31 Wis. 217 | Wis. | 1872
The facts set forth in the complaint are concisely and accurately stated in the brief of counsel for the defendants, which also contains a very satisfactory argument, showing that the complaint is and must be held demurrable. The action is upon the official bond of the county treasurer, given for his first term of office, which was for the years 1861 and 1862. It is an action at law against the treasurer and his sureties in the bond, for alleged defaults of the treasurer made during that term of office. The complaint avers that the treasurer was elected his own successor at the end of that term, and has so continued to be elected from term to term from that time to the present, and has all the time continuously held, and now lawfully holds the office, exercising the functions and performing the duties appertaining to it. The only defaults charged during his first term of office are, that the defendant Vivian, as treasurer, in the several settlements of his official accounts for that term, made with the board of supervisors of the county, omitted by mistake to charge himself with sundry items as moneys received by him for the use of the county, which the complaint alleges should have been so charged. The complaint charges, and it is repeated again and again in the course of the averments, that this was merely a mistake on the part of the treasurer, and that, by a like mistake on the part of the board of supervisors, the settlements were had and balances struck and stated with the treasurer, without his being debited with the several sums which it is now said were omitted. This mere mistake, which was mutual on the part of the treasurer and of the public officers whose
The decisions of the majority of this corrrt in the recent cases of Supervisors of the Town of Franklin v. Kirby and others, and Wolff, County Treasurer, v. Stoddard, Town Treasurer and others, 25 Wis., 498 and 503, are at least authority to this extent, as to what shall be deemed a breach of the official bond of a county treasurer. In the former it was held, that the provision of a town treasurer’s bond, conditioned as by the statute (R. S., ch. 15, sec. 87; 1 Tay. Stats., 370, § 113), “ that he will faithfully and truly account for and pay over, according to law, all moneys that shall come into his hands as such treasurer, ” does not impose two distinct duties, the one to “account for, ” and the other to “ pay over, ” such moneys, nor create two distinct grounds of liability. Upon this point I was unable to concur with my brethren, and I am still unable to construe-the statute as they did. But, whether the same rule would apply to and govern the construction of a county treasurer’s bond, as is contended by counsel for the defendants, is quite a different question. The condition of the bond of the county treasurer, the form of which is prescribed by the statute (R. S., ch. 13, see.
By the Court — Order reversed, and cause remanded for further proceedings according to law.