On June 24, 1924, a petition was presented to this court by J. A. Huddleston (now deceased) wherein it was alleged that on June 8, 1920, the county court of McDowell County having authorized the same, an order on the sheriff of said county was drawn in favor of W. W. Whyte for the sum of $25,000, payable out of County Road Class B fund, which order was signed by H. N. Eavenson, who was the president of the said court and by W. W. Whyte who was then its clerk; that on the 9th day of June, Whyte indorsed and sold the said county order to petitioner for $25,000, which was then paid by petitioner in good faith, relying upon the validity of said order; that in 1924 petitioner presented the said order to the sheriff of said county, who not only refused payment, but also refused to indorse on the order "presented for payment," etc.; that in June, 1924, and subsequent to the said presentation to the sheriff, petitioner presented the order to the said county court with the demand that it provide for its payment out of its next county levy, and that such demand was refused. The petition then prayed for an alternative writ of mandamus returnable July 1, 1924, commanding the county court to provide for the payment of the order or show cause why they should not do so.
The alternative writ was issued as prayed for, and on July 1, the answer of the county court was filed, which stated:
That the said court did not authorize the issuance of the said order on June 8, 1920, or at any other time, out of the County Road Class B fund or any other fund or appropriation and that there was not due to W. W. Whyte on that date or at any other time any bond, note, claim, salary or debt, in payment whereof the order would be issued;
That the court was not in session on June 8, 1920, and that it did not then or at any other time by its President, H. N. Eavenson, sign a warrant for $25,000 payable to W. W. Whyte, out of Class B Road fund or any other fund or appropriation, that H. N. Eavenson did not then or at any other time sign such warrant, and that there was no stub in the *Page 708 County Road Class B Fund Warrant Book, showing the issuance of any warrant for any such amount to W. W. Whyte.
The depositions of the members of the county court in June, 1920, were taken, which fully support the statements in respondent's answer. Mr. Eavenson, while admitting his signature to the order, denied "signing it on that warrant to W. W. Whyte." He stated he had no idea how his signature was secured, but was positive he did not sign the warrant as it is now. He further stated that McDowell County was never indebted to Mr. Whyte in any manner except for his salary as clerk. He admitted the possibility of Mr. Whyte having had him sign a check in blank, but had no recollection of ever having done so. There is no evidence to the contrary. Mr. Whyte died suddenly in May, 1924.
If the warrant was altered or filled in contrary to instructions after Mr. Eavenson signed it, and before it was purchased by the petitioner, then the relator could have no higher rights to enforce its payment than Mr. Whyte would have had. This order was not a negotiable instrument.
"Such orders as these have, except in few cases, been held by courts not as notes or evidences of debt importing promises to pay, on which actions could be maintained, but only as vouchers for disbursing officers and as guides to direct their disbursements." Ratliff v. County Court, 33 W. Va. 94, 10 S.E. 28.
"The assignee of a non-negotiable illegal claim can stand on no higher ground than the assignor, and he is entitled to no more consideration even though its assignment be for value." Davis v. County Court, 38 W. Va. 104, 18 S.E. 373.
Consequently, the fact that Mr. Huddleston purchased the order in good faith and for value would not entitle the relator to enforce payment.
By affidavit made June 27, 1924, and filed with this case the petitioner made an explanation of how he secured the order in question somewhat variant to his petition, as follows:
"The affiant further says that on the 9th day of June, 1920, W. W. Whyte, Clerk of said Court, came to him at his place of residence in Excelsior and *Page 709 stated to him that the said county court and the County of McDowell were in need of funds for road purposes and had authorized the issuance of a county order on the treasury of said county for the sum of Twenty-five Thousand ($25,000) Dollars, and had authorized and directed him to secure and obtain the money on said order. The said W. W. Whyte then exhibited to the affiant the said order, dated June 8, 1920, payable to the order of W. W. Whyte for Twenty-five Thousand Dollars, and signed H. N. Eavenson, President, W. W. Whyte, Clerk, and endorsed the same, and requested the affiant to give him the money thereon for the benefit of said Court and said County of McDowell, stating to the affiant that the said County order would be paid to him in the fall of that year when the taxes for that year were due and payable, and out of the levies made. The said order is hereto attached and made a part of this affidavit.
