49 Mo. 192 | Mo. | 1872
delivered the opinion of the court.
Gasconade county sued the defendants on a bond executed for the payment of school funds loaned them.
The defendant Sanders, by his separate answer, sets up as a defense, “ that about the date mentioned in the petition, one Preston H. Collier was one of the justices of the County Court of Gasconade county, and agent of the county; that said Collier, on the date last mentioned, falsely representing to said Sanders that said Miller desired to borrow from plaintiff out of the school funds of said township about the sum of three hundred dollars, requested the defendant to sign said Miller’s obligation as security ; that this defendant refused to sign it without the name of one Henry Benner as co-surety; that said Collier then and there agreed to get said Benner to sign said obligation as surety; and this defendant further says that on or about the same day the said Collier returned to this defendant with said obligation in blank, and with the name of said Benner signed thereto as surety, as falsely and fraudulently represented by said Collier, and then and there falsely and fraudulently representing to this defendant that Benner had signed his name to said obligation as surety, and then and there falsely and fraudulently renresented to said Sanders that said obligation should only
The answer further states that this obligation was presented to the County Court, the said Collier being one of the justices, and was approved by the court; that said Collier was on the bench at the time, and knew the bond Avas forged and fraudulently filled up, and defendant did not know the said Benner’s name was forged.
The plaintiff demurred to the answer, alleging as reasons “that the matter in said answer sets up no defense, counter-claim or set-off; because the petition is for money loaned by the County Court of Gasconade county in their official capacity, and no improper conduct on the part of the justices can be set up as a legal or equitable defense to the payment against this plaintiff; because the acts of the county are only known by its records, and no extraneous facts can be pleaded to bar, contradict or change the records, and there is no record or proffer of record made in this answer; because the answer is wholly insufficient and irrelevant to any issue tendered by plaintiff.”
The court sustained the demurrer to the defendant’s answer, and gave final judgment against him for the amount of the school bond and costs.
The answer, in my opinion, sets up a good defense. It is charged that Collier, in taking the bond, was acting as the agent of the county. Whether he was so acting will depend upon the evidence to be adduced upon the trial. The County Court can only act in such matters by agents appointed by it for that purpose. The very fact that the County Court approved this bond, if its record shows that fact, would be evidence that the person who took it was acting as agent. The records may not show that Collier was appointed agent, yet if he did in fact assume to act as such agent, and this bond so taken by him was received and approved by the County Court, and its records show this approval, it seems to me this would be a ratification of his assumed agency; and if this bond was procured from the defendant in the manner detailed in this answer, it ought to be held void as to him.
When the principal in a bond, or other person not acting as agent for the creditor, fraudulently procures the names of sureties to a bond, and thé creditor takes the bond and loans his money, without any knowledge of the fraud practiced on the surety, he cannot be made to suffer by such fraud. Their remedy is against the party who defrauded them, and not against the creditor. But that is not this case. Here the agent of the party having control of the school fund is the actor in the fraud, and-the defendant’s signature is procured by the fraud and forgery of this agent.
We think the defendant is entitled to have his defense tried, and to this end the judgment must be reversed and the cause remanded.
SEPARATE OPINION OF JUDGE BLISS.
I think the pleading is bad. Even if the fraudulent acts of the agent for loaning the school fund would vitiate the bond
1. The law knows no agent but the County Court. It is itself but the agent of the school townships in loaning their money, and the duty does not involve the necessity of employing another agent.
2. If the court could appoint an agent to transact this business he should be appointed of record, and the pleading alleges no such appointment.
3. The facts recited show that the perpetrator of the fraud was rather the agent of the borrower than of the County Court.
I greatly fear for the security of 'our school funds if these defenses are allowed.