Court Opinion

ID: 9305918
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-12-02 17:16:56.986354+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T17:13:54.300812
License: Public Domain

Thayer, J.,
(after stating the facts as above.} The first question to be considered is jurisdictional.
1. The respondents apparently concede, and for present purposes I shall assume, that the court has power to entertain these motions if the warrants now held by relators were issued in obedience to process of the-United States circuit court for the western district of Missouri. I shall assume that relators are right in asserting that an unlawful act or series of acts committed by county officers with intent to defeat the payment of county warrants, which they have been compelled to issue by the mandate of a court of competent jurisdiction, amounts to a contempt of its authority, and may be so treated. The respondents contend, however, and this seems to be the only ground of their objection to the jurisdiction, that the warrants here involved were not issued in obedience *403to judicial process of any sort; that they were drawn by the county court of Macon county merely at the request of the relators, and are in no sense the outcome of the mandamus proceedings in which the motions have been filed. If the facts are as they aver, I have no doubt that the objection to the jurisdiction is well taken. I can conceive of no ground on which the court, upon a mere motion filed in these cases, could inquire into the various acts complained of, or undertake to afford redress for the alleged wrongs, unless it be on the ground that the relators’ warrants were obtained by means of process issued in these suits, and for that reason are entitled to protection by further supplementary proceedings had therein. But the assumption that relators’ warr&nts were not issued in obedience to writs of mandamus does not seem to be well founded. The contention is based solely on the fact that the relators petitioned the county court to draw warrants on the special Missouri & Mississippi fund, in payment of their judgments, after the court had ordered warrants to be drawn on the “general fund,” and that the court granted such request. This fact, it is urged, places the warrants now held by relators on the same footing with warrants drawn by the county court of its own volition, in the ordinary exercise of its auditing powers. But it does not appear, and the return does not allege, that the relators ever accepted the warrants as originally drawn on the general fund as a compliance with the writs of mandamus, or that such warrants ever passed out of the possession of the county. The fact is that relators’ warrants wero issued “in lieu” of those originally ordered to he drawn, and that the relators accepted them as being iu compliance with the writs of man-do hi as. The first warrants were not paid, as respondents’ attorneys contend, by the issuance of the second warrants. The order of the county court merely provided that warrants on the Missouri & Mississippi fund should be issued in lien of those previously ordered to be drawn, the intent being evidently to substitute the former for the latter, and thereby comply with the writs of mandamus in a manner satisfactory to the relators. The warrants issued to the relators were also drawn on a fund that was properly applicable to the payment of their judgments, and the drawing of warrants on the Missouri & Mississippi fund was a substantial compliance with the writs of manda,mus. If the relators saw fit to demand warrants on that fund, and the county court thought proper to accede to the request, both parties intending that the act done should be accepted as a compliance with the writs of mandamus, the court should so treat it, and thus give effect to the intent of the parties. Viewing the matter in that light, I accordingly hold that relators’ warrants were obtained by virtue of process heretofore issued in these suits, and that the plea to the jurisdiction of the court should be overruled.
2. It accordingly becomes necessary to consider the motions on their merits. The return admits that respondents have done the several acts complained of, but denies that the acts done are illegal, or that they have been done with intent to defeat the payment of relators’ warrants. Therefore the motion to quash raises the question whether such acts are lawful or unlawful. Furthermore, the motion to quash the return is an ad*404mission of all material matters of fact therein alleged; and, as the return avers that the respondents have neither combined nor conspired to obstruct the collection of the relators’ warrants, but in all of their official acts have endeavored to comply with the laws of the stale as by them understood, it must be taken for granted on this hearing that such is the fact.
There appear to be three grounds on which the official action heretofore taken by the respondents is challenged. In the first place, it is said that they had no right to receive county warrants in payment of the special Missouri & Mississippi Railroad tax of one-twentieth of one per cent., and that their action in this respect was unlawful. This claim, •however, is n'ot made with much apparent confidence, and in my judgment there is no ground upon which it can be sustained. The fact is that county warrants have been receivable for county taxes for more than 25 years. Gen. St. Mo. 1865, c. 38, § 46, p. 232. Such was the law when relators’ bonds were issued, and the statute is very general in its terms. County warrants are made receivable in discharge of “any county or city revenue, license, tax, assessment, fine, penalty, or forfeiture.” Language could hardly be made more comprehensive. It has been the ■common practice for many years to receive county warrants in payment of county taxes of every description, and I am not aware that the practice has ever been called in question. It is argued that by permitting taxes belonging to the special Missouri & Mississippi fund to be paid in warrants, the preference by law accorded to warrants first drawn thereon and registered, may be defeated. This is no doubt true, but it is equally true of warrants drawn on all other funds. The practice of receiving warrants for county taxes tends to defeat the payment of warrants in the •order of priority, no matter on what fund they are drawn. Relators have no more reason for saying that warrants are not receivable for taxes belonging to their fund because such practice defeats priority than the holders of warrants drawn on other funds. Therefore, the argument employed is entitled to no weight, and must be overruled.
