175 Ga. 584 | Ga. | 1932
Lead Opinion
(After stating the foregoing facts.)
The execution in the present case was issued by county commissioners against a county treasurer and his surety, and was issued not only for principal but also for interest at 20 per cent, per annum, and for attorney’s fees. Under the decision in Massachusetts Bonding Co. v. Board of Commissioners of Richmond County, 172 Ga. 409 (157 S. E. 459), the execution must be construed as having been issued under section 585 of the Civil Code of 1910; and having been so issued, it could not be arrested by affidavit of illegality. The defendant 'surety company, therefore, was entitled to relief in equity, provided it showed a valid defense to the enforcement of the execution. Webb v. Newsom, 138 Ga. 342 (75 S. E. 106). The request of counsel for the plaintiff in error that the Richmond County case be reviewed and overruled is denied.
Did the petition set forth a valid defense against the claim of liability; and if so, did the court err in granting the interlocutory injunction, after hearing the evidence? Since the allegations of the petition were at least as strong for the plaintiff as the evidence which was later introduced, we will first discuss the question as related to the evidence. It appears from the evidence that the bank was insolvent on October 10, 1930, the date when the outgoing treasurer delivered to his successor the check for $36,217.28; and yet the bank was a going concern and continued to do business for a period of more than a month thereafter. The mere fact that the bank was insolvent on the date of the delivery and acceptance of this check, and of its deposit to the credit of the new treasurer, would not establish a violation of the bond of the old treasurer as for a failure to account to his successor in office. The question is, had the insolvency of the bank progressed so far that the bank could not have paid this check in cash upon its presentation in due course by the new treasurer. If the bank could and worfid have paid the check in whole, then there was no default by the old treasurer; but if the bank could and would have paid the check in part, but not in whole, there was a default to the extent of the difference. To that extent there was a loss of public funds by the insolvency of the bank, and for such loss the old treasurer and his surety were responsible to the county. After the allowance of certain credits, the execution is now proceeding for the principal sum of $10,527.54. Assuming that the evidence demanded the inference
Our conclusions upon these questions are supported by principle and authority. In Preston School District v. Robinson, 81 Minn. 305 (84 N. W. 105, 83 Am. St. R. 374), the facts were as follows: Eobinson was treasurer of the plaintiff school district. On August 6, 1898, while serving his first term, he was re-elected as his own successor, and made a bond on which the suit was later brought against himself and his sureties. In August, 1899, H. E. Wells was duly elected as Bobinson’s successor. Eobinson failed to pay over to Wells the sum of $1367.68 belonging to the school district, and this was the claim in suit. The defendants contended that Eobinson never in fact received the money in question, or its equivalent, and hence never became liable therefor. Eobinson was the district treasurer, and the funds entrusted to his keeping came from the county treasurer. That official delivered to him as district treasurer, on July 21, 1898, a check for about $3000 on Fillmore County Bank, which check was intended to cover public moneys due from the county to the school district. Eobinson accepted the check, presented the same to the bank for payment, and as school district treasurer received credit on the books of the bank for the full amount of the check. He subsequently checked out of the bank all of the money except the amount for which the action was brought.
In School District v. Hubbard, 110 Iowa, 58 (81 N. W. 241, 80 Am. St. R. 371), the case involved the following facts: Hubbard as treasurer of a school district made a settlement with its board of directors in September, 1897, in which he produced a statement of
In Oeltjen v. Menard County, 160 Ill. 409 (43 N. E. 610), suit was brought upon the official bond of Oeltjen as county treasurer of Menard County, Illinois. The bond was executed on October 19, 1893. The public funds involved in the controversy had been received by the treasurer, and deposited in a bank, before the execution of this bond. The bank failed on November 15, 1893, and the evidence showed that the bank was hopelessly insolvent at the time the bond was executed, and that it was continuing to do business by disposing of its property and by other temporary makeshifts. After the failure of the bank, and as a consequence thereof, the treasurer failed to pay over certain moneys, as required by law. It was contended by the sureties that the treasurer’s failure did not constitute an official delinquency occurring after the approval of the bond, for the reason that the money had been deposited in an insolvent bank before the bond was executed. The court held that there was no official delinquency until the bank ceased to do business and to honor such checks as were presented to it for payment, and thus overruled the contention of the defendants that the loss had occurred before the execution of the bond. While the Oeltjen case is not directly in point upon the question presented in the case at bar, it does illustrate the proposition that the surety here was liable only for such balance as may have existed after crediting the amount which the bank could and would have paid upon the check in the event the new treasurer had demanded cash thereon.
In Yawger v. American Surety Co., 212 N. Y. 292 (106 N. E.
In School District v. Hackman, 178 Minn. 199 (226 N. W. 514), it appeared that Daby as treasurer of a school district delivered to Hackman, his successor, a check upon a bank for the amount of money chargeable to him as such treasurer. Hackman took credit for the amount in the same bank, and, by reason of the failure of the bank about six weeks later, he was unable to account for a balance which remained in the bank at that time. An action was brought upon his bond. The court held that “Hackman received thé money, though the bank did not have cash in its vault in a sufficient sum to pay the amount; it having money in correspondent banks and other credits out of which payment, if demanded, could have been made.”
