258 P. 246 | Mont. | 1927
This is an appeal from a judgment in favor of respondent upon the relator's application for a writ of mandate to require her to make payment of two warrants issued and delivered to him by the Red Lodge-Rosebud irrigation district.
The cause was heretofore before this court (State ex rel.Haley v. Dilworth,
The facts in the case are fully set forth in the opinion on the former appeal and the related case of State ex rel. RedLodge-Rosebud Irr. Dist. v. District Court,
The trial court was not requested to and did not make any[1] special findings of fact; therefore, under the rule which prevails in this state, every finding necessary to support the judgment will be implied. (State ex rel. Case v. Bolles,
It is also the settled rule in this state that on an appeal[2] from the judgment in an action tried by the court the appellant has the burden of showing that the record will not *106
sustain the conclusion of the court upon any admissible theory, and that a judgment in an action at law so tried will not be reversed for insufficiency of the evidence if there is any substantial evidence to support it. (State ex rel. Urton v.American Bank Trust Co.,
The evidence introduced at the trial disclosed that the two warrants in question were issued and delivered to relator at a meeting of the board of directors of the irrigation district held on July 14, 1925, and that immediately upon directing the issuance of the warrants the meeting was adjourned. The evidence further tended to establish that on the same day a further meeting of the board of directors of the irrigation district was held, the minutes of which are as follows:
"The board reconvened in session upon July 14, 1925, after the proceedings recorded on this page. It then appearing to the board that J.S. Haley was violating the arrangement under which the above-mentioned warrants were issued and delivered to him, and that the members of the board, acting individually and informally, therefore have directed the county treasurer not to pay the warrants, the board then resolved, all the directors voting `Aye,' that the county treasurer shall be, and is hereby, directed not to pay the two warrants held by Haley, and that payment of these warrants is stopped. The meeting then adjourned.
"LOUIE J. HYEM, Secretary.
"Approved: A.F. BOGGIO, President."
The "proceedings recorded on this page," referred to in the foregoing minutes, were the minutes of the meeting of the board at which the warrants in question were authorized. There is some controversy in the testimony as to whether the resolution referred to in the foregoing minutes was in fact adopted at a meeting of the board of directors; that is, from the contradictory statements of the witnesses testifying, it would be possible to draw the conclusion that a meeting of the directors of the Red Lodge-Rosebud irrigation district was *107 not held as recited therein, and a finding to that effect would not have been disturbed on an appeal like this. On the other hand, there is evidence in the record from which a conclusion might be reached that such a meeting was held and such a resolution was adopted. Under the rules above announced, the court's implied finding that such a meeting was held and the resolution adopted cannot be disturbed.
Counsel for relator contends that even if adopted, the[3] resolution as shown in the minutes is invalid and does not show a legal, corporate act, for the reason that it does not show that the yeas and nays were taken upon the vote for its adoption.
Section 3964, Revised Codes of 1921, in enumerating the powers of the board of directors of an irrigation district, provides, among other things: "All orders and resolutions shall be passed or adopted by a majority of directors by a yea and nay vote, to be entered upon the records of the board." The requirements of this statute are mandatory. (Pickton v. City of Fargo,
As shown by the decree establishing it, the board of directors of the Red Lodge-Rosebud irrigation district consists of three members. The minutes above set out recite, "The board then resolved, all the directors voting aye," etc. The word "all" is of such uniform use and generally understood meaning that it seems unnecessary to define it. But in Webster's New International Dictionary it is said to mean "the whole number of," and in State v. Maine Central,
The case of Steckert v. City of East Saginaw, supra, is many times cited and quoted from in the decisions of other states. The opinion was by Judge Cooley, and he said that the object of a yea and nay vote was to make each member of the voting body feel the responsibility of his action when voting and to make such a record that it should not afterwards be open to dispute. In applying the rule to the facts in the case under consideration the learned jurist said: "If the record in the present case shows precisely who voted for the resolution in question, it is apparent that the object of the statute has been fulfilled, and we may be able to sustain the action, notwithstanding the compliance with its provisions has not been exactly literal."
Since the minutes of the meeting of the board of directors of the irrigation district above quoted show that the whole number, or every one, of its directors voted "aye" upon the matter of the adoption of the resolution, we feel constrained to hold that the "object of the statute has been fulfilled," although "compliance with its provisions has not been exactly literal," and that the resolution was duly and legally adopted.
The record does not disclose that a copy of this resolution[4] was delivered to the respondent at any time. It is shown, however, that when the relator presented the warrants to her for payment she notified him that she had been told by Skinner, attorney for the district, who was acting under instructions from the board of directors, to refuse payment of the same, that this information was imparted to her by Skinner at her office in the presence of at least two, and possibly all three, of the directors, and, according to Skinner's version, this was after the board of directors had acted upon the matter of stopping payment. These circumstances were sufficient to justify the court in finding that notice of the action of the board of directors in directing the respondent not to pay the warrants in question, and that payment thereof *109 had been stopped, had been given to her and that her refusal to pay the same was justified.
Counsel for relator next advances the argument, as we gather[5] it, that under the terms of the contract between the relator and the irrigation district the construction fund was in reality deposited with the county treasurer in trust for him and that, irrespective of the action of the board of directors in issuing and stopping payment on the warrants in question, the treasurer should be required by mandamus to turn over to him the amount shown to be due by the engineer's estimates.
The contract involved provides that the same shall not be in effect until an amount equal to the contract price shall have been deposited with the county treasurer "for the purpose of paying and with which to pay said contract price * * * to be paid out by the county treasurer according to the laws of the state of Montana and said specifications. Said order or warrant on said treasurer shall be accompanied by estimate or certificate of engineer's estimate," etc.
Section 3977, Revised Codes of 1921, designates the county treasurer of the county wherein the office of an irrigation district is located as the custodian of all funds belonging to the district, and provides that (with exceptions not here material) he shall pay out said funds upon the order of the board of directors and that, when such orders are for the payment of money for construction work, they shall be accompanied by and attached to the written estimate of the district engineer. Section 3986 provides that no money shall be drawn from the construction fund except as specifically provided in the Act. Under the statutory provisions relative to the deposit of its funds with the county treasurer and the method by which they may be disbursed, an irrigation district has no power to place them in trust for the benefit of third persons or to disburse them in any manner except that prescribed. *110
A public corporation in this state has no power to act unless its authority to do so is conferred by a statute or necessarily implied therefrom. (State ex rel. Billings v. Gas Co.,
Some of the relator's assignments of error are not specifically covered by the foregoing discussion, but in view of the conclusion at which we have arrived, we do not deem it necessary to consider them.
At the time of the argument of this case a motion was made to make C.A. Nordstrom, alleged to be successor of the respondent in the office of county treasurer, a party respondent herein. In view of the conclusion reached, it is not necessary to consider this motion on its merits, and the same is overruled pro forma.
Since, as pointed out on the first appeal in this case, the respondent was the mere custodian of the funds of the irrigation district which could only be paid out on warrants issued by the board of directors of said district, and the district had authority to stop payment on said warrants after they were issued, and it appearing in this case that such action had been taken by the irrigation district and notice thereof given to the respondent, her right to make payment of the same ceased. Therefore the judgment of the lower court refusing to issue a writ of mandate in the action is affirmed.
Affirmed.
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE CALLAWAY and ASSOCIATE JUSTICES MYERS, MATTHEWS and GALEN concur. *111