133 P. 367 | Mont. | 1913
delivered the opinion of the court.
From the first Monday of January, 1905, to the first Monday in January, 1909, W. E. Davies was the duly elected, qualified and acting clerk of the district court of Silver Bow county. During a portion of that period W. P. Farrell was his chief deputy. The American Bonding Company of Baltimore was the surety on Davies’ official bond. During the time Farrell was acting as deputy clerk he issued false and fictitious jurors’ certificates, none of which bore the imprint of the official seal, and these certificates, to the amount of $2,076, came into the possession of the State Savings Bank of Butte and were by it
The facts concerning Farrell’s peculations and the character of the instruments which he issued will be found detailed at length in In re Farrell, 36 Mont. 254, 92 Pac. 785, and in County of Silver Bow v. Davies et al., referred to in the statement above. Appellant insists that the certificates held by the bank were void, citing In re Farrell, above, and therefore the bank had no just claim against the county for their payment; that, having paid the bank the face value of the certificates, the county could have recovered back the money so paid in an action for money paid by mistake. To this extent appellant’s contention may be conceded for the purposes of this appeal. It is further insisted that since the county chose to proceed against the district clerk and the surety company, — the surety on his official bond,- — to compel them to make good tfie county’s
1. Assuming that the county of Silver Bow had a cause of action against the bank to recover back the money it paid out on spurious certificates, it does not follow that by paying the county’s loss the surety on the clerk’s official bond became
2. According to the allegations of this complaint, the State Savings Bank is in possession of and holds the legal title to the money which it secured from the county upon the fictitious certificates. At law this surety company would not have any right of action against the bank; but to state a cause of action at all it must allege such facts as will appeal to the conscience
3. If the county had refused to pay the certificates held by the bank, would the bank have had a cause of action against the surety company for its loss? The surety company was
To sustain their contentions, counsel for appellant rely upon the decision in National Surety Co. v. State Savings Bank, 15fi Fed. 21, 13 Ann. Cas. 421, 14 L. R. A. (n. s.) 155, 84 C. C. A. 187. Bourne, the deputy auditor of Ramsey county, Minnesota, fraudulently issued spurious refunding orders on the county treasurer, procured the chairman of the board of county commissioners to authenticate them, indorsed the names of the fictitious payees, and then sold the orders to the State Savings Bank. The bank presented them for payment and received from the county their face value, with accrued interest. The fraud having been discovered, the county brought action against the auditor and the surety company, the surety on his official bond, and recovered. The surety company, having paid the county, commenced an action against the bank’ to recover the amount which the bank had collected from the county. A general demurrer to the bill was sustained. The surety company appealed to the circuit court of appeals for the eighth circuit. The majority of the court held that Bourne’s personal, as distinguished from his official, misconduct would have been the proximate cause of the bank’s loss had the county refused to pay the orders, and therefore the surety on the auditor’s official bond could not be held responsible for such personal misconduct. But it was Bourne’s official misconduct which called the spurious orders into existence. (Board of County Commrs. v. Sullivan, above.) If he had issued them to real persons, but to persons not entitled to them, and such persons had negotiated them to the bank, there is not any question that the bonding company would have been liable to the bank for the injury sustained. Now by just what species of legal legerdemain Bourne’s forgeries of the indorsements of the fictitious payees, added to his wrongful act in issuing the spurious orders, could
The complaint does not state a cause of action, and the judgment of the district court is affirmed.
Affirmed.