It is next contended that by the law enacted February 28, 1873, (Sess. Laws. Mo. 1873, p. 30,) permitting county warrants to be subdivided, so changed the law with respect to the administration of county finances, and so impaired the remedy for the collection of the relators’ debts, which was in force when the debts were contracted, — that such law is inoperative as to them. They accordingly claim that the respondents’ action was illegal in accepting iir payment of taxes due to the Missouri & Mississippi fund warrants that had been subdivided into small sums, pursuant to the act of 1873. I am compelled, to hold that that this position is untenable. In my judgment it is not supported by either of the decisions cited by relators’ attorneys, to-wit, Von Hoffman v. Quincy, 4 Wall. 535, and Edwards v. Kearzey, 96 U. S. 595, or by any of the authorities therein referred to. The act of 1873 did not attempt to alter the obligation of the county on any of its outstanding contracts, or to change the remedy for their enforcement. It facilitated to some extent the use of county warrants in paying county taxes, and this is all that •can be alleged against it.
*405Under the law as it stood in 1870, when the relators’ bonds were issued, it was possible to make use of county warrants in payment of taxes quite as extensively as they may now bo used under the act of 1878. The law at that time permitted them to be assigned, and did not limit the number of persons who might be named as assignees. A number of joint assignees of a warrant might lawfully use the same to pay taxes severally due from them to the county. No law of the state then or now in force, so far as J have been able to find, either in express terms or by necessary intendment, prohibited such a practice. For some reason— very likely to facilitate the transaction of business in some of the poorer counties of the state, where warrants were in common use — the legislature saw fit to pass the act of February 28, 1873, which 1 think it clearly had the right to do, inasmuch as it did not thereby interfere with any vested rights.
It is finally urged that the respondents violated the law in accepting warrants in payment of taxes due to the Missouri & Mississippi fund that were not properly assigned. It is said that the collector violated the law in receiving such warrants for taxes, that the treasurer violated the law in accepting them from the collector as money without a sworn list, and that the county court violated the law in approving the treasurer’s settlement. It is undoubtedly true, as relators contend, that the legal title to a county warrant does not pass unless it is assigned by a full indorsement, in the mode provided by statute. It is also probably true that the statute contemplates a legal, rather than an equitable, assignment of a warrant, before it may be used by an assignee in payment of county taxes. There is not even a suggestion in these motions, however, that the various tax-pavers who used warrants to pay taxes were not in good faith the equitable owners thereof; and, furthermore, it is shown both by the motions and the return, that the action taken by the collector and treasurer in the matter now under consideration was approved by the county court, acting in a judicial capacity, when the county treasurer made his annual settlement. Under tírese circumstances the court can grant no relief, even though some -warrants were received in payment of taxes that were not regularly assigned, and even though the list returned by the collector to the treasurer was not properly verified. In the case of State v. Winterbottom, 123 U. S. 215, 8 Sup. Ct. Rep. 98, it was expressly hold that it was competent for the county court, in its settlement with the county treasurer or collector, to waive all such irregularities in the mode of receiving warrants in payment of county taxes as are here complained of. Referring to the collector, and his right to receive warrants in payment of taxes, the court said:
“He had a right to receive county warrants in payment of taxes. The law * * * declares it to be his duty to receive them. Whether they were received by him under the exact circumstances which the law directs as to original ownership or assignment to the party who presented them wero matters for which he might have been called to account by the county court, and that body, in making the settlement with him, might possibly have had the power to reject the warrants so received in making up the account; but, inasmuch as they wero actual obligations of the county, payable out of the county funds, *406and receivable! in payment of taxes, if properly tendered, the county court * * * could waive any such irregularity in the time and mode of presenting their own obligations, and credit the collector with them in the account.”
There seems to be little need of pursuing the subject further. The only acts complained of that could possibly be regarded as entitling the relators to any of the relief sought in this proceeding, are those last considered, and it seems that they are mere irregularities, which the count}' court has the power to waive, and has -already waived .by approving the treasurer’s settlement.
It also stands admitted by the motion to quash that the action of the county court in waiving such irregularities was not due to any fraudulent combination to injure the relators, but was done in the exercise of a sound judicial discretion reposed in that body. From any point of view, therefore, the return made by the respondents is sufficient, and the motions to quash must be overruled. It is so ordered.