Indiana Court of Appeals, 1920

Tipton Realty & Abstract Co. v. Kokomo Stone Co.

Tipton Realty & Abstract Co. v. Kokomo Stone Co.
Indiana Court of Appeals · Decided January 8, 1920 · Enloe
72 Ind. App. 121; 125 N.E. 577; 1920 Ind. App. LEXIS 21

Tipton Realty & Abstract Co. v. Kokomo Stone Co.

Opinion of the Court

Enloe, J.

—This is a second appeal of this case. For a statement of the facts out of which the controversy arose, see Tipton Realty, etc., Co. v. Kokomo Stone Co. (1916), 61 Ind. App. 681, 110 N. E. 688.

The several appeals from the allowances made by the board of commissioners were, by the agreement of all parties, consolidated in the Howard Circuit Court, where a trial was had before the court, result*123ing in a finding and judgment in favor of the said several claimants, materialmen, and directing that their said several claims be paid first out of said funds. The judgment, as the same relates to the appellee Kokomo Stone Company, was as follows: “It is now ordered, adjudged and decreed that the Kokomo Stone Company do have judgment against the Hoon Gravel Eoad fund in the sum of Eleven Hundred twenty-three and fifty-seven-hundredths ($1,123.57) Dollars, and the auditor of Howard County is ordered and directed to draw his warrant for said sum against the treasurer of Howard County, to be paid out of the funds in his hands on account of said construction of the A. E. Hoon Free Gravel Eoad.” The judgment as the same related to each of the other said appellees, materialmen, was similar.

From this judgment the abstract company prosecuted a vacation appeal to this court, in which appeal no supersedeas was asked. On this appeal neither the board of commissioners of Howard county, nor the county auditor was made a party thereto, nor appeared to said proceedings. The judgment of the circuit court was, on said appeal, reversed, and said cause remanded to the Howard Circuit Court with the directions to sustain the motion of appellants for a new trial, and for further proceedings. Tipton Realty, etc., Co. v. Kokomo Stone Co., supra.

Upon said cause being redocketed in the circuit court, various motions were made by the several materialmen, some of which were sustained, and others overruled, but, in the view we take of this case, said rulings are not of controlling importance, and need not therefore be considered.

*1241. After said cause had been redocketed in the circuit court, the board of commissioners appeared in court and moved to dismiss said appeals, on the ground that since said appeals had been taken from the judgment of the board, in which it had made the allowance to said abstract company, as hereinbefore set out, the abstract company had received, and said Howard county had paid to said abstract company the several remainders of said funds so allowed to the abstract company on said several claims, as hereinbefore set out. Said motion further alleged that said county had paid to said materialmen the several sums so allowed to them severally, and that said county no longer had any funds in its hands as funds of said several highways.

This motion was duly verified, and, the facts stated therein not being controverted, it was sustained and said appeal dismissed, to which action of the court appellants excepted, and from which judgment of dismissal they prosecute this appeal.

Section 7725 Burns 1914, Acts 1907 p. 572, among other things, provides: “* * * The county treasurer shall sell bonds at not less than their face value, and the proceeds shall be kept as a separate and specific fund to pay for construction -of the particular road or roads for which they were issued and to pay the costs incurred in the construction of the road, and the contractor for the construction of the same, to be paid by the said treasurer upon the warrant of the auditor, as directed by the board of commissioners.”

2. A court of appeals can only act where it has jurisdiction of parties and subject-matter and, if it lacks either, its acts, if it assumes jurisdiction, are void.

*1251. Under the law the board of commissioners of Howard county was the named disbursing agent—trustee of the funds—arising from the sale of the bonds for the several roads. The funds were under its control for this purpose. They remained under its control even after the several appeals to the Howard Circuit Court, and said board was therefore a necessary party to said appeals, as the aim and purpose of the several claimants in said suits was to acquire these funds so held. The judgment of the Howard Circuit Court from which the first appeal was taken recognized the relation of the board to these funds, and the capacity in which they were held, when it ordered the auditor of said county “to draw his warrant on the treasurer of said county” in favor of said claimants severally, and disburse said funds. The board of commissioners not having been made a party to said former appeal, said judgment could not, so far as it affected said county, and its custody and disposition of said funds, under said former judgment of the Howard Circuit Court, be in any way changed or modified. As to it, the judgment of reversal was- a nullity. The' judgment could not be reversed as to part of the parties thereto, persons affected thereby, and left unchanged as to^the others. It therefore follows that the former judgment of this court, in this cause, Tipton Realty, etc., Co. v. Kokomo Stone Co., supra, was not binding on the board of commissioners so far as said funds in its hands were concerned, and in no way affected said former judgment of the Howard Circuit Court in that behalf. Winfield v. McCaslin (1917), 186 Ind. 307, 116 N. E. 298; Cline v. Beaver (1915), 183 Ind. 296, 108 N. E. 231; Crumpacker v. Manhattan Lumber Co. (1916), *126185 Ind. 493, 112 N. E. 525; Lauster v. Meyers (1908), 170 Ind. 548, 84 N. E. 1087.

The judgment of the Howard Circuit Court, wherein it allowed and ordered said claims of said material-men paid, was never, so far as. said board of commissioners was concerned, appealed, from. It remained in full force and effect, and the auditor, ■having drawn his warrants and the county having disbursed said funds in accordance with said judgment, the matter, so far as this litigation is concerned at least, was forever closed.

The circuit court did not err in dismissing said cause, and the judgment is therefore affirmed.

Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.