50 Colo. 353 | Colo. | 1911
delivered the opinion of the court:
This action was brought by the appellee, a former state treasurer, to1 recover judgment against the appellants and others as sureties on a bond alleged to have been given to secure deposits of state funds made by Kephart as state treasurer, in the Bank of Montrose. , A demurrer was sustained to the original complaint; the appellee declined to amend.; judgment was'-entered against him, which was reversed by our court of appeals, Kephart v. Buddecke, 20 Col. App. 546. That court held that the sureties on
At the trial it was shown that one signor of the bond had gone'’.through bankruptcy proceedings; while others had made satisfactory arrangements.for their proportionate shares of the loss. The court rendered separate judgments' against the defendants contesting this claim, limitin'g them to the proportionate amounts that would have been owing'by each, had all paid their respective shares, and we do not Understand that any serious contention is made concerning the form or amount of the judgment.
Eliminating the outside picket line contentions, the material facts as disclosed by the -record are: that Mr. Kephart was the state treasurer during the years 1897 and 1898; that when he was inducted into office (January 12th, 1897)' Mr. Mülnix, his predecessor,' tendered to him, as part" of the state funds,
The bond was not executed or at least not dated until Monday, the 18th; all were then returned to Denver together. The certificates were accepted by Kephart in lieu of the old ones and the bond was accepted as security for these deposits. All of this money remained on deposit thereafter. September 28th, 1897, the bank became insolvent, closed its doors, refused to pay depositors, and immediately made a general assignment for the benefit of its cred
The bond reads as follows:
“Know all men by these presents, that we, Bank of Montrose, as principals, and J. E. McClure, F. I-L Reinhold, Fred G. Earner, N. G. Clark, R. C. Diehl, J. M. Cunningham, J. W. Owens, A. E. Buddecke, James A. Fenlon, W. T. Ryman and George R. Hurlburt, as sureties, are held and firmly bound unto Geo. W. Kephart, Treasurer of the State of Colorado, in the just and full sum- of Thirty Thou- • sand 00-100 Dollars, for the payment of which well and truly to be made, we hereby bind ourselves, our heirs, executors and administrators, jointly and severally, firmly' and by these presents..
“Sealed with our seals and dated the 18th day of January, A. D. 1897,
“The condition of this obligation is such that:
“Whereas, There is no depository provided by the State for the use of the Treasurer, who is nevertheless, absolutely responsible for- the safe keeping of its funds, and
“Whereas, it has been heretofore customary and expedient to deposit the monies of the State in the name of the Treasurer in divers banks and banking institutions of the State of Colorado, to be by them held subject to the order and demand of the Treasurer, as the public welfare and requirements demand, and
“Whereas, large sums of money have accumulated in the State Treasury which have been so deposited and which máy continue to so accumulate beyond the demands to be made thereon during the term of office of the said George W. Kephart, from which the people of the State are deriving no rev
“Whereas, the said George W. Kephart, Treasurer as aforesaid, has determined and will deposit certain of the monies of the State of Colorado-, for safe keeping, with and in the Bank of Montrose, of Montrose. The amount thereof shall be subject to-withdrawal or diminution by the said George W. Kephart, as the requirements of his. office shall demand, and which amount may be increased or decreased as the said George W. Kephart may determine, and
“Whereas, the said Bank, in consideration of the said deposits, has agreed to and will pay the said George W. Kephart, for the use and benefit of the State of Colorado, the sum of four per cent, per annum on account of said deposit, the same to be quarterly upon the daily average of the sum of such amount as the said bank shall have on deposit to the credit of said George W. Kephart, for the quarter or any fraction thereof next preceding the payment of said per centum, which shall be computed and credited to the account of said George W. Kephart, Treasurer, as a part of the said State funds, and the said George W. Kephart to- be at once notified of said credit and the amount thereof.
“Now, therefore, if the said Bank of Montrose, of Montrose, shall well and truly keep all said sums of money so deposited, or to be deposited, as aforesaid, subject to the check and order of said George W. Kephart, Treasurer, as aforesaid, and shall pay over the same and each and every part thereof, to the said Treasurer upon his written demand therefor, and shall estimate, calculate and pay said per centum as aforesaid and shall, in the event said money or any part’thereof remain in its custody after the expiration of the term of office of said George W. Kep*359 hart, pay over such sum or sums to his successor iu office, as shall be by him demanded and shall in all respects save and keep him, the said George W. Kephart and his sureties to the State of Colorado, harmless and indemnified for and by reason of the making of said deposit or deposits, then this obligation to be void, and of no'effect, otherwise to be and remain in full force and virtue. ’ ’
The first material assignment urged is that the money sued for was not the money the bond was given to secure. The contention is that by the terms of the instrument the bondsmen assumed liability only for money which should be deposited in the bank after its execution, and counsel for the appellants lay great stress upon the position that sureties are the favorites of the law and their obligation is strictissimi juris. This is unquestionably true, but as well said in a leading case upon that subject, that of The Ulster County Savings Institution v. Young, 161 N. Y. 23:
"The liability of a surety is measured by his agreement, and is not to be extended by construction. His contract, however, is to1 be interpreted by the same rules which are applicable to the construction of other contracts. The extent of his obligation must be determined from the language employed when read in the light of the circumstances surrounding the transaction. Hence, where the question is as to the interpretation and meaning of the language by which a party has bound himself, there is no difference between the contract of a surety and that of a principal or other party sustaining a different relation. It is when the intention of the parties has been thus ascertained that the principal of strictissimi juris applies, and then it is that the courts guard the rights of the surety and protect him against a liability which is not strictly within the terms of his contract. ’ ’
After a careful review of the opinion of the court of appeals, supra, we are of opinion that their conclusion in this respect was correct and should be affirmed.
