48 P. 1071 | Idaho | 1897
At the general election hold in and for the ■county of Ada, on the 1st of October, 1890, one Thomas B. Gess was duly and regularly elected to the office of assessor and ■ex-officio tax collector for Ada county, state of Idaho, for the two years next following from January 1, 1891. On the tenth day of November, 1890, said Thomas B. Gess executed and filed his official bond as such officer in the proper office in the .said county, with the defendants, George D. Ellis, George W. Gess and Ferdinand Dangle, as sureties thereon. On November 23, 1893, an action was commenced in the district court for the county of Ada, by the plaintiff, against said Thomas B. Gess, tc recover the sum of $8,465.36, with interest thereon, alleged to be due from said Gess to plaintiff by reason of said Gess having retained said amount, as commissions for money .collected by him as taxes due said Ada county' for the years 1891 and 1892, over and above the amount allowed by law to be retained by him as such tax collector. Judgment was recovered in suit by the plaintiff against said Thomas B. Gess for the sum of $9,525.53 and costs, which judgment was afterward affirmed by this court. Execution was issued on said judgment and returned unsatisfied, and plaintiff brings this action against defendants, as sureties upon the official bond of said Gess as aforesaid, to recover said amount. The case was tried in the district court without a jury, and after the evidence on the part of plaintiff was submitted defendants moved for a nonsuit, which motion was granted, and judgment en-
The first contention of defendants is that the action is barred by the statute of limitations. It is conceded that the money received by the tax collector, Gess, was so received by him after the. expiration of his term of office, to wit, on the sixteenth day of January, 1893, and this action was commenced ■on January 27, 1896. Defendants claim that this action comes within subdivision 1, section 4054 of the Bevised Statutes of Idaho, limiting the time within which an action “upon a liability created by statute other than a penalty or forfeiture” may be commenced. Appellant contends that it is an action upon an instrument in writing, and therefore comes under the provisions of section 4052 of the Bevised Statutes, limiting action in such cases to five years. The contention of appellant cannot obtain. The money was paid to Gess on the 17th of January, 1893, and if any cause of action ever arose against the defendants by reason of such payment to and receipt by Gess of said money, it arose then. (Board v. Van Slyck, 52 Kan. 622, 35 Pac. 299; Ryus v. Gruble, 31 Kan. 767, 3 Pac. 518; State v. Baker Co., 24 Or. 146, 33 Pac. 530; Ware v. State, 74 Ind. 181.) We are unable to see where section .9, article 18 of our constitution, has any application to the case under consideration. That provision applies only to the liability of a derelict officer criminally, and has nothing whatever to do with the civil liability of the officer or his sureties.
The third contention of respondents is, we think, well taken. The money received by Gess, the collector, was paid to him, by order of the board of commissioners, after his term of office had expired and his successor had qualified. It is conceded he had taken possession of the office. It is not charged or intimated that Gess had not fully and faithfully performed all the duties of his office' for and during the full term for which he was elected, and had fully and faithfully accounted for and paid over all moneys that had come into his hands as such officer; and, having done so, he had fulfilled all of the obligations of his official bond, and his sureties thereon as well as himself were discharged from all obligations thereunder. If thereafter, either as a gratuitous donation in recognition of eminent services, or for any other assumed reason, the board -of commissioners, in violation of law and of their official oaths, saw fit to pay or order to be paid to Gess any sum of money, while Gess would be held liable for money so received, and the commissioners ought to be held both civilly and criminally liable for such misappropriation of the public moneys, we know of no principle of law, nor have we been cited to any authority, which would warrant us in holding the sureties of Gess on his official bond for such posthumous official dereliction.
The claim that the judgment against Gess is prima facie evidence against the sureties is not sustainable upon principle or authority. We held in Ada Co. v. Gess, 4 Idaho, 611, 43 Pac. 71, that “’payments made by the county commissioners to public officers, which are positively and absolutely forbidden by the statutes of the state and by the constitution thereof, may be recovered back.” We are unable to see how a judgment against Gess, predicated upon such a statement of the law, can be urged as evidence against the sureties upon the official bond of Gess. That instrument did not obligate the sureties to answer for or be responsible for any other acts or remissness of Gess except what occurred in his official capacity while he was in office.