42 Ind. App. 243 | Ind. Ct. App. | 1908
This action was brought by the appellee against the appellants upon the official bond of the appellant Boyd, as county auditor of Jay county. There was an answer of general denial, the cause was submitted to the court for trial, special findings made and conclusions of law thereon stated, to which exceptions were reserved, and a judgment
The breach of the bond assigned in the complaint was as follows: “That during the term of office for which said Truman O. Boyd was elected and qualified, he collected and received as such auditor, and by virtue of his office, large sums of money for which he did not account to the Board of Commissioners of the County of Jay, or to any one entitled to receive the same, but retained said money, which was in excess of the salary allowed him by law, and converted it to his own use, specifically setting forth a long list of sums collected from various sources — among other items, one reading as follows: ‘Received for making assessors’ books $547, amounting in the aggregate to $4,696.04; that during the time he was serving as such auditor he paid into the county treasury the sum of $2,532.35, leaving a balance due the county of $2,163.69; * * * that the term of office of said Truman O. Boyd expired on January 1, 1904; and that he did not account or turn over to his successor in office, or to any one entitled to receive the same, the amounts set forth, but converted said amounts to his own use; that there is now due and owing from the defendants to the plaintiff the sum of $2,300, together with interest.”
The first six of the special findings set forth the election and qualification of appellant Boyd as auditor, and the execution of the bond sued on. The seventh, finds that during the time Boyd was acting as auditor he received out of the county treasurer’s office, for making assessors’ books, $137. By the eighth, ninth, tenth, eleventh, twelfth, thirteenth, fourteenth and sixteenth, the court found that said Boyd, while acting as auditor, received fees from various sources, amounting in the aggregate to $261.80, which he failed to pay into the county treasury, as required by law. By the
The reasons assigned for a new trial and pressed upon our consideration are: (1) That the finding is not supported by the evidence; (2) the amount of recovery assessed is excessive.
It is said by the Supreme Court, in the case of Moore v. State, ex rel. (1876), 55 Ind. 360: “In the collection of these several funds by the clerk of a court, when the time at which he should pay them over, and the person or officer to whom they should be paid are fixed by law, and therefore certain, we think, upon failure so to pay them, he becomes at once liable, without demand and refusal before suit is brought; and against an action founded merely upon his breach of duty in not so paying over such funds, he may plead the statute of limitations.” To the same effect see,
We are referred by appellants to the case of Tucker v. State, ex rel. (1904), 163 Ind. 403, as authority supporting their contention. As we understand that case it decides that the facts set forth in the complaint failed to make out a common-law liability against defendants in that action, for the reason that there was no averment in the complaint that appellant Tucker, the principal in the bond sued on, acting in his official capacity as auditor of Hamilton county, drew the warrants on the treasury of the county for the money alleged to have been received by him from the county for
It is pointed out by appellee that the complaint in the case cited failed to show that appellant Tucker acted in his official capacity in doing the acts which it was charged he wrongfully did. This is true, but this case is not to be distinguished from that case for this reason, for here the appellee’s complaint is far more defective than the complaint in the case cited. The appellee’s complaint contains no charge whatever against appellants on account of moneys received by him as clerk of the board of turnpike directors, but is based wholly upon moneys received from other accounts. It not only failed to allege that appellant Boyd, as county auditor, drew his warrant in favor of himself for any sum of money allowed him on account of his services as clerk of the board of turnpike directors, but there is no averment that he was ever allowed, or ever received, any money from the county treasury on account of such services. This finding is entirely outside of the issues presented by the pleadings, and can give no support to a conclusion of law thereon. Citizens Nat. Bank v. Judy (1896), 146 Ind.
Judgment reversed, with instructions to the court below to grant a new trial, with leave to the parties to reform the issues.
Roby, C. J., not participating.