Goree v. Ramey

78 Tex. 176 | Tex. | 1890

HENRY, Associate Justice.

The plaintiffs’ petition charges that :Wm. Heal Barney was on the-day of January, 1887, appointed Assistant Superintendent of the Texas State Penitentiary at Busk; that on the 24th day of July, 1888, the Penitentiary Board made an order requiring of him a bond as such officer, conditioned, among other things, that he-would faithfully discharge the duties of his office and keep a faithful and correct account of all moneys received by him, from whatever source, for .the State, the Financial Agent of the Penitentiary, or any State convict, and pay over the same when due, and to whom due, or as might be required by the law, the rules, or by the Superintendent or Financial Agent of the penitentiaries, and render a faithful and correct account of all such receipts and expenditures of money to the said financial agent, and of .convict money to said Superintendent of Penitentiaries when requested to do so; that the said Barney, with the other defendants as his sureties, did on the 12th day of September, 1888, execute a bond containing said conditions, which was on the 10th day of December, 1888, presented to and - approved by the Penitentiary Board; that at the execution and approval of said bond said Barney as such officer had received from the State convicts large sums of money which he then held in his hands, and that he subsequently, at various times, up to the 14th day of January, 1889, in the performance of his duties as such officer,,received from the State convicts other large sums of money; that the aggregate amount so received and held by the said Barney was $3390.87; that afterwards the said Barney resigned his said office, and has failed and refused to account to said Superintendent of Penitentiaries for $1913.20 of said sum.

, The bond was made payable to “ Thos. J. Goree, Superintendent of the Texas State Penitentiaries, and William G. Parish, Financial Agent of said penitentiaries, and their successors in office.”

; This suit was brought in the names of said Goree and Parish for the use of the State of Texas. The suit was dismissed as to Barney because he was not served wich process. The other defendants appeared and pleaded.

: The court sustained exceptions to the petition in the following language, as shown by its judgment: “As to all that part of said second plea in abatement which does call in question the -power of said board to exact said bond, the law is for the defendants; that in so far as the general exception calls in question the power of the Legislature to confer upon the Penitentiary Board the power to require bond-, fix its amount, and prescribe i.ts conditions, of the Assistant Superintendent of Penitentiaries, and the attempt of the Penitentiary Board to exercise such authority and to make it operative upon the then incumbent of the office of assistant superintendent, and no further, the law is for the defendants.”

. By the Act of March the 18th, 1881 (article 3551, Be vised Statutes), it was provided that “if money be found on the person of a convict, or *179■be received by him at any time, it shall be taken charge of by the assistant superintendent and placed to the convict’s credit, and expended by him for the convict’s benefit on his written order and under such restrictions as may be prescribed by the rules.”

The Act of 18th April (article 3522, Revised Statutes), contains the following provision: The Superintendent of Penitentiaries, before entering upon the duties of his office, shall execute a bond for $20,000; •* * * and the Penitentiary Board may, when in their judgment the public interest will be promoted thereby, require any of the subordinate •officers of the penitentiary to give bond in such amount and with such •conditions as may be prescribed by the board; provided, that the Superintendent of Penitentiaries in office when this act shall take effect shall have sixty days after said date in which to give bond as required by this section.”

The attorneys for appellees in support of the judgment submit in their brief the following propositions.

“1. The office of Assistant Superintendent of Penitentiaries is one created by statute, and the Governor shall appoint him by and with the advice .and consent of the Senate. There was no provision for any other act or requirement except the oath of office to exercise the functions of the office * at the time Ramey-was appointed.

2. An office is a vested right, and neither the Governor nor Legislature has any right to impair it.

“3. The bond was neither a statutory nor a common law bond. There was no statute requiring it, and for it to be a common law bond it must, in addition to its being voluntary, be for a valuable consideration and not exacted colore officii.

“i. The only color of authority by which the Penitentiary Board exacted the bond sued on was in article 3522, Revised Statutes, which we submit was conferring upon the board authority which was legislative in its character and could not apply to a then incumbent. It was not a prerequisite to his exercising the functions of the office of assistant superintendent, neither had they the right to remove him should he refuse to give it.”

We can not consent to the proposition that the act of the 18th of April, 1883, conferred upon the Penitentiary Board authority beyond the power of the Legislature to grant, and as Ramey was not then in office nor appointed until long after the act went into effect, the objection that it could not apply “ to a then incumbent” can not have any application to this case.

If the execution of a bond had not been made a prerequisite to his right to take and hold the office at the time of his appointment, still he was appointed to and accepted the office, subject to the provisions of a law then in force giving to the Penitentiary Board the right at any time to demand of him the execution of such a bond.

*180The fact that the law did not confer upon the “board” the power to-remove him from office if he disregarded its requirement to give the bond can not be held to destroy the expressly given power to demand a bond. The requirement for him to execute a bond being lawful, there can be no doubt about his being subject to removal from office by the Governor for his failure to execute one.

The right of Ramey to hold the office was subordinate to the law conferring upon the Penitentiary Board the power to require a bond from him, and in no sense superior to it.

As the bond was authorized by a statute, and does not appear to have-been made in disregard of it or any of the requirements of the Penitentiary Board, we can find no ground for disregarding it as a statutory bond, and it does not become necessary for us to consider its validity as a common law obligation.

The judgment is reversed and the cause is remanded.

■Reversed and remanded.

Delivered October 14, 1890.