The first question propounded is answered in the affirmative. A deputy sheriff while proceeding en route to serve a jury summons is acting in his official capacity of deputy sheriff. The word “so” in the latter part of the interrogatory, whether used to point out the geography of his route, or the manner in which the officer was performing his duties, can not alter the fact that he was then and there engaged in official business. Code, §§ 59-206, 59-701.
As we interpret the second inquiry from the Court of Appeals, it does not involve the question whether or not in a suit against the deputy sheriff alone the petition, disclosing the facts above enumerated, showed him liable for a tort, but whether such facts made him, as an officer,- and his sureties liable for a breach of his official bond. The answer to the first question propounded does not furnish the solution to the second one. The deputy’s liability under the circumstances mentioned, when sued on his official bond, does not depend upon whether the injury inflicted by him on a third person was done while he was proceeding on his route to serve a jury summons, and therefore while he was acting in his official capacity; but, rather, was his act, from which injury resulted, done either while acting by virtue of his office or under color of his office ?
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The law demands that sheriffs must take from their deputies bonds with sureties. Code, § 24-2811. It is true that the statute does not prescribe any condition for the violation of which the principal and surety thereon would become liable, but there is a statutory requirement that all official bonds must be “conditioned, in all eases in which a different condition is not prescribed, upon the faithful discharge of the duties of the office by the officer during the time he continues therein or discharges any of the duties thereof.” § 89-402. The bond given by the deputy sheriff is an official bond, and there being nothing in the law requiring it which prescribes a different condition, it was properly conditioned faithfully to discharge the duties of the office.
Citizens Bank
v.
American Surety Co., 174 Ga.
852, 857 (
There was here no breach of the bond unless the act which caused the injury was either a failure to perform an official duty, or the improper or negligent performance of a duty imposed by law, so as to make it one done by virtue of the office, else, a wrongful act committed under color of office, the latter being defined as “a pretense of official right to do an act, made by one who has no such right.”
Luther
v.
Banks,
111
Ga.
374, 377 (
The second question propounded by the Court of Appeals is answered in the negative.
