221 N.W. 424 | Minn. | 1928
The United States Fidelity Guaranty Company claims "that there are no questions involved in this appeal which were not considered and decided by this court in its prior decision." It is settled that, where an order denying a new trial has been affirmed on appeal, all questions that might have been raised therein are set at rest and cannot be raised on a subsequent appeal from the judgment. Schleuder v. Corey,
That a trial court in a given matter has failed to exercise the judicial discretion possessed cannot be assumed or left to inference but must be clearly disclosed by the record. Judge Freeman's *349
ability and long service on the bench repel the conclusion that he was unaware of the extent of his powers or that the eminent counsel who appeared in this case failed to remind him thereof. Without the consent of all the parties he had no right to amend the findings of fact (Bahnsen v. Gilbert,
In respect to the appeal in the Maryland Casualty Company's case, plaintiff is in position to raise every question presented by its motion for a new trial, there having been no appeal from the order. There appears to be no judgment entered in favor of Mr. Aiton, and hence this appeal concerns only the judgment in favor of the surety. Judge Freeman based his denial of a new trial chiefly if not wholly upon the fact that the findings show that during the time the bond of this company was in force there was paid out for plaintiff by the treasurer, Mr. Aiton, from the deposits then made in this bank some $12,000 more than was received by the bank during that time. There is no evidence of any loss of plaintiff's moneys or funds *350 other than the $51,093.10 on deposit in this bank in question when it failed. We shall not determine this appeal upon the correctness of that view of the case by Judge Freeman (which was also the view of the trial judge) for we think there is one finding of fact, also found in the case of the United States Fidelity Guaranty Company and held decisive there, which we regard as decisive of this appeal in the Maryland Casualty Company case. This finding reads:
"On the 30th day of September, 1924, said bank, being then insolvent, closed its doors, and no part of said $51,093.10 [then on deposit to the credit of plaintiff] has ever been repaid to said School District, although demand therefor was duly made on or about said 30th day of September, 1924, and said last mentioned sum has been lost to said School District as a proximate result of the failure of said bank to pay over said money on legal demand."
In the former decision it was held that Mr. Aiton could not relieve himself of the obligation to account for school moneys coming into his hands and deposited in a bank except under G. S. 1923, §§ 2836 and 2837, and that he could not do so under those sections because, being a member of the school board and also president of the bank, the designation of the bank as a legal depository of the school moneys was as to him invalid. Hence he was liable even if the deposits in that bank were made in good faith. Unless he could bring himself under the protection of the statute, he was liable to the school district irrespective of the bond.
But upon the record herein it was held that as to a surety on the treasurer's official bond the bank was a de facto depository, so that for school moneys deposited therein the surety was not liable under the terms of the bond. The theory of plaintiff that every deposit of school moneys in this bank was a conversion was rejected. The bank had given the bonds required by statute to make it a legal depository of school moneys, these bonds had been approved by the school board, and we held that, notwithstanding the antagonistic or dual capacity in which Mr. Aiton acted, the surety under the terms of that bond was not liable for the school *351 moneys deposited in the bank and lost through the failure of the bank. When a deposit was made in the bank the surety was relieved as long as it remained therein. The conditions of the Maryland Casualty Company's bond may be construed more favorably, if anything, to the surety than those in the United States Fidelity Guaranty Company's bond. Under the authority of the former decision, that the bank was a de facto depository of school moneys, it would seem impossible to escape the conclusion that in this case also the loss of the money was the proximate result of the failure of the bank. This language used by the court in U.S. F. G. Co. v. Title G. S. Co. (D.C.) 200 F. 443, 448, seems appropriate here as to whether a wrongful deposit in a bank or the subsequent failure of the bank was the proximate cause of the loss of the money:
"The immediate cause of the loss in this case was not the way in which the money went into the bank, but the fact that it got out of the bank into hands other than those to whom it belonged. * * * All the illegal things which the treasurer is said to have done might have been done without causing any one to lose a penny, had the bank kept the money which he deposited with it and paid it to the state upon demand."
It is said plaintiff was entitled to a finding that Mr. Aiton knew or ought to have known the bank was unsafe when the moneys were deposited, and therefore his action was criminally negligent. As a bank officer he might have been criminally and civilly liable for receiving a deposit when the bank was in a precarious or failing condition. But we have been referred to no statute making it a crime to deposit money in a failing bank. There is no statute requiring a school treasurer to deposit the school funds in a bank or in a designated depository. The school board had not directed in which of the four designated depository banks its funds should be deposited. And it is difficult to discover how the surety can be held liable under the particular wording of this condition of the bond: *352
"The surety shall not be liable for any loss of public money deposited by or in behalf of the principal with any bank, depository or depositories, occasioned by the failure of such bank, depository or depositories to faithfully account for and pay over such money on legal demand; any law, decision or statute of the State of Minnesota or ordinances of the said School District No. 1 to the contrary notwithstanding."
That the loss of the school district funds deposited to the credit of the school district in this bank was occasioned by the failure of the bank cannot be doubted. Under the plain reading of the bond the surety is not liable for a loss thus sustained.
The judgments are affirmed.