29 Minn. 398 | Minn. | 1882
Lead Opinion
This is an action upon the official bond of the defendant Bing, as county treasurer, to recover from him and his sureties for a failure on the part of Bing to pay over, according to law, public moneys received by him by virtue of his office. The delin-
The question to be determined is, whether the sureties upon «Ring’s official bond, executed upon his first election to the office, are bound for the delinquencies of their principal occurring after his re-election, and between March 1 and June 21, 1880? The judgment is erroneous, unless these sureties were liolden for that entire period.
The obligation upon which the defendants are sought to be charged is in the nature of an express contract. This contract consists of the statutory bond and the statute law relating to the office. The bond being in general terms, not in themselves- expressing the extent or limit of the liability of the obligors, and being executed pursuant to the statute which prescribes the term of office and certain conditions respecting the tenure of the incumbent, the statute itself, in legal effect, forms part of the contract, and must be considered by the court in construing it. County of Wapello v. Bigham, 10 Iowa, 39; Mayor of Wilmington v. Horn, 2 Harr. (Del.) 190-195; South Carolina Society v. Johnson, 1 McCord, 41. The liability of these defendants is to be determined by the construction of the contract into which they have entered; and, in construing that contract, we are to seek to ascertain from what is there expressed the intention of the parties. The bond is in the form prescribed by statute, and, after reciting the election of Ring as county treasurer at the general election in 1877, is
“In each county there shall be elected a county treasurer, whose term of office shall commence on the first day of March next succeeding his election, and continue for two years, and .until a successor is elected and qualified.” Gen. St. 1878, c. 8, § 144.
Section 145 provides that “the county treasurer, before he enters upon the duties of his office, shall take the oath required by law, * * * and he shall give bonds with * * * sureties * * * to be approved by the board of county commissioners, and in such sum as they direct, * * * conditioned that such person shall faithfully execute the duties of his office, and for the safe-keeping and paying over, according to law, of all moneys which come into his hands for state, county, township, * * and all other purposes.” The oath and bond are to be filed and recorded as directed in this section.
Sec. 146. “If any person elected to the office of county treasurer shall not give bond and take oath, as required by the preceding section, on or before the fifteenth day of January next succeeding his election, it shall be deemed a refusal to serve.”
Sec. 147. “In case of a vacancy in the office of county treasurer, by death, resignation, or otherwise, the board of county commissioners shall appoint some suitable person * * * to be treasurer, who shall file the bond and take the oath prescribed, * * * and shall hold the office until a county treasurer is elected and qualified.”
Chapter 9, Gen. St. 1878, is in part as follows:
See. 2. “Every office shall become vacant on the happening of either of the following'events before the expiration of the term of such office: First, the death of the incumbent; ® ® sixth, his refusal or neglect to take his oath of office, or to give or renew his official bond, or to deposit or file such oath or bond, within the time prescribed by law.”
The statute contemplated that at the end of two years from March. 1,1878, Eing would be succeeded in the office by a person elected for the term then to commence, (March 1, 1830:) But the person elected as such successor might fail to qualify, and'henee not be entitled to enter upon the discharge of the duties of the.place. The legislature saw fit to make express provision for'such case; and, instead of leaving the former incumbent to remain'in office until a succeeding election, as might have been done by chapter 9, above recited, it was enacted that, upon such event occurring, the office-should “become vacant.” By force of section 147, chapter 8, it th’en became the duty of the board of county commissioners to fill the '.vacancy by appointment.
It is claimed upon the authority of Loring v. Benedict, 15 Minn. 198, that chapter 9, § 2, of the statute above recited, is not applicable to this case, because Eing was not an “incumbent” of the office by virtue of his second election. In the case cited it was considered by the court that that part of this statute which made “the death of the incumbent” create a vacancy in the office, was not applicable in case of the death, before qualification, of one who had been •elected to the office of register of deeds. The pronoun “his” in the several succeeding subdivisions of the section would undoubtedly grammatically refer to the word “incumbent” in the first subdivision, but the expressed intention of the legislature, when it can be ascertained from the language used, will prevail over a strictly grammatical construction leading to a different result. There can be no doubt that the sixth subdivision is intended to refer, not merely to one already administering an office, but as well to one elected or appointed to an office, but not yet qualified, and who, hence, by force of other statutory provisions, is not entitled to enter upon its duties. The conditions there named, the non-performance of which within the time prescribed by law is declared to create a vacancy, are, in part at least, such as can properly apply only to an officer elect, but not yet quali
We are brought to the conclusion that by the terms of the statute, and upon the occurrence of an event expressly provided for therein, a vacancy occurred in the office, within the meaning of the statute, by the neglect of King to qualify for his second term on or before the 15th day of January, 1880, and that it then became the duty of the board of county commissioners, enjoined also by statute, to appoint a person to succeed King after March 1st. The office of county treasurer did not, in the proper sense of the word, become vacant, at least before March 1st; for until then the former term of Ring continued. The word “vacant,” in the statute cited, must be regarded as applying to the particular term to which the event causing a vacancy relates, which, in this case, would be the term for which Ring was re-elected, and which should have commenced March 1, 1880. Whether or not the term “vacant” is a strictly proper one to be applied to the office in such case, it is enough, for the decision of this case, to say that the event, oócurred on the 15th day of January, which should have terminated the right of Ring to hold the office after March 1st, and which made it the. duty of the county commissioners to appoint an incumbent for a period then to commence. This was not done; nor, so far as appears, was any effort made on the part of the county commissioners to fill the office by the appointment of another incumbent until June 21st.
