55 S.E.2d 656 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1949
1. (a) "Color of office is a pretense of official right to do an act, made by one who has no such right." Citizens Bank of Colquitt v. American Surety Co. of N. Y.,
(b) "An officer's acts are done colore office when they are of such a nature that his official position does not authorize the doing of such acts though they are done in a form that purports they are done by reason of official duty and by virtue of his office." Robertson v. Smith,
2. (a) Where an injured person who claims damages from any principal officer for the acts of his deputy brings an action for such damages, he may at his option sue on the deputy's bond instead of that of the principal, but he cannot sue on both.
(b) It is a general rule of law that actions ex contract and ex delicto cannot be joined in the same suit.
The petition alleges facts substantially as follows: that George L. Fox (deceased at the time the suit was filed) was elected Sheriff of Gordon County for a tenure which ended at the time of his death, which occurred on July 18, 1948; that he gave the bond required by law in the sum of $10,000 and that the Fidelity Casualty Company executed the same as surety; that the defendant Homer Johnson was his deputy and the defendant surety company executed his official bond in the sum of $2000; that on February 27, 1948, there was born to the plaintiff a baby girl; that on March 5, 1948, said baby girl was in her custody and control where she was temporarily staying, which was at the home of Letcher Goforth, her uncle, who resided in Gordon County; that on March 5, 1948, the sheriff, accompanied by the *122 defendant deputy, came there, entered the room where the plaintiff was confined with her baby, and demanded that she give them the baby, which she refused to do; that her aunt, Mrs. Letcher Goforth, protested the seizure of said baby; that thereupon the sheriff informed the plaintiff and her aunt that he was the Sheriff of Gordon County; that he had a "possessory warrant" for the taking of the baby, and intended to arrest and lock up the plaintiff's aunt if she interfered with him and his deputy in their efforts to take the baby; that the sheriff did not exhibit or read any warrant to the plaintiff; that the baby was in bed with the plaintiff at the time clasped tightly to her bosom, but, despite this fact, the deputy sheriff seized her arms, wrested them from the baby and held her in the bed while the sheriff took the baby from her and gave her to J. Albert Powell and his wife, Mary L. Powell, who took the baby to Atlanta, Fulton County, Georgia; that this conduct was unlawful, illegal and without lawful warrant or process by the sheriff and his deputy while acting under color and by virtue of their offices as sheriff and deputy sheriff respectively; that the same resulted in much mental pain and anguish to the plaintiff, shattered her nervous system, causing her to be unable to sleep for twelve days; and that she was so weak from shock and loss of sleep that she required medical care and attention.
The petition prays for judgment against said defendants in the sum of $12,000. Attached to the petition, and made parts thereof as Exhibits A and B are copies of the official bonds of the sheriff and the defendant deputy sheriff in the sums of $10,000 and $2000 respectively, both of which are executed by the Fidelity Casualty Company of New York as surety.
To this petition the defendants interposed separate general demurrers, and also separate special demurrers, attacking the petition for misjoinder of causes of action. The exceptions here are to the sustaining of these demurrers as to each defendant.
1. The sureties on the bonds of sheriffs of this State are liable to persons for injuries proximately resulting to them, (1) because of the *123
failure of the sheriff to perform a duty imposed upon him by law, (2) because of the improper or neglectful performance of such a duty, and (3) for any wrongful act committed under color of his office. See Code § 89-418; Robertson v. Smith,
(a) In Citizens Bank of Colquitt v. American Surety Co. ofN. Y.,
(b) In Robertson v. Smith,
Counsel for the defendant contends that the surety is not liable for the acts of the principals if the acts were committed in connection with the service of a void process. He contends, therefore, that if the sheriff or his deputy in this case had a possessory warrant for the child it was void and the surety is accordingly not liable. In support of this contention, he quotes a part of Robertson v. Smith,
From this quotation we do not understand that the court adopted the law as applied by the foreign jurisdictions listed therein, to the effect that a surety on the sheriff's bond is not liable for injuries to others committed by him while acting under the color of his office in the service of a void civil process. However, in the instant case it is not necessary to determine whether or not this principle of law is generally applicable in this State. Assuming but not deciding that the surety would not be liable if they had a possessory warrant for the child, which would be void, the mere fact that they were the holders of such a void process would be no protection to their surety when the principals, acting colore officii, disposed of the "property" in a manner different from that directed by the law of this State in cases of possessory warrants.
