The defendant C. V. Cottle was sheriff of the county of Raleigh for the term beginning on the first day of January, 1909, and ending on the 31st day of December, 1912. On the 21st day of December, 1908, before entering upon the duties of his office, he executed an official bond as such sheriff, with the defendants H. A. Snuffer, J. S. Sweeney, Geo. W. Bair, Sr., John W.” Ball, John R. Smith, G. C. Hedrick, E. L. Ellison, S. W. Trail, Henry Massie, F. C. George, John Williams and W. G. Callaway as his sureties. The taxes and levies for the year 1909 went into Cottle’s hands for collection, and in August, 1910, he made a settlement of his accounts, from which it appears that he was indebted to the plaintiff in the sum of $3506.47. On the 9th day of November, 1910, the defendant John R. Smith moved to be discharged from his suretyship on the official bond of said Cot-tle, and the court entered an order requiring Cottle to give a new bond. This new bond was given on the 11th day of January, 1911, with the defendants W. H. Rardin, H. A. Snuffer, F. C. George, John W. Ball, H. H. Harwood, W. G. Callaway, Geo. W. Bair, Sr., John T. Bair, John Williams, P. P. Trail, J. E. Summerfield, J. L. Sweeney, G. C. Hedrick and J. H. Maynor as sureties. It is alleged in the bill that after 'the close of the second year’s business, to-wit, in the
It is averred in the bill that Cottle, while he was sheriff, failed to keep accounts in his office as required by law showing the amounts collected by him each day, and the amounts disbursed by him each day from the public funds, or, if he did keep these accounts, that he did not turn the same over to his successor, and conceals the same from the plaintiff, so that the plaintiff on this account is unable to tell, except from the general settlements above referred to, when the
There is no merit in the first ground of demurrer that the suit is improperly brought in the name of the county court instead of in the name of the State for the use of the county court. In equity the parties beneficially interested in a cause of action sought to be enforced are the proper parties to be made plaintiffs. This exact question was decided by this court in the case of the State for the use of the County Court v. Flanagan, 77 W. Va. 505. In that ease the suit was brought in the name of the State for the use of the county court against the sheriff and the sureties bn his official bond,' and the court held that a demurrer to the bill was properly sustained for the very reason that the suit must be brought in the name of the party beneficially'interested, and not in the name of the State for the use of such party. See also Kellam v. Sayer, 30 W. Va. 109; Bank v. Cook, 55 W. Va. 220; McClaskey v. O’Brien, 16 W. Va. 791.
The plaintiff seeks here to sustain the jurisdiction in equity upon the ground that it is entitled to have discovery; upon the ground that there is involved the settlement of intricate and complicated accounts which can only be satisfactorily adjusted in a court of equity; and upon the further ground that it is entitled to follow and recover its funds invested by Cottle in the real estate referred to in the bill.
That a court of equity has jurisdiction at the suit of the owner of property to follow and recover such property, or the proceeds of it so long as it may be identified, and the interests of innocent parties do not intervene, cannot be doubted. Where the money or property of a plaintiff is embezzled by another and it is converted into a different form, as by investing the same in other property, the original owner has the right to claim the property if he' can find it, even
Can this bill be sustained upon the theory of discovery and and accounting ? The defendants contend that the allegations of discovery are simply colorable,, and that there is no such state of facts alleged as will justify a court of equity in taking jurisdiction to settle the accounts. That equity will take jurisdiction for the settlement of complicated and intricate accounts there can be no question. Grafton v. Reed, 26 W. Va. 437; Lafever v. Billmyer, 5 W. Va. 33; Petty v. Fogle, 16 W. Va. 497; White v. Cook, 51 W. Va. 201. Originally it would seem that the jurisdiction to settle accounts in equity was based almost exclusively upon the necessity for discovery, but in modem times the courts have exercised the jurisdiction where the necessity for discovery did not exist, and it is now well recognized that this jurisdiction exists in courts of equity irrespective of the necessity for discovery, where the accounts are intricate and complicated, for the reason that the machinery of such courts is better adapted for the purpose of an accounting in such cases than is the machinery possessed by a court of law; and where it appears from the allegations of the pleading that the accounts are complicated, either because of the intricate character of the transaction between the two principal parties, or because of th'e complication which arises on account of fixing the liability of several classes as sureties, as is the ease here, a court of equity will unhesitatingly take jurisdiction and employ the agencies at its command, to the end that the rights of the parties may be determined and settled. 1 Story’s Equity Jurisprudence, § 451. It is true in the case of White v. Cook, 51 W. Va. 201, jurisdiction was denied, the court holding that no complicated or intricate accounts were involved. All that was involved there were the dealings between a deputy sheriff and his principal. There was no necessity for discovery; there was no necessity for the intervention of a court of equity to determine what funds went into Cook’s hands, nor was there any necessity for its intervention to determine what sums had been paid by Cook to his principal. So in the ease of Grafton v. Reed, 26 W. Va. 437, this court, while recognizing
We are of the opinion that because of the difficulty in determining which one of the bonds given by the defendant Cottle was in force at the time any particular embezzlement took place, and the difficulty of determining just when those embezzlements happened, so that the liability of the several sets of sureties'may be fixed among themselves, as well as for the other reasons adverted to, the accounts involved here are so intricate and complicated as to make this peculiarly a case calling for the exercise of equity jurisdiction.
It is contended; however, that"the bill in this case is multifarious because it joins four separate causes of action, and seeks to ascertain the liability of the sureties in four separate and distinct obligations. We do not think the bill is multifarious for this reason. There is one common purpose running through the whole suit, and that ’is to obtain payment from the parties liable therefor on account of Cottle’s default. The single object of the bill is to secure the payment of this money, and this cannot be done until the liability of each set of sureties is fixed, and, as before stated, the jurisdiction in equity to ascertain and fix this liability, because of the intricacy and complications which arise, is established. When we determine that this jurisdiction exists, it necessarily follows that all parties who might in any way be' liable for this' default, or any part of it, must be brought before the court, so that when a decree is entered it will fully dispose
From what we have said it follows that the decree of the circuit court of Raleigh county sustaining the demurrer to the bill will be reversed, the demurrer will be overruled, and the cause remanded for further proper proceedings.
Reversed and remanded.