45 Kan. 31 | Kan. | 1890
The opinion of the court was delivered by
On January 30,1889, the Board of Education of the city of Newton commenced an action in the district court of Harvey county against G. W. Holmes, an ex-treasurer of such board, and his sureties on two certain bonds, to recover $3,857.14, an alleged balance due from Holmes as
The facts of this case briefly stated are substantially as follows: On April 5, 1887, G. W. Holmes was elected treasurer of the Board of Education of the city of Newton, a city of the second class, and on April 28, 1887, he qualified by taking
I. It is claimed that in this action two causes of action were improperly joined, one upon the first bond, and the other upon the second bond. There is some plausibility in the argument of the plaintiffs in error attempting to sustain this claim, and yet upon the peculiar facts of this case and the authorities cited, we think the claim is not tenable. In the first place the plaintiff sets up the facts of its case and asks for relief as though the entire facts of the case could constitute only one cause of action. In the second place it alleges only one default on the part of the treasurer, Holmes, and that default occurred after the second bond was given, and indeed not until after Holmes had resigned his office; and this default is the only one for which the plaintiff has sought
II. It is further claimed that this action is not prosecuted by the proper party as plaintiff. It is claimed that the treasurer of the board of education, the successor to Holmes, the person who is entitled to the custody of the money when obtained, should be the plaintiff in the action instead of the board of education, which, it is claimed, has no right to the custody of the money. Now the board' of education of a city of the second class, as the plaintiff in this action is, is the general representative of the legal organization created in such cities for the purpose of carrying on and conducting the public schools. Section 4 of chapter 122 of the Laws of 1876 reads as follows:
“The public schools of each city organized in pursuance of this act shall be a body corporate, and shall possess the usual powers of a corporation for public purposes, by the name and style of ‘The board of education of the city of —-, of the state of Kansas;’ and in that name may sue or be sued, and be capable of contracting and being contracted with, of holding and conveying such real and personal estate as it may come into possession of, by will or otherwise, or as is authorized to be purchased by the provisions of this act.” (Gen. Stat. of 1889, ¶ 5726.)
The board of education is the representative of the corporation, the real party in interest, and the treasurer of the board is not. (See also Gen. Stat. of 1889, among others,
III. It is further claimed that there was no consideration for the second bond, and this for the reason, as is claimed, that the first bond was all that Holmes was required to give, and that the board of education had no power to require him to give any other, further, or additional bond. We think this claim is erroneous. In the first place, the bond originally given, while it may have been sufficient at the time it was given, was clearly insufficient when the second bond was given. The first bond was only for $20,000, while at the time the second bond was given Holmes had over $40,000 belonging to the school corporation in his possession or under his control; and when the first bond became inadequate, as it did, we think the board of education, as the representative of the school corporation, had ample authority to require, as it did, that Holmes should give another and an additional bond as he did. See the sections of the statutes above cited, and others.
IV. The next thing to be considered in this case has relation to the question whether the default for which the plaintiff recovered in this action occurred, as a fact, prior or subsequently to the execution of the second bond. If it occurred prior thereto, the judgment in this case is evidently erroneous; but if it occurred subsequently, then the judgment is right. It is admitted by the parties that Holmes in fact had $4,467.47 less of school moneys in his hands and in the bank at the time of the execution of the second bond than he ought to have had; but it is claimed by the plaintiff, and we suppose it is a fact, that more than that amount of money other than school money was afterward deposited in the bank by Holmes and the investment and guaranty company, in the name of the company, in the same manner as the other deposits were made; and that such amount then became, like all the other moneys deposited in the bank by Holmes, subject to the order of Holmes for school purposes, and therefore that any deficit which may have existed at any time after that time
Other questions have been presented by counsel, but we do not think that they require any comment.
The orders and judgments of the court below in both the cases which we have been considering will be affirmed.