Coleman v. Pike County
Coleman v. Pike County
Opinion of the Court
When this' case was before us on a former appeal, the record stated, that the paper for four hundred and nineteen dollars, which was . introduced in evidence by plaintiff, was given by the county treasurer for county taxes collected by him as agent of the collector. The present record shows, that it was given for warrants against the county, which the collector had received in payment of taxes. In making the settlement with the county treasurer for the month of November, 1885, he ascertained that he had taken warrants to such amount from the tax-payers, that he did not have enough currency to pay the State its proportion of the taxes. He took sufficient money out of the November collections to settle with the State for that month, and turned over to the treasurer the excess of warrants, for which he gave the paper referred to, to be accounted for on the next settlement. It is insisted, that the sureties on the official bond of the treasurer are not chargeable with the amount of the warrants, on the ground that the collector had no authority to receive them from the tax-payers in payment of taxes, and that the treasurer was equally without authority to receive them frbrn the collector. This be
We do not perceive the relevancy of the evidence, offered by the defendants, to show that Hilliard acted as county treasurer after the death of the treasurer, until the appointment of his successor, and that on a settlement with the county commissioners, he paid four thousand dollars received by him during the time he was so acting. It does not tend to pi’ove or dispx’ove the liability of the sui’eties, or its amount, and has no connection whatever with the official transactions of the deceased treasurer.
The other questions raised by the record were settled adversely to appellaxits on the former appeal. — 83 Ala. 326.
Affirmed.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.