88 Fla. 329 | Fla. | 1924
In November, 1920, the County Commissioners of Bay County entered into contract with. Sartain, Dobson and Reese to reconstruct the court house of said county for an agreed sum. The work was completed, accepted and final settlement had when it was found that there was a balance due the contractors of $12,000.00. The commissioners paid the contractors $4,000.00 cash. The contractors transferred $2,000.00 of said claim to Frank Mosley and the commissioners then agreed to sell and deliver to the contractor at private sale sufficient county warrants at 90 cents in the dollar to satisfy the contractors’ claim, now reduced to $6,000.00. Said warrants having been issued under Chapter 8615, Acts of 1921, Laws of Florida.
The contractors agreed to accept said warrants in satisfaction of their claim, and the commissioners ordered that they be immediately signed, attested and sealed by the clerk, W. PI. Marshall, and delivered to the contractors. The clerk refused to obey the order of the commissioners, when Bay County, joined by the contractors, brought suit in mandamus to compel compliance with the said order. Demurrer and motion to quash the alternative writ were overruled, peremptory writ was granted and writ of error taken to this court.
Payment is resisted on the ground that the county is improperly made a party to the suit; that under Chapter 8615, Acts of 1921, Laws of Florida, the warrants sought to be delivered cannot be sold at private sale at 90 cents in the dollar plus accrued interest in payment of a debt due; that if so sold and issued the transaction will be usurious and the warrants bear a greater rate than eight per cent., the maximum allowed under the law, and that tlie writ requires the performance of an illegal act, the
Under the facts as detailed in this case the joining- of Bay County with Sartain, Dobson and Reese as a party relator in the petition for the alternative writ was mere surplusage and does not constitute reversible error.
On the question of a piúvate sale of these warrants, Chapter 8615 Acts of 1921, among other things, provides: “That all of said interest-bearing time warrants shall be sold either at private sale, or to the highest bidder at public sale, and in case the said warrants are sold to the highest bidder at public sale they shall be advertised for sale in a newspaper published in Bay County and in a financial publication published in some financial center of the United States for at least two weeks, as the County Commissioners may decide and direct.”
We think that in view of the foregoing, and the general trerd of the decided cases affecting the situation, the legislature must have contemplated that if a private sale was made ‘•he warrants should bring* par; but that if par could not be lealized at such a sale they should then be sold after advertising-, to the highest bidder as the statute directs.
In the ibsenee of specific statutory authority warrants cannot be ssued at a discount to pay a debt, or for the purpose of 'lorrowing money. Erskine v. Steele County, 4 N. D. 339, 60 N. W. Rep. 1050, 28 L. R. A. 645; Clark v. City of Des Moines, 19 Iowa 199; 19 R. C. L. 1036; 28 Cyc. 1597, 569; 5 McQuillin on Municipal Corporations, §2224; Anott v. City of Spokane, 6 Wash. 442, 33 Pac. Rep. 1063; 1 Dillon on Municipal Corporations (4th ed.) 503. We caniot better state the reason for the rule of law as here annoineed than was done *by the court in the first case above úted, hence we quote the following from Erskine v. Steele County: “The authorities cited,
Chapter 8615 Acts of 1921, Laws of Florida, does not authorize the county commissioners of Bay County to issue the warrants therein provided for at a discount in payment of the debt contracted, but only provides that they may be sold at private sale or public sale to the high est bidder after advertising. The sale here resisted'wis not a public sale to the highest bidder after advertishg and was not a private sale at par in contemplation, of the statute.
Defendants in error contend that these warrants are in reality bonds and may be sold below par in the absence of an express statutory prohibition. We do not ¿hink this contention is well grounded. There is a vast .distinction between warrants and bonds. Warrants are aere orders or drafts on the treasury payable on presentation when funds are available or at a fixed date -with Merest if authorized by statute, while bonds are obligations running through a series of years payable at a diiinite time with a fixed rate of interest independent of presentation. Warrants may be assignable though they are not negotiable paper unless made so by lawful authority. Bonds, like bank notes, bills of exchange and other negotiable instruments as a rule possess all the attributes of commer
A common requirement of the constitutions and statutes of many of the States is that the question of issuing bonds must be submitted to and approved by vote of the people; this fact in the estimation of the purchasing public creates a superior market for bonds and has the effect of making them a more desirable security than warrants.
There appears to be nothing in Chapter 8615, Acts of 1921, to support defendant in error’s contention that the warrants in question are in reality bonds and should be so treated.
On the question of allowance for deficiencies or failure to comply with the terms of the contract, we think that under the law of this State that was a matter the responsibility for which was on the county commissioners, and when they had approved and accepted the structure, no fraud being charged or shown, the plaintiff in error had. no reason) to complain.
Eor the reasons herein stated the judgment below is reversed?