100 Ga. 346 | Ga. | 1897
■In this case, the plaintiff filed his petition, in the superior ■ court, against Rust and the county of Eulton, alleging that he was a judgment creditor of Rust; that Rust was insolvent; that the county of Eulton owed Rust $500.00 “for services rendered said county as an expert accountant to examine the books and accounts of the several county officials, who handle and manage the finances of the county”; that the payment of this sum to Rust had been recommended by ■the grand jury of said county; that the petitioner was wholly without remedy at law in the premises; and that the debt due by the county to Rust was not, under the law, exempt against the payment of the debt due the plaintiff. The plaintiff prayed that the county, through its board of’ county commissioners, be directed to pay the $500.00 which it owed Rust into the registry of the court; that said sum be adjudged to be subject to the plaintiff’s execution and be.
There is a regular system provided by law for the levying-of county taxes and the payment of county debts. If upon the legal ascertainment, in a trial of a case of this -character, that a county is indebted in a given sum to the debtor of the-plaintiff in the suit, it can he,- by the mandate of the court, compelled to- at once pay that sum into the registry of the court, then a county may he compelled, by the order of the-court, to disregard this system in the payment of its debts. Sections 397 and 404 of the Political Code specify for what purposes county taxes shall he assessed. Section 398 thereof' provides, that “when debts have accumulated against theooimty so -thait 100 per cent, on the Sitaite tax, or 'the amount
. From these decisions, and many others that might be' quoted to the same effect, we are of opinion that the county commissioners of Fulton ought not to be compelled to appear in court, to answer a petition of this character, where they might and probably would, for the protection of the-county and themselves, have to take part in the litigation. We are clearly of opinion that the county commissioners could not have been legally compelled, by order of the court, to pay any money which the county of Fulton may have owed Rust into the registry of the court.
The next question is whether or not Rust could be compelled by the court to assign or transfer his claim against' the county to his judgment creditor, the plaintiff. While, from the standpoint of the public interest, the argument against the authority of the court to compel him to make the assignment or transfer 'asked for is mat altogether .as strong’ as the one against the proposition that we have just been, considering, we think that the same public policy which exempts a county from process of garnishment forbids that it should, in any manner, be interfered with by the courts in settling for necessary public work, even after the same has been completed; and that to hold otherwise would at least fend to hamper counties in making contracts beneficia] to the public. In Born v. Williams, 81 Ga. 798, Chief JusticeBleckley, in speaking of the decisions of the courts of this country which hold that municipal corporations are not subject to the process of garnishment, says: “The strength of the argument, as commonly presented, involves two considerations affecting public policy. The first is, that officers charged with municipal functions should devote their time and labor to the public service, and not be burdened with care and attention respecting suits in which the public, as such, has no interest.” (This consideration we have already discussed.) “The second consideration is, that to arrest or-
Judgment affirmed.