48 S.E. 627 | N.C. | 1904
This action is prosecuted by the plaintiff, trustee of the Farmers and Merchants Bank, for the recovery of the penalty of a bond executed by the defendants as sureties (177) of Thomas W. Dewey, late cashier of said bank. A jury trial being waived, the Court by consent found the facts material and necessary to a decision of the controversy. The Farmers and Merchants Bank was duly incorporated by chap. *129 55, Private Laws, 1891. Sections 3 and 4 of said act being the only sections referring to the election and terms of the officers of the bank, are in the following words: Sec. 3. "That the office and place of business of said banking company shall be in the city of New Bern, State of North Carolina, and the officers shall consist of a president, vice-president, cashier and teller, and a board of not less than five nor more than nine directors, who shall be elected annually by the stockholders; the directors so elected to choose the officers aforesaid, and shall require the president, the cashier and the teller each to give bond, with approved security, for the faithful performance of their respective duties. Sec. 4. That it shall be the duty of the board of directors and they are hereby fully empowered to make rules, regulations and by-laws for the government of said corporation and for the conduct of its business; also to fix the salaries of its officers and to fill vacancies in board of directors. Said board of directors shall be chosen by a majority of the corporators named herein at the first meeting to be called by them, which said board of directors shall hold office for one year and until their successors are duly elected, a majority of said board to constitute a quorum for the transaction of business." That under said act the said Farmers and Merchants Bank was duly organized on 3 March, 1891, and a board of directors elected by the stockholders, and that at a meeting of the said board of directors, held on 3 March, 1891, the defendant was elected cashier for one year and his bond fixed at the sum of twenty thousand dollars. That on 29 April the bond was, at a meeting of said board, presented and accepted, and thereafter no other bond was required or given during the continuance in office of said cashier. The parts of said bond material to the decision of this appeal (178) are: "Whereas, the above bounden Thomas W. Dewey has been chosen and appointed cashier of the Farmers and Merchants Bank, by reason whereof he will receive or have control, or be charged with money, property or things of said bank and others: Now the condition of this obligation is such that if the said Thomas W. Dewey, his executors or administrators, shall well and truly serve the said bank as such officer during his continuance in office, and well and truly perform and discharge all his duties as such officer, and shall at the expiration of his said office, or whenever sooner thereto required upon request to him or them made, shall make or give unto said bank a just and true account of all moneys." * * * That thereafter at a meeting of the board of directors of said bank held on 26 April, 1892, the said Thomas W. Dewey was elected cashier for the ensuing year, *130 and it was ordered that the bonds of the officers elected at said meeting be fixed at the same amount. That regularly each year thereafter the said Thomas W. Dewey was elected by the said board of directors as cashier for the ensuing year until and including the year 1903. There was no defalcation or breach on the part of said Dewey as such cashier until the year 1903. That during said year there was a defalcation by said Dewey to an amount exceeding the penalty of said bond. There was no by-law or resolution fixing the term of office of said cashier. The said bank failed and the plaintiff was appointed trustee. His Honor rendered judgment that defendants were liable on said bond and they excepted and appealed.
The defendants insist that by section 3 of the charter the terms of the officers, including the cashier, are made annual. This contention is seriously controverted by the plaintiff, he insisting that the words "elected annually" are confined (179) to the board of directors. The question is certainly not free from difficulty. Assuming, however, that, as contended by the plaintiff, the term for which the cashier was to be elected is left open by the charter, to be fixed by the directors, it would seem that the fact, as found by the Court, that at their first meeting and probably before any by-laws were adopted, they elected the defendant Dewey "for one year," confined his term to that period certainly, until changed by resolution or by-law. In respect to the liability of the sureties to the bond in suit, no action of the trustees thereafter changing the term, or failing to require a new bond, could enlarge or extend the time for which they could be held answerable. The board seem to have so regarded the matter, because just one year after the first election they re-elected the defendant "for the ensuing year," and ordered "that the bond be fixed at the same amount." This language excludes the idea that they regarded the defendant Dewey as continuing in office under the first election, or that the bond given covered the next term. They elected him annually thereafter, ordering that the "bond remain as heretofore." This language might possibly give rise to some doubt, but certainly that used at the time of the second election could not do so. We concur with the plaintiff's counsel that no question of usage or custom can arise in this case. The terms of the contract were fixed at the opening of the bank and nothing done thereafter by the directors could change or affect them in respect to the question before us. What then did the defendants contract to do? It may be well enough to say at the outset that we do not assent to the suggestion that it was not competent for or within the power of the directors to fix *131
the term for a longer time than their own term. We see no good reason why, if not restrained by the charter, they may not elect for a number of years, or to hold at their pleasure. It is frequently said that sureties are the favorites of the law and their obligation is strictissimi juris. This is true, (180) but we think the principle is correctly stated by Martin, J., in Bank v. Young,
Error.
Cited: Jackson v. Martin, post, 199.