7 Colo. App. 510 | Colo. Ct. App. | 1896
delivered the opinion of the court.
By an act of the general assembly, dated the 19th of March,-1889, provision was made for two additional district judges
We freely confess we are in grave doubts, because of the paucity of the record, as to the exact legal rights of the parties. The case was not tried, no evidence was offered, there is no stipulation respecting the facts, but, on a demurrer to the answer, it went to judgment. There is thus presented a simple legal issue, — whether the answer contains defensive matter which, if proven,jwould operate to defeat the plaintiff’s rights. While we must concede the answer does not in apt terms, with ample allegations put in correct legal phraseology, tender a precise issue for trial, yet there is enough in it which, if sustained, would probably prevent the entry of the present judgment. We shall expressly withhold any direct declaration respecting the law which must control the case until the record shall return with evidence of the matters which the treasurer has alleged. We shall go no farther than to state our opinion respecting the admissibility of the evidence | which the state may offer on the issue they have proffered. The enactments respecting the registration of warrants are clear and the duties of the state treasurer and state auditor are very specifically defined in the general statutes. General Statutes 1883, chap. 37.
According to its provisions, every fund in the hands of the state treasurer must be paid out in the order in which the warrants are drawn.' There is a further provision which need not be stated. The treasurer is likewise bound to keep a register of warrants, in' which he must enter each warrant presented and the date of it. Failing to observe the law in respect to these matters, he is guilty of a crime, liable to fine and imprisonment, and removal from office. In this case the treasurer pleaded the prior registration of warrants on the fund out of which they were payable. We are not quite certain that this issue is well tendered nor that it can be proven. There was a special appropriation for the pay
The answer avers that the funds for the payment of the expenses of the three departments of the government were exhausted by prior warrants, so that there was no money to pay the one which was issued to Stuart. If this is true, and there is no money in the treasury, the writ cannot go, because the treasurer cannot be compelled to pay money which he does not hold. We have grave doubts whether this is true, but, in the absence of evidence, we are compelled, when we take the answer as not vulnerable to a demurrer, to permit the introduction of evidence on this subject. We do not agree, with the distinguished attorney general, who contends these matters of registration are to be set up in the petition rather than in the answer. We are decidedly of the opinion that when a warrant is made the basis of mandamus proceedings, and from the allegations of the petition it appears to have been duly issued by the auditor, and, according to the decision of the supreme court rendered at this January term, in Clifford C. Parks v. The Commissioners of the Soldiers’ and Sailors’ Home, etc., 22 Colo. 86, is a preferred claim, it is incumbent on the officer to plead the exhaustion of that fund by antecedent warrants, if such be the real basis of his defense. In the very lucid and exhaustive opinion of the learned chief justice in the case just cited, warrants which are drawn to pay executive, judicial and legislative officials and the expenses of their offices, must be paid out of the general appropriation bill before any of the moneys can be put to other purposes. Under these circumstances, it is very difficult to understand how it was possible to exhaust the entire fund by warrants drawn for these preferred classes of claims. It may be the law was not understood precisely as.
The case will be reversed and sent back for a new trial in conformity with this opinion, and the court below will permit either party to amend their pleadings as they may be ■advised.
Reversed.