5 Wyo. 245 | Wyo. | 1895
The defendant was treasurer of school district No. 3 in the county of Laramie and State of Wyoming. On the 8th day of October, 1891, one Dunstan was elected treasurer of such district to succeed the defendant, and filed his bond as such officer on the 3rd day of November, 1891, which was approved by the county commissioners on the same day. The newly elected treasurer on said day also took the oath of office. On the 8th day of October the defendant had in his possession school money belonging to said school district amounting to the sum of $857.08 and continued to have said sum of money in his possession as treasurer up to and including the 6th day of November,1891. On this last named date Dunstan, the newly elected treasurer, having qualified as such, demanded of the defendant all moneys, papers, warrants and all property which he had and held as such treasurer, and thereupon the defendant gave to Dunstan a written' order upon “Mr. G-. L. Beard,Cheyenne National Bank,” requesting that the money belonging to said school district be passed to his successor, William Dunstan; and at that time the latter gave to defendant a receipt showing that he had received from him one thousand nine hundred and ten dollars fifty-nine cents m school warrants. These writings are set out in full in the agreed statement of facts upon which the case was submitted to the district court. These were all ‘the papers passing between defendant and his successor on that day. The warrants shown in the above mentioned receipt were warrants which had been paid by defendant to divers- parties, and were held ' by him as vouchers.
The defendant during all the time he was treasurer of said district kept and deposited for safe keeping in the Cheyenne National Bank all the money which came to his hand as such treasurer, which was kept in said bank as deposited in the' name of “William Dolan, Treasurer” of said school district, and to the credit of said district. G. L. Beard was cashier of
On that day there was a deposit in said bank to the credit of said district the said sum of $857.08, and the same was never received by Dunstan as treasurer. Defendant resided on a ranch 38 miles from Cheyenne and had no safe or convenient place to keep the money, and the bank was provided with fire and burglar proof safes. Dunstan resided 41 miles from Cheyenne. He had no knowledge that the money was not passed to his credit at the bank .until November 12th, as he was also absent from home. A receiver was duly appointed for the bank; no claim has been presented to the receiver by any person as required in the ease of. claims against'a National bank in the hands of a receiver. A dividend of twenty-five per cent, has already been paid upon all duly presented claims, and there is in the hands of the receiver the sum of $214.27 to the credit of the owner of said deposit, and an additional dividend will also be paid.
The above facts appear from the agreed, statement, and are
The agreed statement of facts took the place of evidence, the issues- being formed by pleadings as in other cases, and the whole ease was submitted to the trial court, upon the pleadings and agreed statement. The district court found for the defendant and rendered judgment in his favor.. The case comes to this court on error.
It is claimed that the court'erred in its-finding and judgment;' and also in overruling certain demurrers filed to second and third -defenses contained in the answer. , It will not be necessary -to- review the action .of the court in respect to-the demurrers.
This is not .an- action upon the bond of defendant given as treasurer of the school district, and- it is not pretended that it is; no mention of a bond appears in either the pleadings or agreed statement, unless it can be inferred that he gave a bond by the allegation that he duly qualified as treasurer; but any liability thereunder is'not sought to be enforced in this action.
Neither is it an action brought against the defendant as for money had and. received, or, to recover the money belonging to the school district and claimed to .remain in his hands and for which he is liable, as in an ordinary action to enforce such liability.. Such an action must be-brought in the name of the school district. ' The language of the. petition also rebuts the idea that it is brought to recover, any alleged general balance in the ha-nds of .the defendant which he is- bound to respond for.
It is clearly and distinctly an action to enforce and recover a penalty or forfeiture which it is alleged and contended arises under section 3977 of the Revised Statutes of 1887; and is found in the -title respecting schools, and was originally incorporated in the school laws of 1873. It is brought in the name of the people, for the use of the district as such an action is -authorized to be brought by-..the provisions of section 3976.
The prayer of the petition is for judgment for the sum of. $1,714.16, that.being double the amount alleged to be in his hands, with interest thereon at the rate of five per cent, per
Section 3977, under which the liability is claimed to arise, reads as follows:
“Any officer or person collecting or receiving any fines, forfeitures or other moneys and refusing and failing-to pay over the same as required by law, shall forfeit double the amount so withheld, and interest thereon at the rate of five per cent, per month during the time of so withholding the same.”
The next preceding section (3976) is as follows:
“All fines, penalties and forfeitures provided by this title may be recovered by action in the name of the people of the Territory (State) of Wyoming for the use of the proper school district or county, and when they accrue, belong to the respective districts or counties in which they may have accrued; and the treasurer for their districts, and the county commissioners of their counties are hereby- authorized to receive and apply the proceeds of such forfeitures as the interest of the permanent-fund is now or may hereafter be applied.”
We are not to determine in the first instance whether the defendant has any money belonging to the district for which he is liable to account, or whether he is generally liable to pay to the district the money which was in the bank at the time of its suspension, but whether he is liable in this form of action or indeed 'any other form of action for a penalty or forfeiture for the refusal or failure to pay over any such moneys as are alleged by the petition to have been in his hands, and as are disclosed by the' agreed statement to have been school district moneys, and were at one time at least in his hands and under his control.
