Court Opinion

ID: 9831989
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-09-01 21:31:41.670541+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T07:43:40.689056
License: Public Domain

WALKER, J.
This suit was instituted by appellant to recover' the balance due on a warrant issued to it by the commissioners’ court of Liberty county, in payment of a bridge built by it across the San Jacinto river. The contract was made by the commissioners’ court on behalf of road district No. 3 of Liberty county. Appellant also prated for mandamus, requiring the treasurer of Liberty county to pay the amount of its warrant from the funds of road district No. 3 in preference to any and all other claims against the district. The treasurer of Liberty county, the county judge, and the individual commissioners and the commissioners’ court of Liberty county were all made defendants. They answered jointly by general demurrer, general denial, and special pleas to the effect that appellant’s claim, if legal, was only one of a large number of claims against road district No. 3, and that all such claims “are upon an equal footing, and none of them has any preference or priority over any other debt or. obligation of said district.” Road district No. 5 of Liberty county intervened, alleging that it held a preference claim against the funds of district No. 3 to the extent of $11,007.91, with interest. On a trial to the court without a jury, judgment was entered in favor of road district No. 6, giving it preferred payment, and in favor of appellant for the unpaid balance of its warrant, but denying it any preference, and directing that all other claims against road district No. 3 be allowed and be paid pro rata. From this judgment, Austin Bros. Bridge Company has duly perfected its appeal.
It was agreed: That road districts Nos. 3 and 5 were duly incorporated ás road districts of Liberty county prior to October 1, 1920; that both districts had issued bonds under the provisions of the statutes of this state, and on the 11th day of October, 1920, district No. 5 had oh deposit with the treasurer of Liberty county $11,007.91. That district No. 3 had issued bonds in the sum of §150,000, and on the last-mentioned date had on deposit with the treasurer of Liberty county funds to the amount of $9,300. That on said date Moore & Sons and H. F. Bland held a claim against district No. 3 in the sum of $11,007.91 for work done on the roads of district No. 3 under a lawful contract with *676the commissioners’ court for which warrant had been issued in said sum, and which was transferred to district No. 5 under the following order of the commissioners’ court, dated 11th day of October, 1920:
“Whereas, the contractors, Moore & Sons and H. P. Bland, have finished their work in road district No. 3, and there is not sufficient funds in road district No. 3 to pay them, and they have received $11,007.91 in scrip drawing 8 per cent, interest, it is ordered that road district No. 6 pay off said warrant for $11,007.-91, and hold said interest-bearing scrip to be paid by road district No. 3 soon as money is available.”
That appellant, Austin Bros. Bridge Company, on said date hold a claim against road district No. 3 for its work in building the bridge acyoss the San Jacinto river, arising out of a lawful contract, in the sum of $42,-923.04, covered by two warrants, one for $7,-237.68, and the other for $35,685.36. That appellant had transferred the first-named warrant to the First National Bank of Cleveland, and on said last-mentioned date, under orders of the commissioners’ court, it surrendered the last-mentioned warrant, and received in lieu thereof two warrants, one for $26,385.36, and one for $9,300, both warrants being issued on the 11th day of October, 1920. That on the 12th day of October, the warrant for $9,300 was paid by the county treasurer from the funds of road district No. 3 then on hand, and on that date the commissioners’ court entered an order, directing that the warrant for $26,385.36 “be registered prior to the registration of all other warrants ordered issued payable from the funds of road district No. 3 of said county.” That said warrant was, in fact, registered prior to all other outstanding warrants. That on November 8, 1920, the commissioners’ court made and entered the following order:
“It is ordered that the treasurer pay to Austin Bros. Bridge Company the sum of $2,000. with road district No. 3 funds, and that the further sum of $12,385.36 be paid out of the first moneys received from the state highway department to cover state aid on contracts in road district No. 3, Liberty county, or from other sources, and the treasurer is hereby directed to pay said last-named sum of money upon receipt thereof from said sources, or any other sources, when Austin Bros. Bridge Company surrenders warrant No. 1, now outstanding for face value of $26,385.36.”
That on the warrant for $26,385.36 there ■was paid the sum of $1,200 on the 21st day of October, 1920, and $2,000 on the 9th day of November, 1920; appellant’s suit being for the balance due on this warrant. “That there is due said road district No. 3, in addition to the $17,753.87 now on hand in cash, the sum of $6,741.06 from the state highway department, and the further sum of approximately $21,000, due on account of bonds of said road district No. 3.” That the following claims, totaling $36,752.62, were outstanding against district No. 3 at the time of the trial of this case:
Registered Warrants.
Warrants No. Date. Name of Holder. Amount.
66 Oct. 12, 1920 Austin Bros, B. Co. $26,385 36
Paid on % Oct. 21, 1920.. $12,000
Paid on % Nov. 8, 1920... 2,000 14,000 00
$12,385 36
69 Oct. 12, 1920 Austin Bros. .B. Co., 7,237 68
67 Oct. 12, 1920 J. S. Moore & Sons & Bland 11,007 91
71 Oct. 13, 1920 W. F. Finley 2,699 59
72 Oct. 13, 1920 J. S. Moore & Sons & Bland 1,989 58
73 Oct. 13, 1920 J. S. Moore & Sons & Bland 1,000 00
Total registered warrants.$36,320 12
Not Registered.
Warrants No. Date. -Name of Holder. Amount.
75 Nov. 20, 1920 C. N. Smith 7 40
79 Dec. 3, 1920 A. D. Davidson 85 00
82 Dec. 3, 1920 A. D. Davidson 15 00
83 Dec. 22, 1920 Gilchrist Heirs 75 00
85 Dec. 22, 1920 W. A. Cannon 15 00
86 Dec. 22, 1920 H. L,. McFiller 100 00
87 Dec. 22, 1920 Mattie Daniel 75 00
101 Mar. 21, 1921 H. C. Beshell 37 60
102 July 7, 1921 Wm. Burkett 20 00
Total warrants .not registered.$422 50
Opinion.
