delivered the opinion of the Court:
At a meeting of the board of supervisors of the county, held on the 9th of October, 1867, it was ordered “ that the sum of $3337.87 be appropriated out of the county treasury to complete the East Embarras bridge, provided the commissioners of highways enter into bond in the sum $7000 for the completion of said bridge within three months or as soon as practicable.”
Thereupon, on the same day, the commissioners of highways of the town of Lawrence (in which the bridge was located) executed, with securities, the bond required, which was presented to the county board and approved by a vote, accepted, and placed on file with the county clerk.
Subsequently, and on the 16th of October, 1867, there were issued,and delivered to Sage, the treasurer of the commissioners of highways of the town of Lawrence, a large number of county orders, of the denominations of ten dollars and five dollars, which he received and used in the completion of the bridge mentioned in the order by the county commissioners. Some of these orders were paid and canceled, others were paid out by Sage, and came into the hands of Wise, in payment, as it would appear, for labor and materials in the construction of the bridge.
*267This action is founded upon these county orders in the hands of Wise. The county resists the payment, and her counsel interposes several objections to the validity of these orders. One objection is that they are issued in small amounts and not for the whole amount of the appropriation, $3337.87. The transcript, from the proceedings .of the board of supervisors in September of 1867, shows that at a meeting properly held in September, a resolution was adopted, directing that the clerk should not issue orders in discharge of any appropriation in fractions, but that such orders should be for the whole amount of the appropriation. At a subsequent meeting of the same board (and before the appropriation in question was made) that order was specifically rescinded. The necessary implication from this action of the board is a sanction of the conduct of the clerk in issuing these orders in denominations of ten dollars and five dollars. Sage was a witness upon the stand, and testified that he did not receive orders to an amount in excess of the appropriation made by the board of supervisors.
It is also insisted, that before the issue of these ten dollar and five dollar orders, a county order had been issued for the entire sum of $3337.87, which was never returned or canceled. The proof shows that this order was never delivered to the highway commissioners or to their treasurer, but after it was made out and countersigned by the treasurer of the county, it was taken by Watts, who was then county clerk, with the intention of selling it. Watts disappeared from the country and his whereabouts is unknown. The evidence indicates that that order was not only never delivered to the highway commissioners, but has been destroyed. The records of the county treasurer show that it has never been presented for payment. There seems to be a confusion in the transcript of the record brought to this court, as to dates, otherwise there is no reasonable ground to defend against the payment of the orders sued on in this action, on account of the issue of that *268large county order, No. 5362, as it is called. The memoranda in the office of the county treasurer, of orders countersigned by the county treasurer, show that this large order (which was made out, but not delivered to Sage) bore date in September, which was prior to the making of the appropriation. These same memoranda indicate that subsequent to the date of the order designated as No. 5362, orders were made out and countersigned—one numbered 5363, for $2894.12; one numbered 5364, for $131.25; one numbered 5365, for $312.60, —(the three aggregating the amount of the appropriation made by the county board on the 9 th of October.) All bear date September 23, 1867. This is prior to the day when the county board made the appropriation of record of the $3337.87 for the finishing of this bridge. That appropriation was made on the 9th of October, as the record shows. If, however, there be any solution of this apparent confusion, showing that these three county orders dated upon September 23, 1867, were really subsequent to the appropriation made by the county board, these three orders seem never to have been used in any manner,—we find no specific proof that they were ever delivered to the payees. Whether this be so or not, they were canceled in the office by the treasurer, and the orders upon which the action is now brought were issued under, and by virtue of, the appropriation of the 9th of October, made by the county board. It is not perceived how the preparation and signing and countersigning of the apparently irregular orders, numbered 5362, 5363, 5364 and 5365, can have any meritorious or substantial bearing against the claim of the plaintiff to have payment of these county orders. On the face of the different transcripts of record, they are the first orders that were issued after the making of the appropriation upon the 9th of October, 1867. They were issued to the parties indicated by that appropriation, for the purpose indicated in the appropriation, and were used to accomplish that end. In justice as well as in law, the county ought to pay these *269orders, and we see no legal objection against the judgment which has been entered.
The judgment must be affirmed.
Judgment affirmed.