64 Minn. 180 | Minn. | 1896
Appeal by plaintiff from an order overruling its demurrers to the separate answers of two of the defendants.
The action is against the defendant bank, as principal, and its sureties upon its bond as a depositary of county funds. The material allegations of the complaint may be summarized as follows: That the plaintiff (that is, the board of county commissioners of Hennepin county), on May 23, 1892, duly designated the defendant bank a depositary of the funds of the county, pursuant to the statute;
“The condition of the above obligation is such that, whereas the above bounden, the State Bank of Minneapolis, has made application to be designated a depositary of the funds of said county, and*182 has offered to pay interest on such funds of said county as shall be deposited with it, at the rate of one and one-half per cent, per annum upon the monthly balances of such deposits, such interest to be credited monthly' to said county: Now, therefore, if the above-bounden, the State Bank of Minneapolis, upon being designated as such depositary pursuant to chapter 124 of the General Statutes of Minnesota, 1881, shall well and truly credit such interest on such monthly balances to said county, and shall well and truly hold such funds, with accrued interest, subject to draft and payment at all times on demand, and shall well and truly pay over on demand, according to law; all of such funds which shall be deposited in said bank pursuant to such designation and said chapter 324, as amended by an act of the legislature of said state approved March 3rd, 1883, entitled ‘An act to amend section one of chapter one hundred and twenty-four of the General Laws of 1881, relating to the deposit of public funds,’ and all of the interest so to be credited, then the above obligation to be void, otherwise to remain in full force and virtue.”
The complaint further alleges that after such designation of the bank and the execution of the bond, and pursuant thereto, the county treasurer deposited with the bank certain public funds of the county, and on June 27, 1893, there was on deposit by the county treasurer, in the bank, pursuant to such designation and agreement, the funds of the county to the amount of $64,703.10; that payment thereof was duly demanded on that day, of the bank, and refused.
The answer of each defendant is the same, and contains no denials, but alleges that the board of auditors of the county of Hennepin never acted upon any application of the bank to be designated a depositary of county funds, and that the bank never was designated by such board as such depositary. The answer admits the execution of the bond, but alleges that the defendant executed it upon the express agreement that it was not to become operative until the bank was designated a depositary of county funds, and that the defendant never knew that the bond was accepted or approved, or was being acted upon, or that county funds were deposited with the bank in reliance upon the bond.
The bond is a part of the complaint, and recites that the bank
In the case of Board of Commrs. v. Gray, 61 Minn. 242, 63 N. W. 635, we held, in an action upon a bond similar to the one here in question, that the provisions of the statute relating to the designation of county depositaries were for the benefit of the public, and not for the sureties, and that, where the depositary was actually designated by the board of auditors, a failure to comply with the requirements of the statute in making such designation would not affect the liability of the sureties; or, in other words, if the principal in the bond was a de facto depositary of the county funds, recognized as such by the treasurer and other county officers, and the county funds were actually deposited with the principal, as such depositary, in reliance upon the bond, the sureties were liable, in case of default in the conditions in the bond, although, in law, the principal was never designated as a depositary.
Public interests would be seriously jeopardized if the sureties upon a county depositary bond could exonerate themselves from liability by showing that he was not such de jure. It is true, the
In principle, this case falls within the rule that the sureties upon an official bond, by virtue of which the officer has been inducted into office, cannot, when called upon to answer for his official defaults, escape liability upon the ground that their principal was not duly elected or appointed, or did not legally qualify. Mechem, Pub. Off. § 341; 2 Brandt, Sur. § 521; State v. Bates, 36 Vt. 387; People v. Evans, 29 Cal. 429; Byrne v. State, 50 Miss. 688; Taylor v. State, 51 Miss. 79. In the last case cited the officer’s appointment was void, and it was held that the sureties, when sued on his official bond, could not set up the illegality of the appointment as a defense. So, in the case at bar, the designation of the principal in the bond as a county depositary was absolutely void, because made by the board of county commissioners, and not by the board of auditors; still it was in fact a depositary, and was inducted into office, and the county funds deposited with it, in reliance upon the bond, and the fact that it was not designated such depositary by the proper board does not exonerate the sureties on the bond.
Order reversed.
Laws 1SS1, c. 124, as amended; G. S. 1894, §§ 729-736.