This case is before us on a petition to-rehear, the- first opinion having been filed at the Spring Term, 1898, and published in 122 N. C., 434. After further argument and a closer investigation, we have arrived at the conclusion that there was error in the former opinion in its reversal of the judgment of the Superior Court. That judgment ought to have been affirmed.
The plaintiff in his complaint alleged that the defendants were indebted to him in the sum of .... dollars due by eight judgments originally had in a Court of a Justice of the Peace, and afterwards docketed by transcript in the office of the Clerk of the Superior Court of Brunswick County, and prayed judgment that the defendants be compelled to levy a tax to pay the judgments and costs. The defendants-in their answer admitted that the judgments were procured as alleged, but averred that they were not valid and binding-against the defendants, for the reason that they were obtained against a former Board of Commissioners on school claims for which neither the defendants nor their predecessors were liable in law. The defendants further aver that the judgments were obtained on certain school orders issued about the year 1886 by the school committeemen of certain school ■districts of Brunswick County upon the Treasurer of the-County Board of Education, and that they were not a valid charge against the defendants, the Board of Commissioners,, or a charge upon the public funds of the county, or upon any
When the case came on for trial a jury trial was waived and it was agreed that his Honor who presided should find the facts, and the case was heard by the Court by the consent of counsel of the plaintiff and of the defendants. What facts could have been in the minds of the counsel, except the facts connected with the consideration of the claims on which the original judgments were procured, and those connecting the judgments of 1894, docketed in the Superior Court by-transcript, as being the same judgments which were originally rendered by the Justice of the Peace in 1888? No other facts could have been referred to, for they were raised by the pleadings, and the defendants in their answer had admitted that the judgments had been obtained by the plaintiff* as set out in his complaint. The plaintiff having failed .to plead his judgments in estoppel of the matter est out in the answer, or to demur to the answer, waived his rights as to any advantage which the law had given to his position, and by his agreement to submit the facts to the finding of the Court, went to the hearing on the merits of the original consideration upon which the judgments were granted. “Nuj merous decisions in this country and England hold that where a party has an opportunity to plead an estoppel, and
His Honor found as a fact upon the evidence, none of which was objected to, that the original judgments were obtained upon certain school orders issued during the year 1886, and that the judgments of 1894 in the Superior Court were the same judgments which were obtained before the Justice of the Peace in 1888, and that there was nothing in the record or judgment of 1894 to show what the cause of action was, except that they were brought on former judgments. Now, upon his Honor’s findings of fact, the legal question arises, were school orders issued in 1886 a debt for which the county wa'S liable, and for which the Board of Commissioners could be made to provide by taxation? We think not. '
The law in force at the time when the school orders upon which the plaintiff’s action was brought were issued, was The Code, chapter 15, Vol. 2, as amended by chapter 174 of 'the Acts of 1885. Section 2551 of The Code provides that the County Board of Education shall, on the first Monday in
The County Treasurer of each county was required to receive and disburse the public school funds, not under his general bond, but under a separate bond conditioned for the faithful performance of his duties as Treasurer of the County Board of Education. The County Board of Education were empowered, if they deemed it necessary, to require the Treasurer of the County Board of Education to strengthen his bond, and for any breach of that bond action was to be brought, not by the County Commissioners, but by the County Board of Education. The Code, section 2554.
The Treasurer of the County Board of Education was required to open accounts with each public school district, and report yearly to each school committee the amount appor
Erom this review of the law in force when the school orders were issued, upon which the plaintiff’s judgments were obtained, it appears that there was a complete separation of the school funds from the general county fund upon the apportionment being made, and from that time all control of the same by the County Commissioners ceased; that the funds were taken charge of by the Treasurer of the Board of Education under a separate bond; that the disbursements were made by that officer under orders signed by the school committees; that the accounts of the school fund were kept by that officer and the several school committees, and a report , yearly, to the County Board of Education made of all receipts of school funds by him, and the amount apportioned to each district was the fund out of which school orders were to be paid.
The county, therefore, through the Board of Commissioners, was not liable for the debt upon which those orders were issued.
If the amount apportioned to the district or districts, upon whose committee or committees the orders were drawn, had been in the hands of the Treasurer of the Board of Education, and he had defaulted in their payment, then the law required action for such defalcation to be instituted against that officer and his bond. If there never had been in the treasurer’s hands any funds to meet those orders because they were improperly issued, then there was no liability on either the county or the treasurer.
But besides the view of this case, as expressed above, we are of the opinion that before mandamus can be issued to compel the Board of Commissioners of a county to levy a
The prayer of the petitioners must therefore be granted. The case must be reheard, and the judgment of this Court entered therein at the Spring Term, 1898, must be set aside, and judgment entered at this term affirming the judgment of the Superior Court. Prayer of the petitioners granted.