"Affiant further says that he made and issued to said W. W. Whyte on said 9th day of June his check on the Berwind Bank in payment of said order so assigned to him by said W. W. Whyte, which check was dated the 9th day of June, 1920, and was for the sum of Twenty-four Thousand Dollars ($24,000.00), the sum of One Thousand Dollars ($1000.00) being deducted from the amount of said order as and for interest, or advanced interest, on said amount until the same would be paid as stated by the said W. W. Whyte, which said check was duly and promptly paid upon presentation by said Berwind Bank, and the said check, with its endorsements thereon, is herewith filed as part of this affidavit."
Counsel for relator cite authorities holding that municipalities can not only borrow money, but can borrow through agents and though a warrant may be void, if the county received the money it is estopped to deny its liability. But none of these authorities are West Virginia decisions, and are not applicable to the facts in this case. It is conclusively proven that neither the respondent nor McDowell County ever received any part whatsoever of the $24,000 paid for this order, but, on the contrary, that every dollar of it was expended by Mr. Whyte for his own private purposes. *Page 710
The explanation of Mr. Huddleston gives him no point of vantage. The members of the county court unanimously state that they never authorized Mr. Whyte to negotiate a loan with Mr. Huddleston. But, for the sake or argument, say that they did; then, according to Mr. Huddleston, he made a loan to respondent on June 9, 1920, which he admitted was not to have been paid until "in the fall." In other words, he accepted from respondent an obligation not payable out of the levy for the current fiscal year, and which the respondent was expressly forbidden by statute to make. Barnes' Code, 1923, ch. 28-A, sec. 12.
Under the Constitution a county court can not contract a debt except when authorized by a vote of the people. Art. 10, sec. 8. There is no contention in this case that this so-called indebtedness of McDowell County had first been submitted to a vote of the people and received three-fifths of all votes cast.
Referring to this provision of the Constitution, Judge DENT said in Davis v. County Court, supra:
"Every citizen, high or low, learned or unlearned, is bound to take notice of and abide by all its provisions, and he can not enjoy the protection, privileges and immunities it affords and then be heard to plead ignorance of its inhabitations. They who deal with the county authorities are charged with notice that such authorities are limited in their expenditures to the annual income derived from their power to levy taxes annually, and must make their contracts accordingly. To hold otherwise would place it in the power of such authorities to evade the constitutional limitation and bankrupt every county in the state."
Our decisions have rigidly upheld the Constitutional and Legislative limitations hedging in the authority of county courts to contract debts. We inherit from Virginia the policy "to keep the counties out of debt, to compel them to pay as they go, and to charge the county revenues of each year with its own burdens." Bank v. County, 28 W. Va. 273.
Judge DENT reiterates the principle in Hanley v. CountyCourt, 50 W. Va. 439, 40 S.E. 389:
"The county court may not make a contract to bind the levies of future years, * * * for over them it is given no control."
In Lawson v. County Court, 80 W. Va. 612, 92 S.E. 786, Judge POFFENBARGER most carefully and patiently explained that debts as such could not be contracted by county courts except upon a vote of the people. "The Constitution fixes that unalterably in the discretion and control of the people."
Judge LIVELY thundered the same principles in Shonk LandCompany v. Joachim, 96 W. Va. 708, 123, S.E. 444:
"The contracts under consideration were illegal and void, made expressly so by the statute and can not be enforced. The legislature has deemed it wise to so declare in order that levies may not be anticipated; floating indebtedness passed on to future years bringing about former chaotic conditions in fiscal affairs, and to insure that the fiscal bodies named in the statute shall have at their disposal funds to meet their contracts and obligations in the fiscal year when the obligations were incurred or the contracts made. Necessity and inconvenience will not justify the bending or breaking of the law." See accord: Dempsey v. Board of Education, 40 W. Va. 99, 20 S.E. 811.
No theory of this case based on law and the evidence sustains the relator's demand.
The peremptory writ will be denied and the petition dismissed.
Writ denied.
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