123 Neb. 539 | Neb. | 1932
This is an action to recover stipulated compensation under a written contract obligating defendant to pay plaintiff $495' for auditing the accounts of the clerk and treasurer of the city of Harvard for the three-year period beginning May 1, 1924. For the compensation stated plaintiff also agreed to audit the accounts of all special improvement districts. Execution and delivery of the contract October 22, 1929, performance by plaintiff, acceptance of the audit by defendant, provision for payment under ■ appropriations for the fiscal year beginning May 1, 1929, and failure to pay any part of the agreed compensation were pleaded in the petition, to which a copy of the contract was attached.
In addition to a general denial of unadmitted allegations in the petition, defendant stated in its answer, among other defenses, that the contract was void for want of a necessary appropriation to meet the expenditure— a statutory prerequisite to the making of such a contract. Comp. St. 1929, secs. 17-569, 17-572. A reply put in issue the facts pleaded in defense to the petition.
Upon a trial of the issues the district court excused the jury and dismissed the case on the sole ground that the contract was void for want of an appropriation to pay the stipulated compensation. Plaintiff appealed.
Execution of the contract, making of the audit, performance by plaintiff and nonpayment of compensation were conceded by defendant for the purposes of the trial in the district court. The contract, dated October 22, 1929, the ordinance or appropriation bill for the fiscal year beginning May 1, 1929, and a stipulation by the parties were admitted in evidence and considered by the trial court in connection with pertinent provisions of the city charter of Harvard. The sufficiency of the appropriation is the question presented by the appeal. The ordinance made provision for a $5,000 “General Fund,” as follows: Salary
“The city council of cities and board of trustees in villages shall, within the first quarter of each fiscal year, pass an ordinance, to be termed ‘the annual appropriation bill/ in which such corporate authorities may appropriate such sum or sums of money as may be deemed necessary to defray all necessary expenses and liabilities of such corporation, not exceeding in the aggregate the amount of tax authorized to be levied during that year; and in such ordinance shall specify the objects and purposes for which such appropriations are made, and the amount appropriated for each object or purpose. No further appropriation shall be made at any other time within such fiscal year, unless the proposition to make each appropriation has been first sanctioned by a majority of the legal voters of such city or village, either by a petition signed by them or at a general or special election duly called therefor, and all appropriations shall end with the fiscal year for which they were made.” Comp. St. 1929, sec. 17-569.
“No contract shall be hereafter made by the city council or board of trustees, or any committee or member thereof; and no. expense shall be incurred by any of the officers or departments of the corporation, whether the object of the expenditures shall have been ordered by the city council or board of trustees or not, unless an appropriation shall have been previously made concerning such expense, except as herein otherwise expressly provided.” Comp. St. 1929, sec. 17-572.
The power of the city to appropriate money for an audit of the accounts of the treasurer and clerk and to enter into a contract therefor seems clear. Those officers are accountable to the city council for the faithful performance of their official duties. The treasurer is custodian of city funds and is required by law to keep accounts and make monthly reports to the council, showing the state of the treasury. Comp. St. 1929, secs. 17-513, 17-514. The power of the council to see that these duties are performed, including an essential audit, is necessarily implied. The council may determine from an unsatisfactory condition of city records when an audit is necessary. Compensation therefor was an administrative expense within the purposes for which the general fund was created by ordinance. The sum of specific items enumerated in the general fund was not the limit of the appropriations therefor. This is recognized by the ordinance itself. The general fund includes an item of $463 for “purposes not specifically enumerated.” This item alone would clearly include compensation for the audit if the amount had been $495,. instead of $463, but, standing alone, the expense would exceed the appropriation by $32 and for that reason the contract would be void under the ruling in Moore v. City of Central City, 118 Neb. 326. In the case at bar, however, the parties stipulated:
“It is further stipulated that at the beginning of the' fiscal year beginning May 1, 1929, and ending May 1, 1930, there was in the general fund unexpended from the preceding fiscal year the sum of $1,111.11.”
Reversed.