Court Opinion

ID: 6637095
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-20 20:41:50.321379+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:47:17.803412
License: Public Domain

Wabbeh, 0. J.
This was an application on the affidavit of appellant to obtain a writ of peremptory mandamus out of the district court of the second judicial district, in and for the county of Deer Lodge, directed to the respondent, treasurer of said county, to compel the payment out of the county treasury to appellant of county warrant numbered 364, drawn by the county commissioners of that county on the treasurer for the sum of $213.20, payable to C. E. Irvine or order, out of any moneys in the treasury of said county, and dated May 9,1866. •
The affidavit alleges legal ownership of the warrant by appellant, its presentation on the 9th day of May, 1866, to the then treasurer for payment, and non-payment for *27want of funds, and avers that afterward money was received by the respondent as such treasurer, which was appropriated by law to the payment of said warrant; and that appellant, on April 17, 1868, presented same to respondent, who had previously as such treasurer received money appropriated by law to pay said warrant, for payment, and who then refused to pay same.
Some matters of practice hereafter noticed make it necessary to detail the history of the case.
In his amended answer respondent specially denies :
1. That he had at the time of answering, or had had since the commencement of the action, any money in his hands or custody appropriated by law to payment of the warrant; and,
2. Thai he had at any time received any money appropriated by law to payment of same.
For further answer he sets up the act of the legislative assembly, entitled “An act to authorize the county commissioners of the several counties of the Territory of Montana to fund the debt of their respective counties,” approved November 22,1867, and two orders made under color of that act by the board of county commissioners of Deer Lodge county, which are set out in the answer, the first bearing date February 1, 1868, and the other February 22, 1868. The first order recites that the commissioners, deeming it for the interest of Deer Lodge county that all the outstanding orders against the treasurer of said county be called in, do order that all outstanding orders against the treasurer of said county be called in, and that bonds, with coupons payable semi-annually, be issued in lieu thereof, by virtue of, and in conformity with, the act of the legislative assembly of November 22, 1867; and further, that $3,000 be set apart from the ordinary revenue of the county for the year 1868, for the payment of the outstanding bonds against the treasury of said county and the interest thereon. The second order forbade the county treasurer to pay any money out of the treasury for the purpose of paying off any unpaid county warrants issued prior to February 1, 1868, or to receive such warrants in payment of taxes or licenses.
*28The answer avers that both these orders of the board were made prior to the presentation of the warrant in question to respondent for payment.
To this answer respondent filed a replication, and the cause was referred, by order of the court, to a referee “to report both the facts and the law of the case,” who afterward filed a report including finding of facts and conclusions of law, and recommending that an order of court be made for a peremptory mandamus to respondent in accordance with the application. To this 'report of the referee respondent excepted, assigning errors, and moved to set the report aside, and for a new trial.
Upon this motion the court rendered what purports to be a judgment, reviewing the conclusions of law reported, and concluding as follows: “We feel impelled in the brief time we have to investigate the question to dissent from the report of the referee. We, therefore, sustain the exceptions (except the one rejecting evidence), and set aside the report of the referee.”
To this order, or decision, appellant noted his exception.
This is all the transcript shows, except the following stipulation of the parties under which the proceeding is brought before this court:
“It is stipulated and agreed by and between the parties hereto as follows:
“ 1. That the cause be taken by appeal to the supreme court of the Territory, upon the decision and order of the judge of said district court setting aside the report of the referee in this cause, and the order of said judge granting a new trial thereon.
“2. That all errors and defects in the pleadings in said cause be and the same are hereby waived, arid the court is hereby authorized and requested to order said appeal in accordance with these stipulations.”
We have thus detailed the proceedings in the. cause, because, as an appellate court, we are met at the outset by a difficulty as to what questions are presented in this transcript for the adjudication of this court.
*29No appeal lies from the mere order or decision setting aside the report of the referee; and, though recited in the' stipulation, the transcript fails to show any further order granting or denying the application, granting or refusing a new trial, or any final judgment or order whatever from which an appeal would lie. This difficulty arises from the error of the court in ordering a reference of the cause, and subsequently in failing to either grant or deny the application. We will not stop, however, to discuss the validity of a reference of “issues” or “questions” of law, under our code of practice, without consent of the parties entered upon the record. In a proceeding for a mandamus our statute contemplates that questions of fact and of law shall respectively be determined in the manner pointed out — questions of law being for the court. In this case the issues raised on the affidavit and answer are questions of law — the only issue of fact joined being the denial by respondent that he had, prior to the commencement of the action, received money as treasurer appropriated by law to payment of the warrant, and this really involving a question of law. Although the court below did not take such final action as would bring these questions before this court on appeal, yet, regarding them as of interest, and in view of the intention of the parties, as indicated by their stipulation, we will proceed to consider them as presented by the pleadings, treating the report of the referee upon the issue of fact as a special finding of the court, and regarding the order setting it aside as an order denying the application of appellant on the facts as shown by the record.
The respondent bases his refusal to pay the warrant, in substance, upon the orders of the board of county commissioners set out in the answer, and that the money in the treasury was not by law appropriated to such payment.
