6 Cal. 281 | Cal. | 1856
Mr. Justice Terry concurred.
The fourteenth section of the Act creating a board of supervisors in the counties of this State, passed March 20,1855, provides that “ warrants drawn on the fund for current expenses during the year, must distinctly specify the liability for which they are drawn, and when it accrued, and shall be paid in the order of their presentation to the county treasurer, and if there be not sufficient money in the fund for current expenses to pay all such warrants, then the balance shall be paid in the same manner as the present outstanding warrants.”
Under the provisions of this section, it is claimed that a warrant drawn for the salary of the county judge for the month of September, 1855, must be paid out of the treasury, from the revenues of 1855, in preference to warrants drawn for the year 1854. The argument is that the Legislature intended to create a fiscal year, and establish a cash basis, by requiring the debts of each year to be paid first for that year, leaving the outstanding indebtedness to be paid out of the surplus, if any, and by prohibiting the supervisors from auditing any excess of expenditure above the revenue accruing in each year. (See section 16 of the same Act.) That the Legislature might have made this disposition of the revenues of the several counties, is beyond denial, but to attribute to them any settled line of policy on this subject, we will be compelled to go beyond the Act itself.
In many of the counties of the State, the old indebtedness is provided for by funding laws and interest tax. In the county of. Sutter there is no provision whatever. What, then, is the meaning of the latter sub division, of the fourteenth section, that “ if there be not sufficient money in the fund for current expenses to pay all such warrants, then the same shall be paid as the present" outstanding warrants.” It
It could hardly be contended with fairness, that the fourteenth and sixteenth sections of the Act were intended to cut off all previous existing indebtedness, and as intimated by us in the case of Brooks v. Taylor, July term, 1855, we will not in the absence of clear and explicit legislation to that effect, postpone an honest creditor, or deny him the benefit of an Act under which he has contracted, and to which he looks as a guaranty for payment.
Judgment affirmed.