Thorne v. Board of Commissioners of Washington County
Thorne v. Board of Commissioners of Washington County
Opinion of the Court
By the Gov/ri
By an act of the Legislature passed March 20,1858, commissioners were authorized to locate and open out a road leading from a certain point in
It is evident that the Legislature, while assuming to act in
We are not surprised that the judge of the District Court, to whom the issues were submitted without-the intervention of a jury, did not feel authorized to give to such a law other than a strict construction ; and we hold, with him, that the county of Washington cannot be made liable in this action, unless the law has been strictly complied with. The main object of requiring the commissioners, under the original act, to file a written statement of the expenses incurred, .was, doubtless, to enable the several county boards to examine' into its correctness, and thereafter to provide means for paying the amount for which their county was liable. The extent of this liability could not be known until the expenses were all incurred, and the statement filed, nor could either county be liable to an action prior to this time. When, therefore, the orders on which this action was brought, were drawn, the liability of the county-had not attached ; and before it was officially known what portion of said expenses the county of Washington had to meet and provide for, or whether any expenses at all had been incurred, for which orders might be drawn on the treasurer, the law was so amended as to change entirely the liability of the county, and to take from the road commissioners the right to draw orders for any purpose. In other words, the Legislature took from the road commissioners the right to draw orders, before that right had been properly exercised ; for we hold that, however great the inconvenience, they had no right to draw for the expenses at all, until after all the expenses had been incurred, and the statement thereof filed with the county board, as required by the act previous to the amendment.
It is not our intention here, to decide that the parties performing the labor and services for which the expenses repre
It is urged that the parties locating and constructing this road, did so on the faith of the counties being liable respectively in the manner provided by the original act; and that the right to hold the counties so responsible cannot be divested by the Legislature.
We do not think this doctrine as to vested rights can have application to this case. Indeed, it would be almost impossible to enforce the principle in favor of the various persons who have aided in locating and constructing this road. It is impossible to tell how many persons were employed, or how many orders were drawn, but judging from the number drawn on the county of Washington, there may have been twelve or fifteen hundred orders in all, and the holders of these several orders have probably all the rights-which belong to the Plaintiff. Now, it will hardly be contended that each laborer employed on this work, so far trusted to the several counties named, as to secure for each day’s labor a vested right to recover of them in the exact proportion which the length of the road in' each bore to the whole length. And yet he would secure this right against all, or none. He could not, however, be said to have trusted all the counties in the proportion named, because, under the law, the commissioners might have paid him by orders drawn on one county alone,— nor that he gave credit to any particular county, when he might be paid by an order on the treasury of another. How then can the Plaintiff reasonably claim a vested right to recover against the county oí Washington, on the ground of the credit given to her at the time, when neither he, nor they under whom he claims, knew on which county the commissioners would give an order for payment?
We do not see that the collecting of the tax can make any difference in the liability of the county. It was, doubtless, collected in ignorance of the amendment before mentioned; and so long as the money thus collected remains in the county treasury, the county authorities may refuse to pay it out until the rights of the parties claiming it are legally established.
Judgment affirmed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- John L. Thorne v. The Board of Commissioners of Washington County
- Status
- Published