44 Wash. 261 | Wash. | 1906
Respondent recovered a judgment for damages against the city of Aberdeen on account of certain special assessment warrants, because certain other warrants issued subsequently on the same fund had been paid out of order, leaving insufficient funds to pay the warrants held by respondent. The city appeals, alleging that the court erred
“ . . . that at the time of the payment of warrants out of order as set forth in the complaint, such payments were recorded in the warrant register of said city, and that the warrant register was a public record of said city and at all times open to the inspection of said plaintiff; that the defendant at no time concealed or misrepresented any of its transactions in relation to the payment of said warrants.”
The funds were collected and misapplied in 1891. This action was not begun until October 5, 1905, which was within three years after actual notice to the respondent that funds had been misappropriated. Appellant contends that, under the finding copied above, the court should have dismissed the action because the respondent was bound to take notice of the public records; but we held in Hemen v. Ballard, 40 Wash. 81, 82 Pac. 277, where the same question was presented, that if the action was begun within three years after the actual notice it was in time. This rule, of course, is based upon the fact that the city treasurer is required to give notice to warrant holders when funds are in his hands to be paid out, upon warrants issued against such funds, and that warrant holders are therefore not required to take notice of the records or the misappropriation of such funds, especially within the time the city under the law may collect such funds into its possession. Potter v. Whatcom, 20 Wash. 589, 56 Pac. 394, 72 Am. St. 135; Gove v. Tacoma, 26 Wash. 474, 67 Pac. 261; New York Security A Trust Co. v. Tacoma, 30 Wash. 661, 71 Pac. 194; Gove v. Tacoma, 34 Wash. 434, 76 Pac. 73.
“We learn on examination of your city records that there is money in some of your special funds on which we hold warrants, and that the warrants which we hold are next in order of payment, but that the money in these funds is not sufficient to take up any one warrant that we hold against such funds, and your treasurer declines to indorse a partial payment on any warrant, the reason given being that he woúld be without the necessary voucher to turn over to his successor in office on demand,” etc.
While this letter states that respondent had examined the city records, it does not say that respondent had examined the warrant register, which appears to have been the only record which showed the wrongful payment. Upon the positive statement of respondent’s manager that this register was not examined, and' that no notice of the payment of warrants out of order was had until 1902, we think the court was justified in finding as a fact that no notice was received by respondent until that time. We find no evidence in the record sufficient to justify the contention that there are prior warrants outstanding on the B street fund, greater in amount than the money misapplied from said fund.
There is no error in the record, and the judgment is therefore affirmed.
Root, Dunbar, Crow, and Hadlev, JJ., concur.