11 Colo. App. 124 | Colo. Ct. App. | 1898
delivered the opinion of the court.
This proceeding in mandamus was instituted to compel the hoard of county commissioners of Rio Grande county to levy a tax to pay a judgment theretofore obtained against that county, and of which the relator had become the owner. The petition averred the recovery of the judgment on the 10th day of September, 1885, by Asa F. Middaugh; its nonpayment ; a demand upon the board by the relator, after he had become its owner, to levy a tax for its payment; and an order of the board refusing and rejecting the demand. The respondents made return in the nature of demurrer to the alternative writ; and the demurrer being sustained, judgment was entered for them. From that judgment the relator prosecuted error to this court.
Two other suits had been brought against the board, on the relation of Frank W. Rollins, for mandamus to compel the levy of tax to pay two other judgments of which he was the owner. The petitions in his cases were the same as the one in this case, and the same proceedings were had in them as in this, and at the same time. They also were brought here by writ of error, and the questions involved in all, were disposed of in one of the cases in which Rollins was the relator. In an opinion, in which the questions arising upon the petition were exhaustively discussed by Bissell, J., the conclusion was reached that upon the averments of the pleading the relator was entitled to the relief which he sought. People ex rel. Rollins v. Rio Grande County, 7 Colo. App. 229. The same judgment was given by this court in all the cases. This cause, with the others, was then remitted to the district court of Rio Grande county, where the respondents answered the petition and writ, alleging that prior to the commencement of the suit by Middaugh against the county, it was agreed between him and the board of commissioners
At the trial it was stipulated between counsel that prior to the commencement of Middaugh’s suit it was agreed between him and the board that he should pay the costs of the suit, and receive, in satisfaction of his judgment, county warrants drawn against money in the county treasury not otherwise appropriated; that upon the rendition of the judgment the board delivered to him the warrants of the county, payable out of money in the treasury not otherwise appropriated, which he received and accepted in full and complete satisfaction of the judgment; that these warrants were after-wards presented to the county treasurer, who refused payment, and indorsed upon them “ no funds; ” that the warrants and all Middaugh’s rights under the judgment, were assigned to the relator; and that no part of the warrants has ever been paid. The respondents introduced in evidence a certified transcript of the judgment, on which appeared a purported satisfaction, and upon the production of which to the board the warrants were issued; but no satisfaction appeared on the docket of the clerk, although Middaugh, before receiving the warrants, had ordered him to enter satisfaction. It was also admitted that the board had unqualifiedly refused to order the levy of the tax to pay the judgment.
But one question is made the subject of argument, and there is really no other in the record; and that is, “ Do the facts proven and admitted show a satisfaction of the judg
A county warrant is the means by which funds for the payment of claims can be reached in the county treasury. It is the mode whereby money is transferred from the treasurer of the county to its creditors, and the payment of its debt effected; and some such method is absolutely necessary to the proper and accurate transaction of the county’s business. The warrant is the authority of the treasurer to pay out the money of the county upon the debt, but its mere delivery to the creditor does not constitute payment. Its purpose is to enable him to secure the money to be applied in payment; and if the warrant fails of that purpose, his claim remains unsatisfied. We are unable to find that the question of the effect of the issue of a county warrant upon the claim for which it was
But there was something more in the transaction of which these warrants were the outcome, than the mere recovery of a judgment and its attempted payment by warrants; and some features peculiar to itself are made the basis of an argument by counsel which seems to demand examination. First, prior to the commencement of Middaugh’s suit, it was agreed between him and the board of commissioners that if the board would make no defense to the action, he would pay the costs of the suit, and receive county warrants, drawn on moneys in the county treasury not otherwise appropriated, in full satisfaction and payment of his judgment. Second, the suit was instituted, and in accordance with the agreement, the county interposed no defense; judgment was given for the amount of his claim, and warrants payable out of moneys in the treasury not otherwise appropriated, issued to him, which he received in full and complete satisfaction of his judgment, instructing the clerk of the court to enter satisfaction on the judgment docket, which, however, the clerk failed to do. Now it is said that by virtue of the agreement in pursuance of which the warrants were issued, Middaugh was bound to accept them in satisfaction of his judgment; and that his acceptance of the warrants as payment, and his instruction to the clerk to enter satisfaction, together with his production to the board of a transcript which showed satisfaction, is conclusive upon him and his assignee that the judgment was in fact satisfied. Of course if Middaugh cannot deny that the judgment was
The warrants which Middaugh agreed to accept in satisfaction of his judgment were orders on money in the treasury. For the purpose of paying judgments, without the intervention of a levy, the statute gave the board no authority to issue ■any other kind of warrants; but the agreement itself specif-, ically, although perhaps unnecessarily, provided that these warrants should be drawn against money on hand. Such warrants would be equivalent to cash, because on presentation they would bring the cash. When Middaugh ordered the entry of satisfaction, and produced the transcript showing satisfaction, he did so in obedience to a requirement of the board, as a condition upon which the warrants should be issued. Afterwards he ascertained that there were no funds in the treasury available for the payment of the warrants. He therefore did not receive the warrants he contracted for, or such warrants as might lawfully be issued for the payment of the judgment. The consideration of his agreement to satisfy the judgment failed, and his agreement fell to the ground with it. In view of the facts, the most that can be said for the warrants is that they stood upon the same footing with ■any other county warrants; and the judgment was not paid because the warrants did not produce the money to pay it. Upon the foregoing facts, if entry of satisfaction had been made upon the record, a proceeding to cancel it would have been first in order, and would have been sustained; but as such entry was not made, no preliminary suit was necessary, and there was nothing in the way of the institution and prosecution of this proceeding.
