6 Colo. App. 485 | Colo. Ct. App. | 1895

Bissell, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The judgment is right and the sureties are not liable on their undertaking. No principle is more firmly settled than that a surety cannot be held beyond the express term of his contract. Unless he be obligated by the specific terms of his engagement, his liability cannot be extended by implication. The rule is universally applied both in actions at law and in suits at equity and rests upon the most salutary principles. Where the terms of the undertaking are at all ambiguous, the courts are always at liberty to look both to the recitals of the instrument and all the circumstances surrounding the parties when the contract was entered into, and may likewise consider the subject-matter of the instrument and therefrom determine the scope and object of the intended guaranty. Le Roy et al. v. Servis et al., 2 Caine’s Cases in Error, 1; French v. Carhart, 1 N. Y. 96; White’s Bank of Buffalo v. Myles, 73 N. Y. 335.

A like principle is expressed in other cases. In many of *488them where the courts have undertaken to determine whether the sureties of a treasurer or deputy should be held liable for defaults occurring after the term for which he had been elected or appointed, whether by public, municipal, or private corporations, they have resorted to the acts of parliament, the statutes, and the proceedings of the boards of directors of private corporations, to ascertain the nature of the office held by the principal, the term for which he was elected or appointed, and therefrom deduced the conclusion that even though the duration of the term was not expressed in the instrument, it was to be taken by the court as within the contemplation of the parties, and therefore presumably was regarded by them as the limit of their security. It is therefore entirely proper for the court to consider the situation and circumstances of these parties as they existed when this bond was given. The instrument perhaps lacks an exact recital, which in some of the decisions has been regarded as the key for the proper interpretation of the instrument, but it contains what will indicate the purpose and intention of the parties as clearly as a definite recital of the term for which Bonney had been ‘elected. The condition recites that Bonney as treasurer has and does deposit money belonging to the county and state with the bank, and the bond was given therefore for the purpose of securing him as treasurer against the loss of any funds which he might deposit. By the demurrer the plaintiff admits Bonney was treasurer when the bond was given, acting as such under a statute bjr virtue of which his term of office expired on the 7th of July, 1892. We may therefore rightfully conclude the bond was executed for the purpose of securing Bonney against loss during the time for which as treasurer he should receive and deposit money in The Chaffee County Bank. The recital and the situation of the parties fully warrant this conclusion.

The expiration of the term on the 7th of July, 1892, is conceded. The legal effect of this appointment seems to be thoroughly established. All agree if the bond was an official one, it would only be a guaranty against defaults happening *489during the term for which the bond was given. The principle would be totally unaffected by the circumstance of a reelection of the same incumbent to the same office for another term. Under such circumstances the election would be regarded as one to another office. Though the individual might be the same, he would in law, with reference to his bond and his sureties and his defaults, stand in the same light and occupy the same legal position as though he had been another and elected as a successor to the first. Amherst Bank v. Root, 2 Metc. 522.

It only remains then to determine whether by the terms of the engagement into which the parties entered, they so expressly and precisely contracted as that the sureties must be held liable for Robertson’s subsequent default. We do not so conclude. There is nothing in the express language of the instrument which compels any such deduction. The contract undoubtedly guarantees Bonney, “ as treasurer of said county, against the loss of any funds, which he may have now or at any future time on deposit in The Chaffee County Bank.” We are not at liberty, however, to infer any intention on the part of the sureties to give or continue an indefeasible guaranty to protect the treasurer for all time against the loss of any money which as treasurer he might deposit in The Chaffee County Bank. No such absolute agreement was entered into and there is no language in the instrument .which compels this construction. Such bonds are given because of the necessities springing from the official positions which individuals hold and the absolute liability which they are under for the public moneys which may come into their hands. These bonds are executed partly because of the exigencies of public business, partly from personal considerations, and from the many diverse but persuasive motives which influence human conduct under such circumstances. An intention to become a guarantor for all time may not be inferred. It is totally contrary to the well known general purpose and intentions of sureties on this class of obligations, and it may not be presumed that a re*490election was in contemplation or in the minds of the parties when they signed the bond. Reelections or reappointments are far from being certainties in public affairs, and the changed conditions which result in this western country in very short periods of time rebut any such expectation. Wherever the question has been discussed, the courts have always given great weight to the consideration of the time for which the party may be bound and the estimate which he is liable to put on the liability likely to devolve on him during that period and his inability to know what may be cast on him at some future and later date. If any other rule were adopted there would seem to be no necessity for an absolute continuity of the term, but a reelection after an interregnum and a resumption of deposits followed by a default would apparently revive the liability of the sureties and make them guarantors for the later deposits contrary to any actual or apparent intention of the parties. Taking the principle on which the cases rest, we think it may be safely said the general construction of the courts is against this doctrine. Hassell v. Long, 2 Maule & Selwyn, 363; Mayor of Cambridge v. Dennis, Ellis B. & E. 660 (96 Eng. Com. L. 659); Peppin et al. v. Cooper, 2 Barn. & Ald. 431; Kingston Mut. Ins. Co. v. Clark et al., 33 Barb. 196; Citizens L. A. v. Nugent et al., 40 N. J. Law, 215; Hubert v. Mendheim, 64 Cal. 213; Chelmsford Co. v. Demarest, 7 Gray, 1; Thomas v. Summey et al., 1 Jones’ Law, 554; Banner v. McMurray et al., 1 Devereux, 219.

The facts pleaded by the defendants constituted a good defense, and if established would relieve the sureties from any liability to respond for the default of the bank happening after the expiration of the term of office which the treasurer was filling when the undertaking was given.

The demurrer was properly overruled, and final judgment must be entered in favor of the defendants in error. The judgment will be affirmed.

Affirmed.

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