Code § 82-102, relating to the subject, provides as follows: "The officer in whose hands the possessory warrant is placed *125 shall forthwith proceed to apprehend and arrest the body of the defendant, or party against whom the warrant is issued, and also to seize the property described in the warrant, if the same are to be found in his county, and carry the said defendant and said property, together with the warrant, before the judge or justice issuing the same or before any other judge or justice of said county."
Good faith in executing such a warrant on the part of the sheriff would require that he take the "property" before the judge or justice who issued the warrant or some other judge or justice of the county. Here, the sheriff, instead, took the child, not to any judge or justice of the county, but to other private individuals who forthwith removed her from the county altogether and took her to another county and city of this State many miles distant. Had the process been valid and served in this manner by the sheriff and his deputy, the surety would have been liable for the neglectful and improper performance of the duty of the sheriff. Even if it were the law in this State that the service of a void process does not amount to a breach of the official bond, the surety here could not rely for a defense to this action upon such ground, because its principals so executed the process that the same cause of action would have arisen had it been valid.
The petition does not allege that the sheriff or his deputy had a possessory warrant. The only allegation in this respect is that the sheriff stated that he had such a warrant. Whether they had the warrant or not is immaterial. Counsel for the defense relies on Code § 24-2813 for his position that an officer acting under color of his office is not liable for executing a void warrant or process. This Code section provides as follows: "It is the duty of the sheriff . . (1) To execute and return the processes and orders of the courts, and of officers of competent authority, if not void, with due diligence, when delivered to them for that purpose, according to the provisions of this Code." A cursory reading of this Code section shows that it does not protect an officer acting under color of his office from liability for damages for executing even a void warrant in a manner which would have been illegal if the warrant had been valid. If the law excuses him for not executing a void warrant, it does not follow that it *126 excuses him for improperly executing a void warrant under color of office. This, of course, does not mean that a surety would be liable for acts of a sheriff or his deputy when they are purely personal even though in bad faith cloaked in official authority. In order for liability to attach to the surety, a sheriff or his deputy must actually be acting as sheriff or as deputy and without authority to so act in the particular matter. The general demurrers are therefore without merit.
2. (a) Code § 89-427 provides as follows: "Any person who claims damages of any principal officer for the act of his deputy, may at his option sue on said deputy's bond instead
of on that of the principal in the same manner as suit may be brought on the principal's bond." (Emphasis ours.) Webster's new International Dictionary defines the word "option" to mean, "The exercise of the power of choice, the power of choosing, the right of choice, an alternative." The bond of a public officer is a contract of suretyship. Such a contract is to be strictly construed in the interest of the surety. Board of Education ofMiller County v. Fudge,
(b) If the plaintiff intended in her petition to set out a cause of action against the deputy sheriff for $12,000 exdelicto, the effect of this would be to join an action ex delicto with an action ex contract, which is prohibited under our law. See Cantrell v. National Surety Co.,
There being a misjoinder of causes of action, the trial court properly sustained this ground of each special demurrer. However, since the plaintiff has had no opportunity to amend her petition by electing upon which contract of suretyship to proceed and reducing the amount sued for accordingly, leave is granted to her to so amend her petition within ten days after the remittitur of this case is received in the trial court. Otherwise, the judgments will stand affirmed.
Pursuant to the act of the General Assembly as approved March 8, 1945 (Ga. L. 1945, p. 232) requiring that the whole *127 court consider any case in which one of the judges of a division dissents, or in the event the whole court desires to consider a case, this case was considered and decided by the court as a whole, by consent.
The judgment in each case is reversed upon condition as abovestated. All the Judges concur.