148 So. 419 | Ala. | 1933
The sufficiency of the bill was challenged by demurrer which was overruled.
C. D. Wadsworth, as tax collector, deposited the funds of the state and county in the bank to his credit as such official. It is averred, as to this, that as such tax collector he collected, and deposited in said bank, "taxes belonging to the State of Alabama and taxes belonging to Autauga County, Alabama, and at the time of the closing of said bank there was on deposit of said funds the sum of $1592.50 deposited to the credit of C. D. Wadsworth as tax collector * * * and of said deposit $612.50 was for the State, $245.00 soldier tax, $735.00 school tax, and that said sums so deposited were entirely separate and apart from any deposit said Wadsworth had in the bank in his individual name; that although said bank was not a designated State depository as provided by law claimant did before making said deposit take a bond from said bank with two individuals as sureties guaranteeing the repayment of said deposit and yet said deposit was unauthorized. That said deposits were made by claimant in accordance with the general custom prevailing and without intention of exceeding his authority. * * * and that said bank received said deposits knowing that said deposits were made for the safekeeping of said money until such time as said tax collector was due to pay the same over to the State and County respectively, and knew or should have known that said deposits were unauthorized."
The prayer of the bill was that complainant was entitled to a preferred claim on the assets of the bank being liquidated by the superintendent of banks of the state; that "complainant is entitled to be paid out of the assets of said bank its said claim of $1911.50 or such part thereof as the court may find complainant entitled to and that said sum be paid by said Superintendent of Banks out of the assets of the said bank before any further distribution is made to the common creditors of said Bank and if complainant is mistaken in the method it has employed to secure this end, then it prays a writ of mandamus," etc.; that "prior to the closing of said bank and on February 17, 1930, he issued a check on said bank payable to the State Treasurer of Alabama in the sum of $1592.50, and that although said check was received by the State Treasurer and deposited in the First National Bank of Montgomery and by it sent for collection to said Autauga Banking Trust Company which forwarded it New York Exchange to the First National Bank of Montgomery, that said New York Exchange was never paid due to the failure of said Autauga Banking Trust Company and that the State of Alabama made demand on complainant for the payment of said sum of $1592.50 and did sue complainant for said sum and recovered judgment in the Circuit Court of Montgomery County, Alabama, on June 26, 1931, in the sum of $1592.50 and that on appeal said judgment was affirmed and a penalty and interest added and that said judgment was made final; that on June 19, 1932, complainant paid or caused it to be so paid or same was paid for him said judgment rendered in favor of the State of Alabama to the clerk of the Circuit Court of Montgomery County, Alabama, and paid or caused to be paid or same was paid for him to said clerk the total sum of $1911.50 and paid to the clerk of the Supreme Court the sum of $14.25 in all a total of $1926.25 and that by virtue of said payments claimant is entitled to be subrogated to the rights of the State of Alabama and to the rights of Autauga County in said deposit and that it is entitled to have whatever preferred claim the State of Alabama or Autauga County would have had against the assets of said bank."
The report of the suit for breach of Wadsworth's official bond as tax collector is reported as Wadsworth et al. v. State,
It is declared that, where public funds are deposited in a bank lawfully designated as a depository, and the bank becomes insolvent, there is no prerogative right or preference in the payment of its claims, over the general depositors and creditors of the bank (Limestone County v. Montgomery, Supt. of Banks [Ala. Sup.]
It is provided by section 3973 of the Code of 1928: "* * * But none of the officers herein named shall be criminally liable under the provisions herein contained for depositing the revenue of the state or county, or any money paid into his office or received by him in his official capacity, in a bank if the officer making the deposit in good faith requires, and takes from the bank, at or before making the deposit, good and sufficient security to secure the payment of the funds deposited."
Of this statute it was observed in National Surety Co. v. State,
The statement of that statute in Montgomery, Supt. of Banks, v. Sparks, Tax Collector,
The case of Brantley v. Kelly (Ala. Sup.)
It is insisted that the payment of the judgment by Wadsworth or his sureties had the effect at law of extinguishing the same (Preslar v. Stallworth,
This is based on the fact that the person making the payment is a third person in respect to the original debt, and is secondarily liable for the debt or for the discharge of the superior lien.
In this case the official had illegally deposited state and county funds in a nondepository bank, but with surety for the forthcoming of the public funds when draft was duly made therefor. And payment was denied on such due application. He and his sureties responded to that failure and fully paid the judgment. As between the contracting parties the primary duty to pay was on the bank and its sureties; the liability of the latter suretyship is secondary, and dependent on the primary duty to pay of that depository bank and its sureties. National Surety Co. v. State,
The question of prerogative power of the county for a preference is not specifically raised by demurrer. If so, it would be unnecessary for decision for reasons now to be stated.
In the case of Montgomery, Supt. of Banks *670
v. Sparks, Tax Collector,
It is established that a court of equity will not lend itsaid to a litigant who has been guilty of reprehensible orillegal conduct directly connected with the subject-matter of the litigation and its immediate circumstances entering into the transactions before the court. Anders v. Sandlin,
We think there was error in overruling the demurrer to the bill for the reason that it was Wadsworth's illegal deposit that was paid; that this action had not the effect and was not the effort of the state to enforce a prerogative right — he was only a common creditor.
The decree of the circuit court is, therefore, reversed, and the cause remanded.
Reversed and remanded.
ANDERSON, C. J., and BROWN and KNIGHT, JJ., concur.