Such liability, if any, arises under section 3977, no other provision of law imposes it, and whether or not there is such a liability depends for its determination upon the effect and meaning of that section. The penalty imposed thereby accrues when any officer or person collecting or receiving any fines, forfeitures or other moneys, refuses and fails to pay over the same as required by law.
We are logically, therefore, led into the inquiry as to the effect and meaning of the words “other moneys” in the connection in which they are used.
Various considerations assist in arriving at a just and proper construction of those words. In the first place the section under discussion is a penal statute. It imposes a very severe penalty upon the person coming within its provisions. It must therefore be construed strictly. This is a rule of universal application. “No case shall be held to' fall within it which does not fall both within the reasonable meaning of its terms and within the spirit and scope of its enactment.” End-lich on Interpretation of Statutes, Chap. 72; Dudley v. W. U. Tel. Co., 54 Mo. App., 391. A statutory liability created in derogation of the common law cannot be enlarged by construction. We cannot, in such case, go beyond the clearly expressed provisions of the act. City of Detroit v. Putnam, 45 Mich., 363.
Does this case fall within the reasonable meaning of the terms, and also, within the spirit and scope, of the enactment of the section before us? We will have occasion .later on to refer to the spirit and scope of its enactment. The terms of the statute must first absorb our attention.- Do the words “other moneys” mean any moneys received from whatever source? Do they mean any moneys which constitute a general balance in the hands of the officer, who happens to be the regular custodian of the funds of a school district or other public corporation and which he has failed to pay over to his successor? They are general words which taken alone might have reference to any moneys received from the most ordinary
We understand the general rule to be that where there are general words following particular and specific words, the former must be confined-to things of the same kind. Sutherland on Stat. Const., sec. 268.
When a specific enumeration concludes with a general term it is held to be limited to things of the same kind. Sutherland, sec. 270. . “It is restricted to the same genus as the things enumerated.” A statute which gave to/a board the right to remove an. officer for specific causes- “or other cause satisfactory to the board,” the words “or- other cause” were held to include only “other like causes.” State v. McGarry, 21 Wis., 496; see also State v. Arnold, 55 Mo., 89; Livermore v. Freeholders of Camden, 5 Dutch, 245; Bailey v. Inhabitants, etc., 6 Cush., 141; City of St. Joseph v. Porter, 29 Mo. App., 605.
We are, it is true, to get at the intent of the legislature in enacting the statute, but that we must do by a consideration of the context, other sections or acts in pari materia, and by the application of the usual and well known rules of construction of words, or terms employed. Unless, therefore, the context forces a different construction, or other provisions exist affecting this matter which lead to such a result, we are inclined, and indeed we are bound to give to these words that construction which is required by the rules already referred to, and this it seems to us is more consonant with reason and justice. Our conclusion is that the words “other moneys” in this section mean other moneys of similar or like character, money which has been received from like sources, or having a like character attached to them.
In the case of United States v. Kirby, 7 Wall., 482, Justice Field uses the following language: “General terms should be so limited in their application as not to lead to injustice, oppression or an absurd consequence. It will always, therefore, be presumed that .the legislature intended exceptions to its language which would avoid results of this character.”
The section does not in its terms confine itself to school
The district treasurer is required to give a bond-in such sum as the county commissioners shall prescribe, but shall, npt exceed one and one-fourth times the amount handled in any one year. The legislature when enacting this section certainly did not have in contemplation the liability of the- treasurer in double the amount. . It may be- said that such penalty is. not-subject to the bond and the legislature may well not have taken that into consideration; that may be, but had they intended such an extraordinary liability they could and would have made ample provision for it.
Our conclusion seems to be sustained also by a reference to other portions of the statute.
Section 3974 provides that every school district. clerk or treasurer who shall neglect or refuse to deliver to their successors in. office all records and books, belonging severally to their offices, shall.be subject to.a fine not-exceeding five hundred dollars. Had it been .within the intention of the .legislature to impose a penalty-such as is found in 39.77 for.'the. failure of treasurer to deliver to his successor any moneys of the district, remaining in his hands it could easily have done-so, and the absence- of such a clear1 provision, when a penalty; is imposed for failure to deliver records and-books, furnishes a very strong presumption.that it was not' intended: to add- to; the ordinary liability for failure-to páy over money, to a successor. The ordinary responsibilities of a public treasurer, especially in • case - of a school treasurer, who serves without compensation; are already, sufficiently burdensome without adding thereto by a fpreed 'construction of a statute which does not clearly authorize it. ■ .
Again, the next preceding section to-3977 makes provision for the recovery of fines, penalties and forfeitures, and .desigi' nates, the'officers-who shall receive and apply'the-same.-. .:Fol
We do not thereby entirely eliminate from the words “other moneys” any meaning; penalties are not specifically mentioned, but can well come under the designation of “other moneys.” We conclude that the defendant is not liable to the penalty provided for by section 3977, for the reasons above set forth.
It is, therefore, unnecessary to consider or decide the other questions raised by the record and presented by counsel.
Judgment affirmed.