55 P. 662 | Idaho | 1898
Lead Opinion
— This is an action upon the bond of W. A. Woodin, the principal defendant, and the other defendants as his sureties upon the bond of said Woodin as treasurer of Bing-ham county. Judgment was rendered by the district court against all of the defendants. Motion for a new trial was made and overruled, and from the judgment and the order overruling motion for new trial this appeal is taken.
We think the demurrer to the first cause of action should have been sustained. It does not appear that any money was paid to the treasurer by Crowley. That Crowley, the assessor -and tax collector, “had and sought to pay to the treasurer” certain sums of money, and in furtherance of that purpose had delivered to the treasurer certain worthless chocks upon an insolvent bank, does not, we apprehend, constitute such a payment as would establish the liability of the treasurer or his sureties. Section 1842 of the Bevised Statutes provides that “when any money is paid to the county treasurer he must give to tin person paying the same a receipt therefor,” etc. It is not alleged in the complaint that any receipt was given by the treasurer to Crowley for the checks and credits alleged to have been given by Crowley to him. It might reasonably be presumed from this fact that the treasurer had declined to receive such checks and credits as money.
The statement of the second cause of action is, we think, equally objectionable. It is one of the duties imposed upon the treasurer by law (see Bev. Stats., see. 1840) to “receive all moneys belonging to the county, and all other moneys by law directed to be paid to him, safely keep the same, and apply and pay them out, rendering account thereof as required by law”; but there is no allegation in the complaint of any failure of this officer to “apply and pay out” the moneys paid to him as such officer, or to “render account thereof as required by law.” He is still in office, and it is not alleged that any demand has been legally made upon him which has not been promptly met. The allegation that the treasurer “did deposit the same [i. e.,
Inasmuch as the judgment in this case will have to be reversed, and the cause remanded for a new trial, it becomes our duty, under the provisions of section 3818 of the Revised Statutes, to pass upon and determine all the questions of law involved in the case presented upon such appeal and necessary to the final determination of the case.
Plaintiff was permitted, over the objection of defendants, to introduce in evidence the ledger of C. Bunting & Co., and certain entries therein were allowed to be read without any proof -of whom the entries were made by, or when they were made, or that Woodin had any knowledge of, or ever consented to, such •entries. This was error. The facts in the case are substantially as follows, as developed by the record: It had been the ■custom, not only of the predecessors in office of the principal defendant, but of all of the officers of Bingham county handling the monej’s of said county, to deposit the same in the bank of C. Bunting & Co., at Blackfoot, the county seat of said county — a ■custom which, though directly in violation of the provisions of the criminal laws of both the territory and the state, has been so persistently pursued that it would almost appear that said officials had concluded their convenience and opportunities were not to be “fobbed by old father antic, the law.” In fact, they ■seem to look upon the law in this behalf as a “mere scarecrow.”
The district court in its findings of fact pays but little re
We are apprehensive that the honorable district court, in formulating findings in this case, got the rules and the matter of bankers commingled with the rules of law. The giving of a cheelr by Crowley to, and the acceptance of the same by, Wright, might well operate as payment as between them; but the subsequent transfer upon the books of the bank of a much less sum to the credit of Woodin without his knowledge or consent would hardly operate, we think, as “a deposit upon general deposit,” so as to make him amenable to the penalties of the criminal statutes or make him or his sureties liable civilly. The complaint avers that on the fourteenth day of January, 1897, the bank of C. Bunting & Co. “was, and ever since has been, and now is, insolvent, and unable to pay all its liabilities as they matured.” C. E. Thum, a witness on the part of the plaintiff, testified: “That on the 14th of January, 1897, when the check for $50,539.03 was given, there was in the bank upon which it was drawn about $10,000 — not to exceed $12,000. There were one or two days about that time when cash run to,
The true facts of the case, as shown by the record, appear to us to be about as follows: Squire G. Crowley, as the assessor and tax collector of Bingham county, had at some time or times prior to January 14, 1897, deposited in the bank of C. Bunting & Co. the moneys collected by him as such officer. On said last-mentioned date he gave to G. G. Wright, the outgoing treasurer of said county, his check for the sum of $50,-539.03, and this check was by Wright presented to the bank, and by the bank placed to his credit; and it would appear that thereafter a certain sum ($41,142.40) was by some one, but by whom does not appear (but conceding that it was done by the cashier, Jenkins), placed to the credit of W. A. Woodin, treasurer. In making such entry, Jenkins was not acting as the deputy of Woodin. As the deputy of Woodin, Jenkins had nothing to do with the books of C. Bunting & Co. It would be an application of the doctrine of vicarious atonement unknown to the law, and unrecognized by it, to hold Woodin responsible for the acts of Bunting & Co/s cashier, of which he
Rehearing
ON REHEARING..
— The petition for a rehearing has been considered, and presents nothing but what was fully considered on the hearing of this case. No reason being presented for granting a rehearing, the same is denied.