71 Miss. 426 | Miss. | 1893
delivered the opinion of the court.
One B. H. Gordon was elected to the office of treasurer of' Grenada county for the term beginning on the first Monday of January, A.D. 1884, and ending on the first Monday of January, A.D. 1886 ; he was also elected as his own successor for the term beginning at the latter date and ending on the-first Monday of January, 1888. He executed his general bond as treasurer for both terms, arid the appellant, Pass, was surety upon each. Neither the board of supervisors nor Gordon and his sureties knew that the law (Code of 1880, § 726) required the treasurer to execute a special bond for the security of the school-funds, and none was given for either term. All concerned supposed that the bond actually given would serve as security of all the funds, school and general, which might come into the hands of the treasurer. It appears now that Gordon had embezzled a part of the general fund and of the school-fund during his first term of' office, but he succeeded in concealing that fact from the county authorities, and pretending to have more cash on hand than he in truth had. His accounts for the first term were audited, and he entered upon his second term a real but not a known defaulter. At the expiration of his second term another person was elected as treasurer, and Gordon, being unable to further use a simulated cash balance as a real one,. his default became known.
Mr. Adams testifies that he was employed by the sureties of the treasurer. He states that “it was a private examination, as I understood it; it was made in the interest of Mr. Gordon and the bondsmen alone, and my report as to the result of my examination was made to Mr. Pass and those sureties present, in the office of Judge Loan, and the report itself was afterwards handed to Mr. Pass. As I understood it at the time, the county, through its board of supervisors, had employed Mr. McLeod to examine for it.” On the third day of September an order was made by the board of supervisors reciting that it appeared from the report of McLeod that Gordon was indebted to the county of Grenada in the sum of $5,810.16, as treasurer of said county, and directed that he and his sureties should forthwith pay said sum into the treasury of said county, and, in default thereof, that the district attorney should immediately enter suit upon his official bond for said amount, and all damages and penalties allowed by law. Under this order the sureties upon the bond of Gordon for his second term, including the appellant, Pass, who was also one of the sureties upon the bond for the first term, paid into the county treasury the sum of $5,810.16, of which sum Pass paid $4,485.16, and thereupon the hoard of supervisors caused an order to be made directing its clerk, as county auditor, to balance all accounts on-his books against said treasurer as final and absolute. It appears from the evidence that this settlement was made by the board in ignorance of the fact that the account made by Adams, in the interest of the sureties, showed a larger balance against the treasurer. The clerk of the board testifies that “the board had no knowledge of what Mr. Adams’ statement was.”
There were many sureties upon th.e bond of the treasurer
Pass then exhibited an amended and supplemental bill against the county of Grenada and the sureties on both bonds. lie averred 'that, if the default was during the first term, he was entitled to contribution from his co-sureties during that term; if the default was during the second term, he was entitled to contribution from his co-sureties on the bond for that term; and if, in truth, there was no default, then, that he was entitled to recover back from the county of Grenada the sum he had paid, which payment he alleged had been made by him under coercion- by the board, and which was made by him and received by the board under protest by him, by which all his rights -were reserved. The county of Grenada answered this amended and supplemental bill, averring that there was no default by Gordon during his first term, but that the default arose during the second term. It denied'that the payment made by Pass and others was coerced by the board, or that such payment was made or received under protest, but averred that it was made and received as a final and absolute discharge of the indebtedness of the treasurer, whatever it might be; but that since Pass, by his bill, repudiated the settlement, the board set up, by way of cross-bill, that the default was, in fact, $7,890.89, instead of $5,810.16, and, for the difference between said sums, the board demanded a decree against Pass and the other sureties on the second bond.
The court referred the account to a commissioner, with in
When this report was made, the county of Grenada asked leave to file a supplemental answer and cross-bill, which was denied. By this cross-bill it was sought to fix liability upon both bonds for the school-funds of the county by a reformation of the bonds. It is sufficient to say, in reference to this matter, that the action of the court was correct; the effort was to bring this case within the control of the decision in Lafayette County v. Hall, 70 Miss., 678, but the facts alleged were insufficient.
On final hearing, the court held: 1. That the payment made by Pass and- others was as upon a default for the second term of Gordon, the treasurer; that the payment was not a voluntary one, and, since the amount paid was in excess of what the county had a right to enforce as against the sureties on the bond of Gordon for that term, the county should repay to the sureties such excess. 2. That the sureties on the first bond were protected by the statute of limitations against any liability on that bond.
The county and Mr. Pass appeal from this deci’ee. There
The appellant, Pass, in the light of the proved facts, does not occupy a position to commend him to a court of equity for relief. He withheld from the county authorities facts known to him, and which it was then supposed made the sureties on the bond liable for a much larger sum than the board of supervisors was demanding. He has since discovered that, though these facts might exist, yet by law their liability was less. The payment made under these circumstances cannot be recovered back, and the chancellor should have denied all relief against the county.
The county, having received an amount equal to that for which the sureties on the general bond were bound, can have no further relief. It suffers because of the inefficiency of its board of supervisors, which failed to inform itself of the law requiring a bond from the treasurer for its school-fund, and because of the dishonesty of that treasurer.
The decree is reversed, and cause remanded.