139 Minn. 382 | Minn. | 1918
This action is brought by Cooper, Myers & Company, a corporation, against Walter J. Smith, former state treasurer,, and the sureties on his official bond. The sureties demurred to the complaint and appeal from the order overruling their demurrer.
Under the facts stated the defendant surety companies were liable to the state on the official bond of the treasurer. Such was their contract. On well understood principles the plaintiff which got the state’s money through a stolen instrument and through the aid of a forged indorsement, though innocent of actual wrong or of any fault or negligence, was bound to restore in the absence of any fact equitably preventing such result and none such is present. The question is whether being liable to restore and having done so its position is so much better than that of Smith’s sureties that it may recover of them what eoncededly the state might have recovered. The question is this: In equity and good conscience should the plaintiff who innocently received the state’s money through the fraud and defalcation of Smith and parted with an equivalent amount of his own, or the sureties who for a consideration contracted that Smith would be officially faithful, bear the loss? We feel no great hesitancy in holding thalt the loss should be that of the sureties.
A discussion of the principles applicable is not necessary. No case directly in point is cited. In National Surety Co. v. Arosin, 198 Fed. 605, 117 C. C. A. 313, it was held that a surety which paid to a county the amount of the defalcation of one of its officers, effected through spurious orders which were sold to a bank which purchased innocently and without notice, could not recover of the bank though the county might have done so. There the holding was that the position of the surety which paid was not'better than that of the bank. Our holding is that the position of a bank paying under such circumstances is better than that of the surely. In principle, American Bonding Co.
In the case cited the wrongful acts were those of á deputy auditor of a county in this state. Some statements in the opinion are to the effect that his wrongful acts were not official misconduct. We would in any event be unable to adopt this view. In several eases decided by this court the same acts were held of a character making the deputy auditor a criminal and involving his sureties in civil liability. State v. Bourne, 86 Minn. 426, 90 N. W. 1105; State v. Bourne, 86 Minn. 432, 90 N. W.
The warrant was assignable but not negotiable. Its. character suggested inquiry. It was in the possession of Smith whose apparent duty was to pay it. . The state was in funds. Smith took it to Duluth assuming to do so at the request of the school treasurer. The plaintiff, through an officer who had known Smith well for many years, bought it at its face and gave checks payable to Smith. Smith was of good repute. No investigation was made. An inquiry at the state auditor’s office would have disclosed all. The transaction was very unusual. The fact that Smith was in possession of the warrant, endeavoring to sell it, when he was directed by its terms to pay it, .naturally would have
In view of the facts recited, a majority of.the court are .of the opinion that the complaint does not sufficiently allege .lack of knowledge or notice or the absence of negligence .though there is a direct allegation that the plaintiff purchased in due course and in good faith and without notice. The minority view is that the general allegation is sufficient, nótwithstanding the special facts pleaded having a tendency to show notice or negligence, and that the issues of notice and negligence are sufficiently tendered by the complaint and are properly determinable when the evidence comes in. The majority view leads to a reversal on the point stated in this paragraph only.
Order reversed.