paid out of the county treasury under the jaw as it existed at the time that decision was made, the presumption obtained that the money out of which the damages were to be paid was already in the county treasury for the benefit of the persons to whom the damages had been awarded, and subject to their claim to receive it on demand.
It appears from the averments of the complaint in the case at bar that, at the time the order establishing the highway in question was made, no appropriation had been made by the county council of Bartholomew county for any money for the purpose of paying claims of this character, and that no such appropriation was made until about thirty days after the order in question was entered. It is claimed on behalf of appellants that since the enactment of the county reform statute the court can no longer indulge the presumption that money out of which the damages allowed was in the county treasury at the time the order was made, and subject to be paid on demand to those in whose favor the damages were allowed. It is insisted that the complaint affirmatively shows that no money, which was available for the payment of such damages, was in the county treasury at the time the order for the establishment of the highway in question was made, and that such order was void under the authority of the ease first cited.
We will now consider the effect of the statute known as the county reform act (Acts 1899 p. 343, §§5918-5968 Burns 1908). Section 19 of the act (§5936 Burns 1908) provides that every estimate required to be made by the board of
Section 20 of the act (§5937 Burns 1908) provides for appropriations by the county council, and §21 (§5938 Bums 1908) provides for additional appropriations in certain cases. Section 22 (§5939 Burns 1908) provides that in cei’tain specified cases therein enumerated moneys may be paid out of the county treasury without an appropriation being previously made, and then concludes: “In all other instances no warrant shall be drawn upon, or money paid out of the county treasury, unless an appropriation by the county council has been made, * * * and which appropriation remains unexhausted.”
Section 25 of the act (§5942 Bums 1908) is as follows: “No board of county commissioners, officer, agent or employe of any county shall have power to bind the county by any contract or agreement, or in any other way, to any extent beyond the amount of money at the time already appropriated by ordinance for the purpose of the obligation attempted to be incurred, and all contracts and agreements, express or implied, and all obligations of any and every sort, beyond such existing appropriation, are declared to be absolutely void. ’ ’
Section 26 of the act (§5943 Burns 1908) provides: “Every county officer, and every member of a board of commissioners, who shall issue, or cause to be issued, any bond, certificate, or warrant for the payment of money which shall purport to be an obligation of such county, and be beyond the unexpended balance of any such appropriation made for such purpose, or who shall attempt to bind such county by
Section 27 of the act (§5944 Bums 1908) is as follows: “No court, or division thereof, of any county, shall have power to bind such county by any contract, agreement, or in any other way, except by judgment rendered in a cause where such court has jurisdiction of the parties and subject-matter of the action, to any extent beyond the amount of ahoney at the time already appropriated by ordinance for the purpose of such court, and for the purpose for which said obligation is attempted to be incurred, and all contracts and agreements, express or implied, and all obligations of any and every sort attempted beyond such existing appropriations shall be absolutely void.”
Note. — Reported in 97 N. E. 200. See, also, under (1) 11 Cyc. 511; (2) 11 Cyc. 535; (4) 3 Cyc. 223. As to tlie application of ultra vires to county officers, see 68 Am. Dec. 292.