4 Ga. App. 637 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1908
The writs of error in these two cases will be considered together, for the reason that the questions in each arise upon the consideration of the same petition. The county board of education of Miller county brought suit against the county school commissioner and the sureties on his official bond, for an alleged misappropriation of school funds. The material portions of the petition allege, that Williams, being elected as county school commissioner, executed a bond for the faithful discharge of all and singular the duties required of him by virtue of his office as county school commissioner, with Phillips, Fudge, and Ball as ¡securities. The bond upon which the suit was based was for the sum of $4,000, payable to the county board of education and their successors in office. The condition of the bond is in the following language: “Whereas, the above bound J. E. Williams was, on the 6th day of February, 1904, elected county school commissioner of Miller county for the years 1904, 1905, 1906, and 1907, ?and during the term pointed out by law, the condition of the above obligation is such that if the said, J. E. Williams shall faithfully discharge all and singular the duties required of him by virtue of his said office as aforesaid, during the -term he continues therein or discharges any of the duties thereof, then the above obligation to be void, otherwise to remain in full force and virtue.” The petition further alleges, that during the year 1905, ••$3,835.50 was paid to the county school commissioner, of which $1,935.50 was paid in checks from the State school commissioner, and $1,900 in cash, borrowed by the county board of education from the First. National Bank of Colquitt, it being alleged that all of this money was for school purposes, — was part of the school fund of, the county, and was accepted by Williams as part of the .school fund of the county. In the 7th paragraph of the petition it is further alleged, “that at the time the said board of education -of Miller county borrowed the $1,900 from the First National Bank of Colquitt, same being the money borrowed and referred ■-to in paragraph 5 of this petition, there was then due Miller
We think the lower court properly sustained the demurrer interposed by the sureties, and' erred in not dismissing the action as to the principal. In our opinion the petition set forth no cause of action on the bond sued upon, either against the principal or the sureties. It may be that the county school commissioner is liable to the board of education, if he received any money as their agent and misappropriated it; but, under the allegations of the petition, he is not liable upon this contract, any more than his sureties upon the bond. The only obligation in the bond is that J. R. Williams “shall faithfully discharge all and singular the duties required of him by virtue of his said office;” and the period for which he is bound to perform these duties, as we construe the meaning of the bond, is during the term he continues therein or during which he discharges any of the duties thereof. We can not agree with the contention of the counsel that the bond was void if Williams discharged “any of the duties thereof.” These words naturally refer back to the words “during the term.” The obligation of obligors on a bond is to be strictly construed, and we have no hesitation in holding that the bond bound Williams and his sureties to discharge only “all the duties required of him by virtue of his office.”
In Mason v. Commissioners, 104 Ga. 35 (30 S. E. 513), the sureties on the bond were held free from liability for borrowed money which had been turned over to the county treasurer. Certainly if, under the facts of that case, as well as those in Hall v. Greene County, 119 Ga. 254 (46 S. E. 69), it could be held that the sureties and the county treasurer were not liable for money borrowed by a county, there should be no difficulty in holding that the sureties and the county school commissioner are not liable for money placed in the county school commissioner’s hands, which has been borrowed, not by the county or county commissioners,, but by a board of education. The borrowing by these members, of the county board of education was simply an individual undertaking, and the money obtained was money for the payment of which they were individually liable, and which they individually turned over to the county school commissioner as an individual
The reasons which have controlled our judgment as to the sureties impel us to hold that the court should have also dismissed the action as to the principal on the bond. We do not mean to say that if the allegations of the petition are true, Williams, as an
Counsel for the county board of education insist that, having received money by reason of a loan made to a county board, the treasurer, upon the principle announced in Mason v. Commissioners, supra, was estopped to question the validity of the authority under which the money was so collected and received. The decision in the Mason case rests upon its own particular facts. Importance was attached in that case to the fact that Mason assisted in borrowing a large portion of tlxe money himself, signing the notes officially as county treasurer. Whether the principle laid down in Mason’s case is sound or not, there are two great differences between the facts in that case and in this. In the first place, county commissioners of a county have broader powers for borrowing mone3 than a county board of education; and it does not appear, in the next place, that Williams signed any of the notes for the mone3 borrowed in this case. The motion to dismiss was well taken, however, regardless of the principle announced in the Mason case, because even though Williams should be estopped to challenge the validity of the loan, he is not estopped to say that he is not liable on the contract sued on, for the reason that, in the particular obligation which is the basis of the suit, he did not undertake to receive or disburse any mone3 other than that which came within the province of his duty as county school commissioner.
Counsel for the county board of education insist that the borrowing of money to pay teachers is authorized by section 13G3 of the Political Code. The language relied upon is that portion of the section which gives county boards of education power to make all arrangements necessary to the efficient operation of the schools. The spirit and language of our constitution is such' that unlim
Judgment in 1171 affirmed, in 1183 reversed.