216 Wis. 1 | Wis. | 1934
The following opinion was filed June 5, 1934:
The amended complaint alleges that plaintiff is a city of the fourth class, organized, under ch. 62 of the Wisconsin Statutes, and that defendant Jensen, during the period from January 1, 1931, to April 21, 1933, was city clerk of plaintiff city. It is further alleged that on April 25,
Appellant contends that the bond of the city clerk of Rice Lake, as executed in 1922, renewed yearly thereafter, and increased in 1932, does not cover defalcations committed by him as cashier of the water and light utilities, which are owned and operated by the city in a proprietary capacity. This contention requires a consideration of several sections of the statutes.
Sec. 62.09 (11) prescribes in some detail the duties of the city clerk, This section imposes no duty to collect city utility
The contention cannot be sustained. The effect of the sections just reviewed is that a municipal utility shall be managed either by a non-partisan commission or by a board of public works, and that the board of public works, as constituted by sec. 62.14 (1), may be dispensed with and its duties
Acting under the authority of secs. 66.06 (10) (g) and 62.14 (1), the council of the city of Rice Lake first constituted itself the board of public works, and then cast upon the defendant city clerk, without extra compensation, the duties of cashier of the utility. The council was authorized under sec. 62.09 (7) (b) to impose additional duties upon the city clerk, and that is precisely what the council did. The only question is whether the additional duties which may be imposed under this section must relate to the governmental rather than the proprietary activities of the city. The section does not expressly impose such a limitation, and- we discover no basis upon which one can be implied. It is of course true that if the resolution imposing the duties of cashier upon the clerk constituted an attempt to create a new office for him, the bond as city clerk would not cover the risk, but as stated in Milwaukee v. United States F. & G. Co. 144 Wis. 603, 129 N. W. 786: “If, on the other hand, the effect of the provisions ... is simply to impose some additional duties on the clerk, . . . his bondsmen . . . are liable on his bond for his non-performance of those duties, because they were a part of the duties of his office as clerk. ...”
Sec. 62.09 (1) (b) provides:
“The council by a two-thirds vote, may dispense with the offices of . . . comptroller . . . and provide that the duties thereof be performed by other officers. ...”
This section leaves no doubt as to the power of the council to require that the duties of the comptroller be performed by the city clerk.
Sec. 19.01 (3) reads as follows:
“(3) Official duties defined. The official duties referred to in subsections (1) and (2) include performance to the best of his ability by the officer taking the oath or giving the bond of every official act required, and the non-performance of every act forbidden, by law to be performed by him; also, similar performance and non-performance of every act required of or forbidden to him in any other office which he may lawfully hold or exercise by virtue of his incumbency of the office named in his official oath or bond. ...”
In view of the facts, and the operation of this section, the bond of defendant surety company, which guarantees the faithful discharge of Jensen’s duties as city clerk, covers his activities as comptroller and cashier. Since the bond was renewed after the extra duties were imposed upon him by resolution of the council, we are not presented with the question of increase of risk during the term of the bond, and the cases cited by appellant have no materiality. See note 43 A. L. R. 1000.
By the Court. — Order affirmed.
A motion for a rehearing was denied, with $25 costs, on September 11, 1934.