“ When a judgment shall be given and rendered against a county of this state in the name of its board of county commissioners, or against any county officer, in an action prosecuted by or against him in his official capacity, or name of office, when the judgment is for money, and is a lawful county charge, no execution shall issue thereon, but the same may be paid by the levy of a tax upon the taxable property of said county,'and when the tax shall be collected by the county treasurer, it shall be paid over, as fast as collected by him, to the judgment creditor, or his or her assigns, upon the execution and delivery of proper vouchers therefor; but nothing contained in this section shall operate to prevent the county commissioners from paying all or part of any such judgment by a warrant, drawn by them upon the ordinary county fund in the county treasury; Provided, That the power hereby conferred to pay any such judgment by a special levy of such tax, shall be held to be in addition to the taxing power given and granted to such board, to levy taxes for other county purposes, but the board of county commissioners shall levy under this law only such taxes as they, in their discretion, may deem expedient or necessary, and all taxes levied by authority of this act shall not exceed one and one-half per centum of the dollar of assessed property for any one fiscal year; And, provided, further, That the powers herein given to the board of county commissioners shall not he construed as requiring said board to levy any special tax to pay any judgment, unless in its discretion the said board shall so determine.” Session Laws, 1887, p. 240.
While in our opinion the foregoing enactment leaves the prior law applicable to the question before us unchanged, yet, for reasons which will appear, we think there is no impropriety in subjecting it to some examination, for the special purpose of ascertaining what was intended by the last proviso. When we passed on the case before, we held that the
If the last proviso were a detached and independent enactment, making it discretionary with the board whether it should ever levy any special tax to pay any judgment, the view of the lower court as to the legislative intent might perhaps be correct. But it is not a separate enactment. The portion of the act which includes it, consists of but one sentence, the several parts of which are interdependent. The proviso is so connected by its language with what precedes it, that it cannot be insolated without destruction of its sense; and in the position which it occupies, to find what it was intended to mean, the whole must be read. If the learned judge has correctly conceived its meaning, then we have an •enactment which makes it mandatory upon the commissioners, under certain circumstances, to levy a tax to pay a judgment against the county, and yet leaves it optional with them, without regard to circumstances, whether they shall do so or not; in other words, which provides that they must, but need not, levy the tax. Such a rendering of its language would reduce the statute to an absurdity. Let us see whether an easy and natural construction of the act cannot be found. It first prohibits the issue of an execution on the judgment, and requires the levy of a tax for its payment, but provides
Reversed.
WWson, J., not sitting.
ON MOTION TO MODIFY JUDGMENT.
The defendant in error has submitted a motion to modify the judgment heretofore entered, in such manner that it shall simply reverse the judgment of the district court, and remand the cause to that court for a new trial. The reasons assigned for the motion are that the answer on which the case went to trial, and which was prepared by counsel other than those now representing the county, fails to state important facts, which, if stated, would be a complete defense to the action, and which, if a new trial were awarded, could be introduced into the answer by way of amendment.
We are aware of the burden of debt which is weighing upon the inhabitants of the county; and if the facts set forth in its application, and which it desires to incorporate into its answer, would constitute a defense to the action, we should cheerfully comply with its request.
What it proposes to plead and prove, may be summarized
Now, we do not undertake to say that upon a proper c#se being presented, in a direct proceeding for the purpose, a court of equity would not go behind the record and relieve a county from an unconscionable judgment; but we do not see how the matters alleged, if pleaded and proved, could possibly be of any avail to the county in this litigation. This is a proceeding at law to compel the payment of the judgment. For the purposes of the action we must start with the judgment as we find it in the record. We cannot look behind it; and evidence of the nature of the indebtedness on which it was recovered would be inadmissible. It is conclusive of all questions which were, or might have been, litigated in the suit. In this action we are bound by an ironclad presumption that the indebtedness for which the judgment was recovered was not contracted in violation of the constitution, but was valid and unpaid, and entitled Middaugh to the judgment he obtained. Such was our opinion when the case was here before, and such is our conviction still.
We begin then with a valid judgment, and it is proposed