If those orders of the board were made by competent authority, within the limitations of legislative power, they would, of course, furnish a legal justification of his refusal. To determine whether such is the case, we must first refer to the acts of the legislative assembly conferring powers *30upon the commissioners, as it is not contended that they possess any legal powers, except such as may be rightfully conferred upon them by the legislature, in the exercise of its powers under the constitution and acts of congress.
The act of November 22, 1867, is relied upon as conferring this power upon the board. The constitutionality of this statute is questioned by appellant, but, properly interpreted, we regard it as upon a rightful subject of legislation, and within the scope of legislative powers.
It is claimed, however, by respondent that, under this statute, the county commissioners possessed the power to require, by an order, that all hoi ders of warrants, issued prior to the date of their first order, should surrender them for cancellation, and receive bonds in lieu thereof; and that this act, upon the making of such order, in effect repealed all-prior laws providing for payment of outstanding warrants out of the treasury, leaving such warrants as were not surrendered unprovided for. We do not so regard it. While we admit the power of the legislative assembly, either by direct laws or through the commissioners, to control the financial affairs of a county, subject only to well established limitations, we would be forced to deny the power claimed to require the surrender of evidences of county indebtedness by the holders on any terms or conditions, whether favorable or unfavorable to the latter. The county revenues might be appropriated by law to other purposes than payment of the outstanding indebtedness, leaving that unprovided for, and whatever violation of moral obligation or of public faith this might be, the creditor, unless in some case of vested right, would be without legal remedy. This subject we have discussed in another case and will not pursue farther.
W e do not think the act in question intended a compulsory change of the form of the county indebtedness. In construing a statute it is the duty of a court, where one of two constructions will render it inoperative, or even simply harsh, and another valid, to give it such construction as will sustain it.
*31We hold, then, that the statute of November 22, 1867, simply conferred upon the commissioners the power, which, without it, they did not possess, to issue bonds bear ing liberal interest, and substitute them for outstanding orders, and thus sustain the financial credit of the county. The exchange was not to be compulsory, but dependent on the will of the holders of warrants. In this light it is a wise and just measure; and we fail to see, as is claimed by respondent, how such construction renders the statute nugatory.
The question then recurs as to what were the rights of appellant, if declining to surrender his warrant under the order of the board. Unquestionably to have it paid, according to its terms, out of money in the county treasury not otherwise appropriated by law. The answer of respondent avers that, at the time of the presentation of the warrant to him, he had not in his hands money appropriated by law to its payment. The finding of the referee on this issue was, that “ on the 17th day of April, 1868, when demand of payment of plaintiff’s warrant was made, by reason of further receipts and the funding of prior warrants, he had received more than sufficient money to pay plaintiff’s warrant, supposing that it was entitled to be paid in its regular order, without regard to the funding law and the order of the commissioners.”
The money, then, was in the treasury. Was it appropriated by law to the payment of the warrant?
By an act of the legislative assembly, entitled “An act defining the duties of county treasurers, and the payment of county warrants,” approved November 19,1867, it is provided that county warrants “ shall be paid in the order in which they are presented” to the county treasurer for payment. It is urged by respondent that this law was repealed by implication by the act of November 22. It is a primary principle that statutes in pari materia shall be so construed as that, if possible, all shall stand. The interpretation we have given the latter act removes all conflict between it and the former one, and gives effect to both.
*32The act of November 22d permitted the commissioners to appropriate bnt one-fifth of the county revenue annually to payment of bonds, leaving the remainder to be applied in accordance with previous laws. The order of' the commissioners, of February 1st, set apart $3,000 of the ordinary revenue of the county for 1868 for the payment of outstanding bonds, and it is to be presumed that amount constituted the one-fifth of the revenue of the county for that year permitted by law to be appropriated for that purpose ; if it was more it was unauthorized by the law. The remainder of the revenue, then, was subject to the disposition made by prior laws. The act relating to counties and county officers, approved February 9, 1865, in specifying the duty of the county treasurer, provides that “all moneys received by him for the use of the county shall be paid out by him only on the orders of the board of commissioners, according to law, except when specified provision for the payment thereof is or shall be otherwise made by law.” Under this act, and that of November 19, 1867, it appearing that appellant’s warrant was entitled to payment in the order of presentation, and that the money in the treasury, at the time of its presentation to respondent for payment, was not set apart under the order of February 1st of the board of commissioners as part of the $3,000, or otherwise appropriated by law, it was the duty of respondent, notwithstanding the last order of the commissioners, to apply it to payment of the warrant.
The judgment of the court below is reversed with costs, and it is ordered that a peremptory writ of mandate issue out of this court, directed to the treasurer of Deer Lodge county, commanding him to pay to appellant, holder of the county warrant hereinbefore described, the amount of said warrant, with interest on the same at the rate of ten per cent per annum from April 17,1868, out of any money in the treasury not otherwise appropriated by law.
Knowles, J., concurred.
*33Exceptions sustained. Peremptory writ of mandate granted.
The respondent filed a motion for a rehearing, which was denied at the same term for the reasons contained in the forgoing opinion.