117 Ala. 549 | Ala. | 1897
The complaint, in which the appellees were plaintiffs, contains two counts. The first count complains of the breach of the official bond of one Joseph Hodgson as register in chancery of the chancery court of Mobile county, executed on the first day of December, 1893, in the execution of which the appellants joined as sureties. The second count complains of the breach of a like bond executed on the eleventh day of December, 1894. The facts from which a breach of the bond is deduced are the same in each count. The defendants pleaded several pleas, to the fourth and fifth of which demurrers were sustained, and sustaining the demurrers forms the matter of the first and second assignments of error.
The error of the argument in support of the fourth
The fifth plea differs from the fourth only by adding the averment “that there had been no settlement of the trust vested in Hodgson by said order and decree of said chancery court, and no ascertainment of the balance, if any, due from him on account of his administration of such trust; and that this court has no jurisdiction to entertain such settlement, and to ascertain such balance.” We agree that the liability of Hodgson as trustee'is not involved in this suit, and that a court of law has not jurisdiction to take an account of his administration of the trust. But we cannot conceive of what concern Hodgson’s administration of the trust, is to the defendants. So far as Hodgson may have invested the money in his hands as register in the creation of the trust estate, he was relieved from liability as register, and the sureties on his official bond were also relieved. For his administration of the trust estate, the defendants are not answerable — in no event, are they liable except for his delinquencies as register. — Mechem on Public Officers, § 285; Brandt on Suretyship, § 528; McKee v. Griffin, 66 Ala. 211. The money now in controversy, was not part of the trust estate — it was never in Hodgson’s keeping as trustee — and not having been invested in obedience to the decretal order, it remained as it was-paid into court, and as it was received by Hodgson ; the money of the plaintiffs. There was no error is sustaining the demurrers to these pleas.
Hodgson held the office of register for several successive terms. The term continuing when the money was paid into court, and when he made the last report that he had the money in his hands, subject to the order of the court, expired six years before the execution of the bond mentioned in the first count of the complaint, and
Hodgson was without authority to employ the money otherwise than in the purchase of real estate, or in the improvement of the real estate he had purchased. This was the scope and extent of the authority conferred on him by the decretal orders of the court, which was the measure of his authority and duty. If the money was not so employed, the only duty resting upon him was the keeping of it safely, subject to the orders of the court. He was without authority, as he was without duty, to lend the money, or invest it otherwise than as the decretal order's prescribed. The want of authoxnty to lend, he recognized in one of the reports made to the court, stating that he made a loan of the moxxey, pending xiegotiations for its investment in real estate, and accounting for the interest received. Though the loan was unauthorized, he was bound' to account for the in
We do not deem it necessary to say more in reference to the first instruction requested by the defendants, than that there is no aspect of the case in which it would have been justified. There is no legal presumption that the fund was converted or misappropriated by Hodgson, ■before the execution of the bonds on which defendants are his sureties, as there is no such presumption that until the execution of the bonds it remained in his keeping. The time of the conversion or misappropriation, is matter of inference to be drawn by the jury from all the facts and circumstances in evidence. When this is the state of the evidence, such an instruction would be
The matter of the remaining exceptions relates to instructions given or refused, as to the liability for interest on the fund in controversy. The general rule is, that a public officer is liable for interest from the time of a conversion or misappropriation of moneys entrusted to his keeping, and he is liable, also, if he unlawfully retains moneys in his hands, during the period of the unlawful detention. — 11 Am. & Eng. Encyc. of Law, 398, note. As in the case of trustees, there must be some element of a breach of trust in the transaction, or a breach of duty. — Perry on Trusts, § 468. As we have already said and repeated, any other employment of the money than in the purchase or improvement of real estate, was a conversion, and that if such conversion occurred before the execution of the official bonds on which defendants are sureties, they are not liable. The instruction given by the court ex mero motu, authorizes the jury to award interest against the defendants from the time of such conversion, from the time he had invested the money by loan or otherwise, if such loan or investment was continued after the execution of the first of the bonds on which defendants are sureties. Doubtless, Hodgson is liable for interest from the day of the conversion — from the day of the unauthorized loan or investment — but such liability cannot be visited on the defendants because the investment was continuing at the time they became Hodgson’s sureties. The investment was a past act — a past .breach of official duty — for which the defendants are.not liable.
The fourth instruction requested by the defendants, is predicated upon the hypothesis that Hodgson could have accounted for the principal only to his successor, and that of consequence liability for interest would attach only on the appointment of a successor. Hodgson’s liability was to the plaintiffs only, and whatever of duty he was bound to perform was owing only to them. The duty, and the only duty Hodgson owed his successor, was that owing by every public officer, as prescribed by the statute (Code of 1886, § 301) ; the delivery on demand of all books, papers, property and money, belonging or appertaining to the office.
The sixth and seventh instructions, in the view we have expressed of the liability of the defendants, should have been given. If Hodgson had the money in his keeping at the execution of the first bond, the liability of the defendants for it then accrued, and in no event could they be liable for interest at any earlier period.
For the errors pointed out,' the judgment of the court below must be reversed and the cause remanded.
Reversed and remanded.