101 Cal. 483 | Cal. | 1894
It would be necessary, if we were to state the facts upon which all the points made by appellant are based, practically to copy the statement on motion for a new trial, as there are ninety-two assignments of error and specifications of insufficiency of the evidence based upon sixty-five pages of the record. With the exception of those hereinafter referred to, they are entirely without merit, although sufficiently plausible as they are stated to entail upon the court a great deal of unnecessary labor in passing upon them.
Briefly stated, this is the case: The defendant, Gardi
It is claimed by the plaintiff that when this bond was executed, Gardiner held of the moneys he had collected for the company the sum of $880.37; that between the date of the execution of the bond and September 1, 1889, he held moneys of the plaintiff amounting to $16,073.52, including said $880.37, and that he paid in during that period $14,982.91, leaving a balance due the corporation of $1,091.61. Of this amount there is evidence tending to show that $1,000 was collected by Gardiner in August, 1889, on a note for that amount executed to one Beoekman, but no record of the transaction appears in the books, except the order of the board authorizing the issuance of the note. Plaintiff recovered judgment in the court below against the sureties for $1,000 and costs of suit, and from that judgment and an order denying their motion for a new trial defendants have appealed.
The court gave to the jury the following instruction:
“If you find from the evidence that defendant J. S. Gardiner, on the sixteenth day of February, 1889, had,*487 or should have had, in his hands as secretary of plaintiff any moneys of plaintiff, and that the subsequent deposits and payments made by him to plaintiff and the treasurer of plaintiff, between said date and the first day of September, 1889 (not applied to the payment of other accounts, balances, and receipts), equalled such amount so found in his hands on said date, then, and in that event, the court instructs you to add the amounts found in his hands February 16,1889, to the amounts received by him as secretary of plaintiff between said sixteenth day of February, 1889, and September 1, 1889, and deduct from this total amount the amount of payments made by him to the plaintiff and plaintiff’s treasurer, as .shown by the evidence. The balance, if any, would be the balance in the hands of said Gardiner, as secretary of plaintiff, and would be the amount owing by him to plaintiff on said date, and for which balance of said amount, the court instructs you, you will render a verdict for the plaintiff, unless you also find that the sum has been subsequently paid.”
This instruction was erroneous. It declared to the jury that the sureties were liable for all moneys collected by Gardiner and not turned over to the company prior to February 16, 1889, and assumes that he was not a defaulter in any sum prior to the time of the execution of the bond in suit. In this assumption the learned judge usurped the functions of the jury. It was for the latter to determine, upon all the circumstances of the case, whether Gardiner was a defaulter at the time the bond was executed; and- if he was, the sureties therein were not liable for his dereliction. Where a second bond is executed, the sureties are not liable for money converted by the officer prior to its execution, and the plaintiffs are bound to show a conversion after the execution of the bond sued upon. ( Williams v. State, 89 Ind. 570; Governor v. Robbins, 7 Ala. 82; Thompson v. Dickerson, 22 Iowa, 360.) In the last case cited the court said: “This bond was not retrospective in its terms, and in such a case there can be no ground for
In Rochester v. Randall, 105 Mass. 295, 7 Am. Rep. 519, the court said: “The cause of action against him arose in 1862, when he rendered his account.....We cannot regard the defendant’s bond as applying to it..... In Myers v. United States, 1 McLean, 493, it is said that it would be doing great injustice to a surety to hold him responsible for a default consummated before he became hound; and in Farrar v. United States, 5 Pet. 373, it is said that the bond should be made retrospective in its language, if it is intended to cover past derelictions, and all the cases cited for the defendants sustain similar views.” (See, also, Potter v. Trustees, 11 Bradw. 280; School District v. McDonald, 39 Iowa, 564.) In Board of Education v. Fonda, 77 N. Y. 358, the court said: “For any sum paid to a principal before the execution of a bond for official good conduct, there is but one ground on which the sureties can be held to answer, and that is that the principal still held the money in hank or otherwise. If still in his hands, he was, up to that time, bailee to the public; but, if he had become a debtor or defaulter thereto, his offense was already consummated.” (Farrar v. United States, 5 Pet. 372.) It was said there that if it was meant to cover past deeds, the bond should have been made retrospective, and that the sureties had not undertaken against his past misconduct. In Vivian v. Otis, 24 Wis. 520, 1 Am.Rep. 199, the court said: “For any moneys paid Otis prior to the execution of this bond, and in his hands at the commencement of the second term, the sureties therein became answerable to the county. But, if he had already appropriated to his own use any of those moneys, he had been guilty of a breach of duty; it was a past delinquency or default for which they never became responsible. How does the fact that
It will be found that there is not an entire agreement in the decided cases respecting the liabilities of sureties on second bonds, but the rule stated is deduced from the weight of authority, and is the more rational one.
It is claimed by respondent that it was shown conclusively that the day after the giving of the bond Gardiner had in his bands $880.37 belonging to the company; that, thereafter, $1,000 was paid to him for the company, the
It is true the record shows that Gardiner paid to the treasurer $718.78 more than he had received subsequent to February 16th, and prior to September 1, 1889, so far as the books showed, but there is nothing to show the source from which these moneys were received. If they were, in fact, moneys collected by him prior to the execution of the bond, as claimed by the respondent, they would to the extent stated, $718.78, have gone to pay off the prior indebtedness, and the same is true if they were taken from the private funds of Gardiner. This, however, would not cure the error of the instruction, which covers the whole amount of the defalcation. If the money referred to was actually collected subsequent to February 16, 1889, we cannot agree with respondent in his contention that the company, at least in the absence of direct instructions from the secretary to apply it to the prior indebtedness, could so appropriate the money and render the defendant liable for the delinquency. The court in allowing this would be robbing Peter to pay Paul. In Porter v. Stanley, 47 Me. 515, it appeared that Stanley was collector of taxes for the years 1854, 1855, and 1856, and gave bonds with different sureties. As collector for the year 1854 he received moneys, and omitted to pay a portion of the same into the treasury. The selectmen appropriated from moneys received on the assessments for the years 1855, 1856, sufficient to balance the deficiency for the year 1854, without the request of Stanley, who nevertheless consented thereto. The court said: “ The appropriations so made were manifestly inequitable, as respects the sureties, and, by the authorities cited for the plaintiffs, cannot be upheld. It is said, in the opinion of the court in the case of United States v. January, 7 Cranch,
It is claimed by the appellant that the evidence does not support the verdict, and, as we understand the testimony of the experts and that of the plaintiff’s treas
The court erred in admitting testimony as to the amounts actually received and paid in by Gardiner between September 1 and October 5, 1889. The complaint charges that the defendant, Gardiner, as secre.
We see no merit in any other exception. The exception to the refusal of the court to give instruction Fo. 11, which is the only one other than the one above referred to worthy of notice, is not well taken. The officers of the company may have had “reason to know and believe that the said Gardiner had failed in his duty to pay, in that he had failed to pay over the said sum to the treasurer of said company,” and failed to-communicate the fact to the sureties, yet, unless there was fraud—an actual intent to conceal, or culpable negligence—the sureties would not be released from their liability. (Guardian Fire etc. Assur. Co. v. Thompson, 68 Cal. 208; Bostwick v. Van Voorhis, 91 N. Y. 357; Roper
The judgment and order are reversed, and the cause remanded for a new trial.
Harrison, J., and Garoutte, J., concurred.