1. The law fixes and determines the order in which creditors of a road district shall be paid from its funds; that is, they shall be paid in the order of the execution of the contracts under which thejf arise. When one makes a contract with a commissioners’ court for the performance of work on the roads of a road district, he at once acquires a vested interest in the funds of such district to the full extent of his contract, and the commissioners’ court has no power to impair such vested right by paying out the funds to subsequent contractors or creditors. The rights of all subsequent contractors are inferior to the first contractor. Their claims against the funds of the district must be determined in the order of their contracts. First National Bank v. Terry, Briggs & Co., 203 Ala. 401, 83 South. 170.
2. Appellant did not raise the issue of preference just discussed, neither by its plea nor by its proof. The record is absolutely silent as to the respective dates of the contracts under which accrued all the claims now outstanding against road district No. 3.
3. Appellant by its plea grounded its claim to a preferred payment on the two orders of the commissioners’ court, the one, dat*677ed tlie 12th of October, 1920, ordering that its claim be registered first, and the other, dated the 8th day of Novembef, 1920, directing that its claim be paid out of the first money received by the district. These orders gave appellant no cause of action for preference, and are insufficient to change the relative rank of its claim as a charge against tfie funds of road district No. 3. From the nature of its organization, there is no necessity for registering the warrants of a road district. There is no statutory requirement that they be registered. Then no inference of priority afises in appellant’s favor from the order directing that its warrant be first registered. The rights of the creditors of road district No. 3 were vested when both orders were made by the commissioners’ court, and to sustain either order would be to vest in the commissioners’ court the power to impair contracts and to defeat vested rights.
 4. We recognize that the commissioners’ court is a court of record (Gano v. Palo Pinto County, 71 Tex. 99, 8 S. W. 634), and “when it acts within its statutory and constitutional limitations its proceedings cannot be attacked collaterally” (Temple Lumber Co. v. Commissioners’ Court of Sabine County [Tex. Civ. App.] 239 S. W. 668). But when it affirmatively appears on the face of the record that it had no jurisdiction over the subject-matter bf its orders, its proceedings are void and of no ei'tect, and can be impeached collaterally. In aealing with the contractors doing work on the roads of district No. 3, the commissioners’ court had jurisdiction to make the contracts, to audit the accounts, and to approve or reject claims. It had no authority to decree a preference. All such orders were absolutely void. What it-could not do directly it could not do indirectly by ordering that certain warrants be registered prior to all other warrants. It is our conclusion that all orders made by the commissioners’ court under which appellant claimed a preference against the funds of road district No. 3 were void and do not sustain its prayer for mandamus.
6. We are not holding that the creditors as among themselves may not waive their preferences, nor that by their conduct and agreements among themselves a prior creditor may not be estopped to assert a preference, but, as no such issues were pleaded in this case, it is not necessary for us to review the facts in order to determine whether they were raised by the evidence.
 6. The order of the commissioners’ court, directing that the funds of road district No. 5 be invested in the warrant of Moore & Sons and ,H. F. Bland, was illegal in the sense that the court had no authority to invest those funds in commercial paper, but that order in no way affected the other creditors of the district, and they had no interest in it. Hence they are not in position to raise any issue affecting the validity of that order. Under the order, road district No. 5 became the owner and holder of the warrant issued to Moore & Sons and H. F. Bland, and was subrogated to all their rights, but it acquired no claim against road district No. 3 nor its funds, beyond the interest of Moore <⅛ Sons and H. F. Bland. Its funds did not increase the assets of road district No. 3, nor decrease its liabilities. Road district No. 3 was not a party to that order. It was made by the commissioners’ court representing road 'district No. 5. Therefore road district No. 5 had no equitable right to a preference above the other creditors of district No. 3. To give it a preference on this illegal order of transfer would be to deplete the funds of district No. 3, and thereby impair the rights of its other creditors. But by subrogating it to the rights of Moore & Sons and H. F. Bland; the funds of district No. 3 are not affected, nor are the rights of the other creditors impaired. We believe the trial court erred in giving district No. 5 preference based on the order of transfer. As it did not raise the issue of priority of the contract of Moore & Sons and II. F. Bland, but grounded its claim for preference on the illegal order of the commissioners’ court, there is no basis in the record for the judgment in its favor.
7. The legal title to the funds of road district No. 3 was in the commissioners’ court of Liberty county. It occupied a trust relation to all creditors of the district. Its powers and duties as such trustee are thus defined by the Supreme Court in Austin v. Cahill, 88 S. W. 550:
“It is, in brief, the lawful conservator of a specific property for a particular trust purpose, and its duties in that respect are commensurate with its powers. It became entitled to make, and it is its duty to make, every defense for the beneficiaries against an opposing claim that they could make if before the court in their own proper persons. Being invested with such powers and subject to such obligations, those for whom it holds will necessarily be bound by what is done against as well as by it.”
Under the authority thus given to the commissioners’ court, it answered in this case to the effect that all the creditors of road district No. 3 were “upon an equal footing, and none of them has any preference or priority over any other debt or obligation of said district.” From the presentation made of this case before us, it affirmatively appears that no proof whatever was offered to sustain this plea. Then the judgment of the trial court ordering a pro. rata payment to the creditors of road district No. 3 has no support in the evidence. •
8. As appellant had a cause of action *678on its debt, the trial court erred in not giving it judgment for its costs.
It is our ordet that the judgment of the trial court be in all things reversed, and this cause remanded for a new trial.