168 S.W.2d 427 | Ark. | 1943
The appellee, W. E. Billingsley, a taxpayer suing for the use and benefit of Izard county, in his complaint filed in the circuit court charged that the appellant, R. G. Miller, as county treasurer, in obedience to a void order of the county court, had unlawfully transferred from the courthouse bond fund, a fund arising from taxes voted to pay principal and interest of bonds issued for the purpose of building a new courthouse, to the building fund the sum of $2,500, which was used for the completion of the county courthouse, and that D. O. Johnson, now deceased, while collector, had paid over the sum of $2,000, collected by him as taxes and belonging to the courthouse bond fund, to the courthouse building commissioners, and that the appellant, Van P. Johnson, successor of D. O. Johnson as collector, had paid over to the said commissioners the sum of $250 collected by him as taxes and belonging to the courthouse bond fund; and that the appellant, National Surety Corporation, as surety on the official bonds of the said treasurer and collectors, was liable to the county in the total sum of $4,750 to cover the amount of the funds said to have been illegally diverted. The appellants in their answers denied the right of the appellee to bring the suit, and set up as defenses that the courthouse was constructed under an agreement with the National Youth Administration by which the National Youth Administration was to furnish approximately $40,000 in labor and material, and the county was to furnish cash in the sum of $30,000, to be raised by a bond issue duly authorized by the voters of the county; that after the bonds were sold and construction of the courthouse begun the funds derived from the sale of the bonds were exhausted and the National Youth Administration threatened to withdraw aid from the project unless additional funds were made immediately available, and that, an emergency being caused by reason of the fact that the courthouse was not ready for occupancy and that the county officers and agencies were housed in inflammable wooden structures, *295 the county court made an order directing that the surplus of $2,500 then on hand in the bond fund, after paying current interest on the bond maturities, be transferred to the building fund, and that thereafter this sum was duly paid out on warrants drawn on said fund by order of the county court to pay for labor and material used in the new courthouse; that D. O. Johnson, deceased, as collector, made advances, used for the same purpose, totaling $2,000, to the building commissioners, and that his settlement showing these advances was approved by the county court; that appellant, Van P. Johnson, had paid to the building commissioners $250 out of the taxes collected by him for the bond fund, and that this payment had been shown in his settlement, which was duly approved by order of the county court; that the county had sold additional bonds in the sum of $10,000 for completion of the courthouse, and that the proceeds thereof had been placed in the hands of the county treasurer, and, at the time of the filing of the suit, there was the sum of $6,742 still remaining in this fund.
After the filing of the suit by the appellee, Billingsley, (which was transferred to equity) the appellants, Miller, Van P. Johnson for himself and as administrator of the estate of D. O. Johnson, deceased, and National Surety Corporation, filed suit in the chancery court against the appellee, Billingsley, as county judge, and appellee, Dale Estes, county treasurer, in which the facts as to the diversion of the funds as alleged in their answers were set forth, and alleging that, in equity and good conscience, if it should be held that the transfers and payments from the bond retirement fund complained of in the original suit, were unlawful so as to impose liability therefor, they would be entitled to a mandatory injunction requiring the treasurer to reimburse the bond fund account out of the moneys now in the courthouse building fund account. On this complaint of appellants, a temporary injunction was issued restraining the county judge and the county treasurer from paying out any funds from the courthouse building *296 fund that would deplete it below the sum of $4,750. The two cases were consolidated for trial.
The lower court found that the appellants, in transferring the money from the bond fund account to the courthouse building fund account, acted in good faith and were prompted by a desire to complete the courthouse without delay, thereby preventing the possible loss of National Youth Administration labor; that there was no intentional fraud on the part of any of the appellants in making the transfers, but that the said bond fund was derived from taxes that could be used only in payment of the bond maturities and interest; that, at the time said transfers were made, most of the indebtedness was unpaid, although there was a surplus in the bond fund account not needed at the time to meet current obligations, and that this surplus could not be used for any purpose other than to retire the bonds; and a decree was rendered by the court in favor of the appellee, Billingsley, for the use and benefit of the county, against Miller and National Surety Corporation for the sum of $2,500, and against Van P. Johnson, as administrator of the D. O. Johnson estate, and National Surety Corporation for $2,000, and against Van P. Johnson and National Surety Corporation for $250. The lower court refused to grant the relief as to the retransfer of the sum of $4,750 from the building fund to the bond retirement fund as prayed for by appellants in their complaint. After appealing from the decree of the lower court, the appellants asked and were granted by this court a temporary injunction restraining the appellee, Billingsley, as county judge, and appellee, Estes, as county treasurer, from depleting the courthouse building fund then on hand below the sum of $4,750.
There is no dispute about the facts in this case. It appears from the record that funds aggregating $4,750 were improperly diverted from the bond retirement fund to the building fund; that these funds were actually used to pay for labor and material in the completion of the courthouse, and that after the courthouse had been completed and furnished there was $6,742 still remaining *297
in the building fund. In the case of In Protest of Bledsoe,