136 Mich. 454 | Mich. | 1904
The defendant bank closed its doorson the 10th of February, 1902, and the board of education at that time had on deposit, credited to the several funds of the board, $464,000. There was to the credit of the library commission $38,551.60. Henry R. Andrews was the treasurer of the board of education and ex officiotreasurer of the Detroit Library Commission. The moneys were deposited in the bank with the knowledge of the
The question of first importance is whether these funds so deposited are to be treated as trust funds in the first instance. Counsel for petitioners relies upon Act No. 131, Pub. Acts 1875 (1 Comp. Laws, § 1197 et seq.), the provisions 6f which, so far as they relate to the questions involved here, are as follows:
“Sec. 2. It shall be the duty of every officer charged with the receiving, keeping, or disbursing of public moneys to keep the same separate and apart from his own money, and he shall not commingle the sáme with his own money, nor with the money of any other person, firm, or corporation.
“Sec. 3. No such officer shall, under any pretext, use nor allow to be used any such moneys for any purpose other than in accordance with the provisions of law; nor shall he use the same for his own private use, nor loan the same to any person, firm, or corporation without legal authority so to do.
*456 “ Sec. 4. In all cases where public moneys are authorized to be deposited in any bank, or to be loaned to any individual, firm, or corporation, for interest, the interest accruing upon such public moneys shall belong to and constitute a general fund of the State, county, or other public or municipal corporation, as the case may be. ”
It is contended by counsel that as Andrews, the treasurer, was cashier of the bank, the question is ruled by Board of Wire & Water Com'rs of Marquette v. Wilkinson, 119 Mich. 655 (78 N. W. 893, 44 L. R. A. 493). In that case Wilkinson, who was treasurer of the board, was also the banker, and it was held that this act (No.331) prohibited him from commingling the funds with his personal funds. It was further said that, if section 424
The present case is clearly distinguishable from the Wilkinson Case. The record does not disclose that Andrews, the treasurer, was even a stockholder in the bank. It is true he occupied the position of cashier, but that he profited in any i^ay by the deposit of the money in the bank does not appear. Certainly the bank was a distinct legal entity; and, if section 4 is to be construed as authorizing the board of education and the library commission to legalize deposits in the bank in the regular way in consideration of interest payments thereon, it must be assumed that such deposits are subject to the incidents of all depos
Was the treasurer authorized to make this deposit on interest? As before stated, in some cases the deposits were made by the secretary without the intervention of the cashier at all. The accounts in the bank were kept with the school board. Both petitioners took the benefit •of credits of interest from time to time upon these deposits, and, while formal action authorizing deposit at the bank is not shown, reports from time to time were made to the boards, and they had full knowledge of the fact that the funds were deposited as a general deposit. More than this, it can be said that the consideration upon which Andrews was named as treasurer was that the fund should be.deposited in this very bank upon interest. It maybe a hardship that these public funds should suffer a loss, but it is evident that two policies were open, — the one to preserve the funds intact by placing them in the hands of the treasurer; the other to increase the funds by securing interest- thereon, relying upon the treasurer’s bond to make good any deficit. We cannot escape the conclusion that both the library commission and the board of education pursued the latter course, and that these funds became a ■general deposit, subject to the risks incident to an ordinary deposit in the bank.
The order of the circuit judge denying the prayer of the petitioners will be affirmed.
1 How. Stat.