188 S.E. 770 | W. Va. | 1936
This suit involves primarily the right of a surety on an official bond which is insufficient to satisfy all demands against it, to enjoin several actions at law upon the bond and to have all matters connected therewith settled in a court of equity. The circuit court upheld that right.
The treasurer of the City of Dunbar failed to pay over to the parties entitled thereto the collections made by him on certain paving assessments. Shortly after his default, to-wit, during November and December, 1933, two owners of assessment certificates which he had collected brought separate actions in Kanawha County against him and his three sureties, and another such owner brought an action in Roane County against one of the sureties, G. N. Price, alone. This suit was instituted by Price in February, 1934. He included as defendants his principal on the bond, his two co-sureties thereon, the three plaintiffs in the law actions, and other claimants against the treasurer. One of the latter, by answer in the nature of a cross bill, regularly matured, also prayed that all law actions on the bond be enjoined, and the demands against the bond be adjudicated in this suit. The three defendants who had instituted the law actions appealed.
Price contends that he is not liable at all for the treasurer's default on these collections; that if so, the claimants' only remedy is in equity; and that even if they might proceed at law, he is entitled to convene them *50
in equity to avoid the expense and annoyance of multiple actions and to secure more adequate relief. Appellants respond that Price's alleged immunity from their claims may be raised in the law actions and consequently is no ground for equity jurisdiction; that Code
The statute relied upon by appellants (
The treasurer's bond is not payable to the state as the statute contemplates, but to the City of Dunbar. It is only by right of the statute that these claimants may proceed at all against the bond. The common law did not permit any person to sue upon an official bond except the named obligee, and he could sue only for himself and not for the use of another. This was because the common law recognized no privity between any save the obligor and the obligee. Crook Co. v. Bushnell,
Price says that under State ex rel. Sand Gravel Co. v.Royal Ind. Co.,
In a scramble of creditors for preference in a common fund, equity imputes no particular merit to diligence, alone. In rel.Lord Polk Chemical Co.,
The ruling is affirmed.
Affirmed.