77 P. 699 | Kan. | 1904
The opinion of the court was delivered by
This is a proceeding by D. M. Ward to compel the officers of Isabel township, Scott •county, Kansas, to pay four judgments held by the plaintiff against the township, out of certain funds nowin the township treasury. In 1892 the township issued bonds to the amount of $22,500, which are still ■outstanding. Default was made in the payment of interest on them, for which a judgment to the amount •of $5000 was rendered in the federal • court. The plaintiff held a number of defaulted coupons in the same series of bonds, and on December 18, 1903, he recovered four judgments, amounting'to $1166.29, before a justice of the peace. On January 6, 1904, he applied for a writ to compel the payment of these judgments. At that time there was in the township treasury the sum of $357.79, levied and collected in 1903 for the purpose of paying interest on bonds, and
It is not alleged, nor shown, that the funds raised for current expenses are more that sufficient for that purpose. It does not even appear that the indebtedness on which the judgment was founded was for the ordinary expenses of the township, to which funds derived from a levy for current expenses could be legally applied. The taxes levied for one purpose cannot be diverted and applied to another. Presumably the township officers are acting in good faith and have levied and raised a fund which is necessary, as ■as well as sufficient, to meet the ordinary current expenses of an economical administration of the affairs of the township. The township organization must be maintained and its current expenses met, although creditors of the township must wait for payment of their bonds and judgments.
As the case stands, it cannot be said that more money was raised than is needed for current expenses, and nothing is shown to warrant the claim that a large and unnecessary current-expense fund was raised to avoid the payment of interest on bonds or of judgments for such interest. The law confides in the officers of the municipality the discretion to determine how much money is required to carry on the affairs of the township—a discretion which the courts cannot ■supervise or control. In the absence of a showing to ■the contrary, we must assume that this discretion has been honestly exercised, and that no part of the current-expense fund can be properly applied to the payment of plaintiff’s judgments.
Regarding the money raised for the payment of in
The contention' that there are other creditors holding like claims, and that plaintiff should not be given-a preference over them, is not good. They are not here demanding payment, or asking that the fund which plaintiff is seeking to obtain be distributed equally with them. The defendants are not competent to speak for them, and it will be time enough to-consider the rights of other creditors when they intervene or invoke the action of the court. Upon an application for mandamus to compel the payment of a debt out of a particular fund, and where the municipality made a similar objection, the supreme court-of California remarked :
“Nor is the fact, if it exists, that there are other-creditors interested in the fund provided for their payment, who have not demanded payment, any answer to tie application of the petitioner. Non-actions*777 by others having equal rights with him, in a matter on which his right is founded, cannot prejudice him in the assertion of his right nor excuse non-performance of a duty in connection with it specially enjoined by law.” (Meyer v. Porter, 65 Cal. 67, 70, 2 Pac. 884. See, also, City of Galena v. Amy, 5 Wall. 705, 709, 18 L. Ed. 560; Mayor etc. of City of New Orleans v. United States, 49 Fed. 40, 1 C. C. A. 148; Vorhies v. Mayor, 70 Tex. 331, 7 S. W. 679.)
The plaintiff is entitled to a peremptory writ compelling the payment of his judgments out of the fund provided for the payment of interest on bonds, or so much of the same as remains in the township treasury. This will be the judgment of the court.