Miller v. City of Socorro
Miller v. City of Socorro
Opinion of the Court
-The facts in this case show that plaintiff in error, William Hezekiah Miller, appealed to the district court having jurisdiction from the action of the city council of the city of Socorro, New Mexico, in refusing to fund warrants therefore issued by city and unpaid. ‘ The appeal is under the authority of section 286, Compiled Laws of 1897. In September following the city entered its appearance to the action. On September 10, 1897, the city council appears to have reconsidered the alleged indebtedness involved in this appeal, and on recommendation of its committee appointed to investigate in regard to the pending suit ordered that the claim should be recognized and the warrants funded as provided by law. On September 13, 1897, defendants in error petitioned the district court for leave to intervene as taxpayers. The court granted the leave on interveners amending their petition by setting up reasons why they seek to intervene and by giving reasons why the city will not properly defend, etc. From this amended petition it appears that the original disallowance of the claim on which appeal was based was for irregularities and fraud in the issuance of the warrants, that the meeting of the council of the city of Socorro held on September 10 was illegal, and that the council attempted with fraudulent intent to impose an unjust debt upon the city of Socorro in total disregard of the rights of taxpayers and interveners and that they fraudulently failed and neglected to interpose a proper and legal defense to the controversy involved in the appeal. On being admitted to defend, the defendants in error interposed the plea of the statute of limitations. Plaintiff in error moved to strike out amended petition and plea, which motion was overruled. Thereupon plaintiff replied to defendants’ plea and joined issue upon the statute of limitation and upon trial the court rendered judgment against plaintiff in error. Motion to vacate judgment was overruled and the plaintiff in error brings the record into this court on a writ of error.
The assignments of error are as follows:
1. The court erred in overruling the plaintiff’s demurrer to interveners’ amended petition of intervention.
2. The court erred in overruling the plaintiff’s demurrer to' interveners’ plea of the statute of limitations.
• 3. The court erred in finding that the statute of limitations applied to municipal or city warrants or orders, which are the basis of this action.
4. The court erred in sustaining the plea of the statute óf limitation plead by the interveners when the same was not the plea of the defendant city of Socorro.
We can discovei no error on the part of the court below in entering judgment against the plaintiff in error on his petition to fund the warrants here involved, and the case is therefore affirmed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- WILLIAM H. MILLER, in Error v. CITY OF SOCORRO, Defendant JOHN McCUTCHEN and J. M. HILL, Interveners, in Error
- Status
- Published
- Syllabus
- SYLLABUS BY THE COURT. Municipal Corporations —Warrants—Action—Intervention—Limitation. — 1. A tax payer may be granted leave to intervene m an appeal taken under section 289.of the Compiled Laws of New Mexico, 1897, by a claimant feeling aggrieved by the aetiom of the city council. 2. It is not error for the court to enter judgment against plaintiff, a plea of the statute of limitations having been interposed, on a petition to fund city warrants, where there is nothing in the record in explanation of the long delay of ten years or more, extending from the date of the city’s indorsement upon the warrants of “not paid for want of funds” to the date of bringing suit, in instituting the action.