79 Neb. 263 | Neb. | 1907
Plaintiffs and appellants constitute the board of county commissioners of Loup county. Clark, the appellee, is treasurer of the county and has occupied the office since January, 1904. Following the custom of his predecessors, the treasurer had prorated the interest received from the several banks where the funds of the- county were deposited, and credited the same to the several funds from which the interest was derived. Section 10871, Ann. St., provides that “all interest on such moneys be credited by the county treasurer directly to the account of the general fund of the county.” At a meeting of the board of county commissioners held on August 21, 1905, the board adopted a resolution requiring the treasurer to credit the general fund of the county for 1905 with all interest theretofore credited to the several funds from which such interest had been derived, but Clark, instead of complying literally with the order of the commissioners, after crediting the interest in question to the general fund of the county, used it to pay outstanding warrants issued in 1903 and 1904, instead of the warrants of 1905, to the payment of which the commissioners insist the interest should be applied.
In answer to an alternative writ of mandamus issued by the district court on the application of the commissioners, Clark, among other matters, states that at the time the plaintiffs made the order above referred to there were filed against the general fund of 1903 unallowed claims
From the above statement it Avill be seen that the question to be determined is whether depository interest received by a county treasurer during the years 3903 and 1904 should be applied to the payment of oustanding Avarrants issued against the general fund of the county during those years, or Avhethcr the county board may of right direct it to be applied to the payment of Avarrants issued against the general fund of the county in the year 1905, it not being shown that the outstanding Avarrants of 1903 and 1904 had been included in the annual estimate of the expenses of the county for the year 1905. Subdivision VI, sec. 4443, Ann. St., defining the duties of county boards, is as follows: “At their regular meeting in January of each year to prepare an estimate of the necessary expenses of the county during the ensuing year, the total of which shall in no instance exceed the amount of taxes authorized by law to be levied during that year, including the amounts necessary to meet outstanding indebtedness, as evidenced by bonds, coupons, or Avarrants legally issued; and such estimate, containing the items constituting the amounts, shall be entered at large upon their records and published four successive weeks before the levy for that year in some newspaper published and of general circulation in the county, or if none is published, then in some
This, to us, seems decisive of the case and requires an affirmance of the judgment appealed from, and we so recommend.
By the Court: For the reasons stated in the foregoing opinion, the judgment appealed from is
Affirmed.