38 P.2d 954 | Okla. | 1934
This is an appeal from the judgment of the Court of Tax Review upon the protest of the St. Louis-San Francisco Railway Company (No. 25553), and has been consolidated with a similar protest of the Chicago, Rock Island Pacific Railway Company (No. 25554), and Atchison, Topeka Santa Fe Railway Company (No. 25555), wherein the said railway companies protest portions of the sinking fund levy of Custer county, Okla., for the fiscal year beginning July 1, 1933, and ending June 30, 1934. The Court of Tax Review sustained the protests upon the theory that the following judgments theretofore rendered against the board of county commissioners of said county were illegal and void on the face of the judgment roll. The judgments involved are listed as follows:
Number 4102, Rogers v. Board of County Commissioners; Number 4103, Rogers v. Board of County Commissioners; Number 4104, Rogers v. Board of County Commissioners; Number 4119, Sunnyside Hospital v. Board of County Commissioners; Number 4260, Rogers v. Board of County Commissioners; Number 4261, Rogers v. Board of County Commissioners; Number 4399, Parker v. Board of County Commissioners.
The issue presented is whether or not the judgments in question are void on the face of the judgment roll.
The suits resulting in those judgments were all based upon medical and hospital services alleged to have been furnished various persons by the plaintiff in each case at the request of the board of county commissioners of said county. The petitions contained allegations to the effect that the claims for the services in each case were within the limits of the unexpended balance of appropriations for that purpose.
It is contended, and the Court of Tax Review so held, that the judgments were void because the petitions failed to show that the persons for whom the services were performed were residents of Custer county. The case of Board of County Commissioners of Carter County v. Dowdy
Shivers,
In the Dowdy Shivers Case, supra, this court held in the syllabus as follows:
"In an action for the recovery of medical services performed for poor persons under *12 the authority of sections 8211, 8212, and 8213, C. O. S. 1921, it is necessary to allege and prove that the persons for whom the services were performed were lawfully settled in the county sought to be held liable therefor, or that the relief was temporary for persons not settled therein, and was actually necessary pending the ascertainment of their legal settlement and removal thereto."
However, that case was considered on direct appeal where the judgment in the case was attacked directly. In that case the judgment rendered was reversed, because the evidence failed to show that the persons considered were residents of Carter county. The gist of the decision was that upon direct appeal from a judgment, the failure to prove an essential fact was fatal to the plaintiff's right to sustain the judgment. That is far different from holding, as the protestant here contends, that the mere failure to allege a material detail of the cause of action must be held to go to the jurisdiction of the court, and must be held to render the judgment void and subject to collateral attack. In re Protest of the Gulf Pipe Line Co., decided April 24, 1934,
In Excise Board of Carter County v. Chicago Rock Island Pacific Railway Co., supra, it was held in paragraph 2 of the syllabus as follows:
"A judgment entered upon a petition which not only fails to state a cause of action upon a claim against a county, or other municipality, but affirmatively shows that no cause of action can be stated upon such claim, is void upon the face of the judgment roll and subject to collateral attack in the Court of Tax Review."
And in the body of the opinion, this court, speaking through Mr. Justice Riley, said:
"In the instant case the petitions upon which the judgments were taken not only failed to state that there was an appropriation but affirmatively alleged that no appropriation was ever made. * * *"
In that case the judgments under consideration were held to be void, but the foregoing quotations distinguished that case from the one at bar. In the body of the opinion in that case there occurred also this language:
"If the judgments in question are fair and valid on the judgment roll, we are inclined to agree with the contention that they cannot be successfully attacked collaterally in proceedings of this nature. * * * "
Defendants contend further that, although there are allegations in the petition to the effect that the claims presented were within the limits of unexpended appropriations, the exhibits attached to the petition disclose on their face that the claims were disallowed because of lack of funds. They urge that this negatives the allegations in the petition. The point is not well taken, because if it were true that at the time the claims were disallowed there were no funds or enexpended appropriations for the payment thereof, it does not necessarily follow that there was no unexpended appropriation in the fund at the time of the creation of the liability, which is the criterion. Huddleston v. Board of County Commissioners,
Protestants contend, further, that the judgments are void because the defendants' answer in each case consisted only of a general denial coupled with an admission of the qualifications of the plaintiff, and admitted the fact that the defendants were the regularly elected and acting board of county commissioners. They cite Protest of Carter Oil Co.,
Plaintiffs in error raise other questions which they present as further reasons for reversing the judgment of the Court of Tax Review herein, but, in view of our conclusion above stated, it becomes unnecessary to consider the other questions.
The cause is remanded to the Court of Tax Review, with directions to render judgment overruling the protests of the defendants in error.
RILEY, C.J., CULLISON, V. C.J., and McNEILL and OSBORN, JJ., concur.