In addition to the cases therein cited, we think that the reasons given concerning the injunction bond in the case of Meyers v. Block, 120 U. S. 206, sustain the.reasoning of Judge Thomson in his construction of the bond here, and are specially applicable in that respect.
In. addition to what Judge Thomson has said, it could also be urged that, the construction for which counsel contend would render the bond ineffective, and make its execution a useless ceremony at the time it was entered into by the obligors and accepted by the appellee, as well as ever since, for the reason that no future deposits were intended to be made, at the time of its execution, and none have ever been made; hence, an indemnity against losses which did not exist nor could not have occurred up^ to the time of the bank’s failure, was neither useful nor desired. That construction which sustains and vitalizes an agreement, should be preferred to that which strikes down and paralyzes it. Such a construction should be placed upon a contract as will prevent its failure and will give effect to the obligation of each of the
The second material question presented pertains to a failure of consideration. It is earnestly urged, by accepting the ruling of the court of appeals, that the promise to deposit funds in the future constituted a sufficient consideration for the execution of the bond. The answer sets up a failure of consideration in the fulfillment of this promise, and the proofs establish that no future deposits were made. In-this respect it will be noted that the ruling of the- court of appeals was based upon the pleadings as they then existed, and the opinion of that court was to the effect that the complaint showed that the money was on deposit in the name of Kephart at the time of the execution of the bond. The entire pleadings now before us and the evidence sustain the facts as first above stated, pertaining to which it might be consistently urged that the depositing of the money by the treasurer Kephart, or his redepositing of the same in his own name by surrendering the Mhlnix certificates and taking new ones in his own name in lieu thereof, and the execution of the bond to secure him therefor, were all a part of one and the same transaction, and to all intents and purposes were done simultaneously as one act, and thereby that there was a deposit of funds in the future, or at the time of the execution of the bond, as contemplated by its terms. — Sybert v. Harrison, etc., 88 Ky. 461. But it is'unnecessary to make any ruling upon this question so earnestly urged upon oral argument by counsel for appellee, for the reason that, accepting the position of the appellant as correct, and assuming for the purpose of the case that this money was on deposit at the time of the execution of the bond, and that there was no money deposited by the treas
In this connection the first question which presents itself is, what was the consideration for the execution of the bond? The court of appeals held, that it was the promise in the bond to make deposits in the future, so that if the promise was the consideration, the promise was given in the bond- and hence it did not and could not have failed. It is admitted by counsel that many respectable authorities hold that there can be no such thing as a failure of consideration.
In vol. 9, Cyc. of Law and Proc. at page 369, upon the question of failure of consideration, it is said:
■ “Strictly speaking, as has been well pointed out, there can be no such thing as a failure of consideration. The promisor either receives the consideration he has bargained for or he does not. If he does not, then there is no enforceable agreement, for there is no consideration; and if he does receive the consideration, how can it afterward fail? It may become less valuable or of no value at all, but that does not affect the agreement. Failure of consideration is in fact simply want of consideration. Nevertheless, it is laid down in a number of cases that when the consideration for a promise wholly fails, the promise is without consideration and unenforceable. But this must mean that in a contract with an executory consideration, the execution of the consideration is a condition precedent to the liability on the promise, and the failure to execute the consideration discharges the promisor.”
But counsel urge that while the above is usually recognized as thé law, and while they concede that such promise- on the part of the treasurer, if performed, does furnish sufficient consideration for
It will be unnecessary to pass upon this question for the .reason that, assuming for the purpose of the case that counsel’s position is correct, and that it is necessary to show that the promise had been complied with, or rather, that it had not been violated; it will be noted that the bond did not provide when such funds were to be deposited in the future, nor the' amount of such deposits. Had the bondsmen desired to be advised of these matters in advance, they should have made inquiry as to what the agreement was on that subject, or had it inserted in the bond as to when future deposits were to be made and the amount thereof; not having done so, and the matter being made an issue by them, and these matters not having been covered in the bond, it was necessary and proper to resort to other evidence in order to ascertain what the contract was in this respect between the treasurer and the bank; when this was done, we find the undisputed evidence to' be that it was agreed by the treasurer and Mr. McClure,' upon behalf of the bank, that at any time after any of the $15,000 then in the bank should have bepn; withdrawn the treasurer would, as soon as the state.funds.
The record further shows that the bond bears date January 18th; that the bank became insolvent upon September 28th of the same year; that during this period all of the $15,000 was on' deposit and the record does not show that any demand, request or claim had been made for. other deposits', under the provisions of the bond, the contract upon the subject, or otherwise. .Under these circumstances,' if the promise in the bond to make future deposits was the sole legal, consideration running to the bank for its execution, when considered in the light of the surrounding circumstances at the. time the contract was entered into, we, cannot say that there had been a failure of consideration 'or refusal to corpply with the terms of the bond up to the time the. bank failed.
The trial being to the court, we find.no prejudicial error in the admission or rejection of evidence. For the .reasons stated, the judgment is affirmed.
Affirmed.
Chief Justice Campbell and Mr. Justice Gabbert concur. ' ■ . ■ . >
Decided April 3, 1911; time granted to petition for rehearing; no petition filed.