114 Ark. 289 | Ark. | 1914
The St. Francis Drainage District, covering certain territory in Clay and Greene counties, Arkansas, was created by a special statute enacted by the General Assembly of 1905, for the purpose of constructing drainage ditches and building levees in the territory described. The act named five directors and provided for the appointment of their successors by the Governor, and constituted the board a body corporate with authority to cause the improvement named above to be made and to do the ether things necessary to carry forward the work.
A section of the statute with reference to the employment of an attorney reads as follows:
“The board of directors or the president thereof, may engage the services of an attorney for the purpose of enforcing the payment of delinquent taxes, and an attorney may also be employed by the board for the purpose of bringing or defending any suit which may be instituted by or against the drainage district, but in all cases of fees to be paid such attorney, shall be agreed upon in writing at the time of employment, and shall not exceed in any one year the sum of two hundred and fifty dollars. ’ ’ Section 21, Act 172, Session of 1905, p. 444.
The statute further provided that the board should effect an organization “by electing a president, a secretary and a treasurer, who shall also be collector, and an engineer, and prescribe the duties and fix the salaries of said officers, not to exceed the amounts fixed by law,” and further provided that said officers should be elected for two years at the first annual meeting of the board and biennially thereafter at regular meetings. The board wias duly organized and W. E. Spence, an attorney-at-law, in Clay County, was employed as the attorney for the district, and J. D. Mitchell was elected as engineer. The board entered into two written contracts with A. W. Wills & Sons, one for the cutting of a ditch, and the other for the building of the levee as authorized in the statute, and the work was proceeded with pursuant to these contracts. Dissatisfaction subsequently arose on the part of two members of the board, and also on the part of many property owners and taxpayers in the district, concerning the operations of the district, the performance of the contract by the contractors, the method of paying the contractors, and the amounts so paid, and various other things which became the subject-matter of acute controversy. These differences resulted in the present action, instituted by two dissenting directors and several taxpayers against the other members of the board, the contractors, the engineer and the attorney.
In the complaint it is alleged that the contractors were making overcharges under the contract, and were being paid in excess of the contract price; that the stipulated percentage of estimates were not being reserved in accordance with the terms of the contract, and also that there are various other irregularities and inaccuracies in the account with the contractors. It is also alleged that the engineer had fraudulently approved the estimates of the contractors, and had also been guilty of fraud in padding his accounts for salaries of the assistant engineers in his employment. The complaint alleges further, that the attorney, Mr. Spence, had been allowed five hundred dollars as fees in excess of the amount authorized by statute. The prayer of the complaint is that the board of directors be restrained from paying the contractors any further sums of money on account of the levee; that an accounting be had as to the amount of work done by the contractors, and the amount paid by them in accordance with the contract; and an accounting be had of the moneys paid to Mitchell, the engineer; that Spence be compelled to refund the excessive sum of five hundred dollars paid to him; and that the board be restrained from further employing Mitchell as the engineer; and that judgment be rendered in favor of the district for whatever sums are found to be due from the contractors, from Mitchell and from Spence.
All the defendants answered, in substance denying the allegations of the complaint with respect to the irregularities and errors in the account of the contractors or the allowances to them, and as to the misconduct of the engineer, and the unlawful payment of excessive fees to the attorney. The case was heard by the chancellor upon the pleadings, the documentary evidence, and the depositions of witnesses, and there was a finding by the chancellor in favor of the contractors on some items, and against them on others; against the attorney, Mr. Spence, for the five hundred dollars paid to him; and against the engineer, Mr. Mitchell, for sums paid to him in excess of the amounts paid to his assistants. The court thereupon rendered a decree against Spence, directing him to pay the treasurer of the district said sum of five hundred dollars, and making perpetual the temporary restraining order preventing the board from employing Mitchell as engineer. There was a reference to a special master of the accounts between the district and the contractors, with instructions to.report in accordance with the directions of the court. Both sides saved exceptions and prayed an appeal to this court, but neither of the appeals was prosecuted within the time prescribed by law, and subsequently the defendants obtained an appeal from the clerk of this court. We have not before us the report of the master and the final decree of the court thereon, if such decree has been rendered.
The first question which arises is whether the decree rendered hy the court, or any part of it, is final and appealable. It will be noticed from the above recital that the court did not award any amount for or against the contractors. The court merely made certain findings and referred the accounts to a special master for report.
(1) In the early case of Crittenden ex parte, 10 Ark. 334, the court laid down the rule that “a decree, which disposes of the matters in issue between the parties and gives all the consequential directions necessary to carry it into execution, is a final decree; but if such consequential directions be not given, though the decree may adjudicate as to the interest or right in controversy, it is not final.”
The test announced in that case has never been departed from by this court, so far as we know, but has been reiterated in numerous later cases. Haynie v. McLemore, 12 Ark. 397; Shegogg v. Perkins, 34 Ark. 117; Davie v. Davie, 52 Ark. 224; Cohn v. Huffman, 52 Ark. 436; Heffner v. Day, 54 Ark. 79; Batesville v. Ball, 100 Ark. 496.
In Davie v. Davie, supra, Chief Justice Cockrill, speaking for the court, said that “a judgment in equity is understood ordinarily to be interlocutory when inquiry as to matter of law or fact is directed preparatory to a final adjudication of the rights of the parties, ” but that, quoting from the Supreme Court of the United States in Beebe v. Russell, 19 How. 283, “where the decree decides the rights to the property in contest and directs it to be delivered up, or directs it to be sold, and the complainant is entitled to have it carried into immediate execution, the decree must be regarded as final to that extent, although it may be necessary for a further decree to adjust the account between the parties.” In the same case it was also said that an appeal will be allowed “where a distinct and severable branch of the cause is finally determined, although the suit is not ended.”
The controlling principle is stated by Chief Justice English, in the case of Town of Jacksonport v. Watson, 33 Ark. 704, as follows: “A court of equity may, at the suit of property holders or taxable inhabitants of a municipal corporation, restrain the corporation and its officers from making an unauthorized appropriation of the corporate funds. This is so because the corporation holds its money for the corporators, the inhabitants of the town or city, to be expended for legitimate corporate purposes, and a misappropriation of these funds is an injury to the taxpayer, for which no other remedy is so effectual or appropriate as an injunction. ’ ’
We held in Griffin v. Rhoton, 85 Ark. 89, that a chancery court would entertain jurisdiction upon a complaint of taxpayers to require a public officer to pay back fees illegally collected.
The decree against defendant Spence is therefore affirmed; the decree against Mitchell and the board, restraining the board from retaining Mitchell as engineer, is reversed and remanded with directions to dismiss the complaint as to that feature of the case. The appeal of Mitchell and the appeal of the contractors, A. W. Wills & Sons, concerning the state of the accounts between them respectively and the board, are dismissed as premature.