It is plain from the foregoing decisions that where an officer, as a public treasurer, in an accounting with the authorities to whom he is responsible, or with his successor in office, delivers checks, drafts, or certificates of deposit representing public funds which he has in bank, and the same are accepted in lieu of cash, and credit therefor is transferred by the bank to the authorities or the official to whom the accounting is made, the fact that the bank may be insolvent at the time of such transaction does not necessarily show a default by the officer making such accounting, but the transaction should in equity, as in the instant equity case, be treated as a transfer of money, to the extent of the amount which the bank could and would have paid in cash, if cash had been demanded. A
It will have been noted, of course, that our conclusion here is not predicated upon such' cases as Smith Roofing Co. v. Mitchell, 117 Ga. 772 (45 S. E. 47, 97 Am. St. R. 217); Pollak v. Niall-Herin Co., 137 Ga. 23 (72 S. E. 415, 35 L. R. A. (N. S.) 13), in which as between private parties it was held, in effect, that where the holder of a check delivers it to the bank upon which it is drawn- and is given credit therefor upon the books of the bank, the transaction is equivalent to and will be treated as a payment of the check. The question in the present case concerns the action of public officials with respect to .public funds, and as against the county (whether so as to others) liability will be determined by the amount of the funds which were lost in the bank. The check may in equity be treated as the equivalent of money, but can be so treated only to the extent that payment in cash could and would have been made thereon, if demanded, and the remainder, if any, is the criterion of liability.
While, as stated above, there is no statute or rule in this State which prohibits a county treasurer from depositing public funds in a bank, it is perfectly manifest that the general rule as to treating a check as payment where the holder is given credit therefor by the drawee bank should not be applied in a case like the present.
The foregoing conclusions contemplate a lawful payment by the bank, and are also based upon the assumption that the bank would commit no preference in paying the cheek or any part thereof, so that the amount paid could be recovered from the party receiving
If, as we have held above, the evidence showed at least a partial defense, it necessarily follows that the allegations of the petition, which were not less favorable to the plaintiff, were sufficient to set forth a valid defense. We conclude that the court did not err in overruling’ the demurrer upon all grounds, or in granting the interlocutory injunction pending trial by a jury upon the issues involved.
Judgment affirmed.
Rehearing
ON REHEARING.
1. A motion for a rehearing, filed by the defendant
in error, was granted. It is contended that we should have gone further and held that section 585 is unconstitutional, for reasons stated in the petition. The allegations upon this question are shown in the statement preceding the decision. In the original decision we held that the execution must be construed as having been issued by authority of section 585, and that having been so issued it could not be arrested by affidavit of illegality. This was in accordance with the decision in Massachusetts Bonding Co. v. Richmond County, 172 Ga. 409 (supra). That decision did not rule in' terms upon the constitutionality of section 585, nor does the present record require any adjudication upon that specific question. As will be seen on reference to the petition, the attack is made upon the validity of section 1187, and not of section 585. It was the latter section which authorized the issuance of the execution in the manner therein pointed out, and the petition has not drawn into question the constitutionality of that section. Speaking only for himself, the writer will say here what he might have said before, that as an original proposition he would have hesitated to hold that the execution must be construed to have been issued under section 585, or that it could not be arrested by affidavit of illegality. The decision in Massachusetts Bonding Co. v. Richmond County, supra, seems to’be directly in point, however, and, having been rendered by a full bench, must, unless and until it is overruled.
It is further contended that, in reaching the conclusion stated in the second division of the decision as previously filed, we overlooked the case of Palmer v. Harrison, 165 Ga. 842 (142 S. E. 276). The headnote in that case was as follows: “Where a tax-collector, after accepting a taxpayer’s check on a Sparta bank and delivering to her a receipt for payment of State and county taxes, held the check for six days and then indorsed and deposited it in a Gibson bank, which indorsed and sent it to an Atlanta bank, which indorsed and sent it to the Sparta bank for collection, which (on the ninth day after its date) charged the amount of it to the drawer’s account and later delivered it canceled to her, having also mailed to the Atlanta bank a cashier’s or exchange check, which remained unpaid because before its collection the Sparta bank failed and discontinued business, the taxpayer was not subject to execution issued by the tax-collector for the amount of the tax so paid.” In the opinion it was said that the collecting bank was the agent of the tax-collector, and that although “taxes are payable in gold and silver, or in the bills of such banks as pay specie promptly” (Civil Code of 1910, § 1013), the effect of the transaction was to pay the taxes in lawful money. We did not overlook the case of Palmer v. Harrison in the consideration of the present case, but did by inadvertence fail to make reference to it for the purpose of distinguishing it, as we had intended to do. The facts of that case are different from those involved in the case at bar, although by parity of reasoning the decision there might be considered as persuasive in the present case. It is not a precedent, however, and is pertinent only by analogy. We will not extend the ruling there made.
Judgment adhered to on rehearing.