The statute is to be considered as a whole, and so construed as to give effect to every part. In view of the provisions of chapter 9, just considered, section 144 of chapter 8 cannot be so construed as to au
It thus appears that the statute under which Eing was first elected, 5 and pursuant to which this bond of suretyship was given, did not contemplate that, in the event óf Eing being re-elected, and being unwilling or unable to renew his official security for another term, he should, nevertheless, continue in office for an indefinite period beyond the term of two years. On the contrary, it expressly provided that, in such event, another should be. appointed to succeed him.
These statutory requirements were in effect a part of the contract into which the defendants entered, and have the same force as though they had been expressed in the bond itself. The failure of the county commissioners to perform the prescribed duty, and the consequent continuance of Eing in office after March 1st, had not the effect to enlarge the obligation of these sureties, so as to make their contract cover a period of incumbency by him not contemplated by the law, not expressed or provided for in the contract, and which, as must be presumed, was not within the intention of the contracting parties. See authorities above cited. The undertaking of a surety is to receive a strict rather than a liberal interpretation, and is not to be extended
It is probably true that the sureties of a public officer are not, by the neglect of other public officers or servants in the discharge of their duties, discharged from any obligation which they may have assumed. But that proposition is not applicable here. Our inquiry is, not whether these defendants have been discharged from their obligation, but rather, what was the extent and limit of that obligation, as it was originally created ? If we have correctly interpreted the contract, the undertaking of the defendants did not in this case include or apply to an indefinite period subsequent to the prescribed term of two years. We do not say that that obligation would not extend in any event beyond the first day of March. It has been decided, under-statutes similar to our own, and under laws of incorporation declaring the continuance of a term of office to be for a definite period named, and until a successor should be elected and qualified, that an official bond of suretyship applied to the definite period of office named, and such reasonable-time thereafter as might be necessary for the purpose of providing a new incumbent by the appointed means. See, supra, Chelmsford Co. v. Demarest; Mutual Loan Ass’n v. Price; Mayor of Rahway v. Crowell. We think the same construction of the statute and contract here would be correct, except in so far as the result is affected by the other statutes cited, and the circumstances already referred to, and, to which we now again allude.
The occasion and the duty of appointment became apparent on the 16th day of January, some six weeks before the end of the then current term. Ordinarily, this time would be deemed sufficient, and, no fact appearing as a reason for an appointment not being made, we
In the view we have taken of the case, it is obviously unimportant whether, as between Ring and the public, he be regarded as holding the office after March 1st de jure, or merely de facto.
The judgment against these sureties is erroneous for another reason. While Ring was still acting as county treasurer, and between
Baumhager’s act, in taking from the funds turned over to him a sum equivalent to that which should have been paid by Eing to the state, cannot affect the sureties. For aught that appears, the defalcation or loss, the whole of which is by the judgment charged upon these sureties, was in part from these state funds, as well as from those of the county, with which they were commingled. And such is the inference to be drawn from the facts found. It is possible that if the fact should finally appear to be that Eing intermingled the two funds, and only the total deficiency in the whole commingling funds could be shown, the state and county would be compelled to divide that total deficiency pro rata. In that case, perhaps, these defendants would be answerable to the county for its proper pro rata proportion of such deficiency. We do not, however, decide that. We
The judgment as to these sureties is reversed, and the cause remanded for further proceedings against them in the district court, which may be had, notwithstanding the judgment as to the defendant Eing is undisturbed.
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting. I am unable to concur in the foregoing opinion. On the contrary, I agree, in the main, with the views very clearly and forcibly expressed by Judge Macdonald, (who tried the action below,) in his memorandum returned to this court. When the statute says, in so many words, that a county treasurer’s term of office shall continue for two years, and until his successor is elected and qualified, it seems to me that this plain, simple, and unambiguous language is to be understood in its ordinary signification." To my mind, it requires no labored construction or interpretation, for it bears but one possible meaning. The term of the treasurer, as an officer defacto and de jure, continues until his successor is elected and qualified. The interval between the end of the two years, and the election and qualification of the successor, is just as much a part of the term as is the period of two years itself. During the term the treasurer is in office, and the duties of the office rest upon him. The statutory condition of a county treasurer’s bond is that he will faithfully execute the duties of his office, and safely keep and pay over, “according to law,” all moneys which come into his hands, etc.
The sureties upon a county treasurer’s bond guaranty the performance of this condition, and their liability upon the bond, as well as that of the treasurer himself, is for the faithful performance of the treasurer’s duties, and the safe-keeping and paying over, according to law, of the moneys mentioned, during the whole of the term, as defined above, in accordance with the express language of the statute. The purpose of the bond is the complete and absolute protection of the public, and nothing short of the view above expressed will assure this. There must be no interval of time during which this protection is wanting. If it be said that this is hard doctrine for sureties, it is sufficient answer that the statute was not made in the interest
I remark, further, that the doctrine of the majority of the court as to what would be a reasonable time within which the county board should appoint a successor to a county treasurer, appears to me to introduce an element of uncertainty as to the obligations of sureties upon a treasurer’s bond much to be deprecated, for reasons which hardly need be stated. As for the authorities, they are to be found in abundance on both sides of the main question presented by this case. See, in addition to those cited in the majority opinion, State v. Howe, 25 Ohio St. 588; Butler v. State, 20 Ind. 169; State v. Daniel, 57 N. C. 444; Dunphy v. Whipple, 25 Mich. 10.