217 N.W. 496 | Minn. | 1928
Defendant Aiton has been treasurer of plaintiff school district from 1918 to and including September 30, 1924. During such time he was also a member of the school board, president of the Security State Bank of Grand Rapids, Minnesota, and a member of its board *430 of directors. He owned during that time a majority of the capital stock of the bank which, being insolvent, closed its doors on September 30, 1924.
On or about September 8, 1915, the bank presented an $80,000 depository bond to the school board, under G.S. 1923, § 2836. The bank presented additional depository bonds as follows: August 16, 1921, $75,000; June 24, 1922, $50,000; July 1, 1922, $50,000; all of which were accepted and approved by the school board as presented.
No written designation of the bank as a depository for the funds of the school district, in accordance with the provisions of G.S. 1923, § 2836, was ever made or filed with the clerk.
All the members of the school board, including Aiton, were of the opinion that the only action necessary to make the bank a legal depository for the funds of the district was the approval of the depository bonds. Aiton at all times herein mentioned, as treasurer of the school district, deposited school funds in the bank in reliance upon the depository bonds and the board's acceptance and in the belief that the bank was a legally designated and qualified depository for such funds in accordance with the statute. Soon after August 21, 1921, the board, including Aiton, knew that the attorney general had given an opinion that a bank could not legally be designated or act as such depository so long as the treasurer of the school district was a stockholder and officer of the bank and a member of the school board.
On July 16, 1921, defendant United States Fidelity Guaranty Company executed with Aiton a bond to plaintiff for $50,000 for the faithful performance of his duties as such treasurer for the term of one year from August 1, 1921. It also executed for the same purpose similar bonds as follows: $50,000 for one year from August 1, 1922; $50,000 for one year from August 1, 1923; and $50,000 for one year from August 1, 1924. Each bond contained the following provision:
"It is understood and agreed, and this bond is given and accepted on the condition that the surety shall in no way be held liable for any loss, costs, damages or expenses of any kind caused by the failure of any bank, institution or depository of any kind to pay, deliver *431 over or properly account for any money, moneys, papers, securities or property of any kind placed on deposit therein or in its custody by or for said George B. Aiton as such treasurer or in any other capacity."
During the four years covered by the fidelity bonds, Aiton as treasurer deposited large sums of money in the bank and disbursed in the manner hereinafter indicated all but $51,093.10, which was the balance appearing upon the bank's books when it closed. From January 1, 1924, to September 30, 1924, the bank was in a precarious condition. This was known to Aiton, who believed at all times until the bank was actually closed that it would be possible for it to continue business without loss to its depositors.
The school district sustained no loss by reason of any wrongful failure of Aiton as treasurer to pay school warrants when presented for payment; and the finding is that the said sum of $51,093.10 has been lost to the school district as a proximate result of the failure of the bank.
1. The law imposes absolute liability upon a public officer such as a school treasurer for the safety of the funds coming into his hands. He is answerable for all he receives. Commrs. of Hennepin County v. Jones,
The legislature has created a very definite exception to the above rule. G.S. 1923, §§ 2836 and 2837. The statute authorizes the officers of a common and independent school district to select and designate as a depository any bank which gives a depository bond to be approved by the district. Such designation shall be in writing, signed by the chairman and clerk, and filed with the clerk. The treasurer, under the statute, is exempt from liability if loss comes from the failure or other acts of the bank. The district will presumably be protected from such hazard by the depository bond, and *432 it is only just that the surety of the one who causes or permits the loss should be the one to answer therefor.
2. Plaintiff's board consists of a chairman, a clerk and a treasurer. It was the intention of the board to designate the bank a legal depository under authority of the statute. Everything with one exception was done to perfect the plan. The board did not execute and file the designation. The bonds were furnished, approved and accepted. The money was deposited, and doubtless received, under the belief that the bank had been duly designated a legal depository. That was the hope of the bank's sureties. The plaintiff's bank account was considerable. Many checks were drawn. The bank's name was printed on the checks which were signed by the treasurer but which were not good unless countersigned by the chairman and clerk, both of whom signed on a form on the back. The depositing of the money in the bank created a contractual relationship between plaintiff and the bank. The books sometimes refer to such transactions as a loan. It is clear that G.S. 1923, § 10305, which forbids a public official's making contracts where he is interested, is applicable; and for that reason under the facts the exception to the general rule was inoperative as to the school treasurer. He brought himself within the operation of City of Minneapolis v. Canterbury,
3. As to Aiton's surety we have quite a different situation. Its liability is not in all things the same as its principal. We construe the limitation of the surety's liability as expressed in the bond as relating only to a depository within the contemplation of G.S. 1923, § 2836. So construed there can be no question as to the surety's right to so contract. The surety's contract was made in reference to a depository. Its reference was to a supposedly legal depository. All the parties so intended. May it be said then that because of a delinquency or a deficiency in action on the part of the plaintiff the surety must be held to a contract which it never contemplated? To so hold would doubtless give the plaintiff more protection than it would have had, had it performed all that it really intended and successfully created the legal depository. It would also make the surety of Aiton's fidelity answerable for the failure of the bank, which was the proximate cause of plaintiff's loss. This was never intended. It guaranteed the fidelity of Aiton, whose integrity was the basis of its undertaking. He had never failed to pay warrants until he was rendered unable to do so by the closing of the bank.
The claim is that Aiton imposed a liability upon the surety by making an unlawful disposition of the money; that every deposit in the bank was a separate wrongful act, an illegal loan, subjecting the surety to liability; repeated acts in which plaintiff participated and concerning which it had knowledge from the beginning. But the fact is found by the court that not this diversion of the money but the bank's failure caused the loss. We do not however need to pursue this branch of the case because we are of the opinion that the surety's contractual limitation in the bond must, in view of the findings of fact, preclude a recovery from it.
The bank was not legally designated as a depository. But it was a depository in fact. Plaintiff believed it to be a legal depository. It approved and accepted the depository bonds and thought that was all that was required. The bonds contain a recital that the bank had been designated and selected as a depository of the school district. The bank did all that was required of it to become such. It became in fact a depository and must have supposed that it was a legal one. The bank's sureties had a right to assume that their *434
purpose was accomplished. Aiton thought the bank was a legal depository and deposited money therein in reliance on the approved depository bonds. All interested parties intended, believed and supposed that the things done constituted the necessary designation. The opinion of the attorney general did not relate to the failure of designation, but it went to the dual capacity in which Aiton was acting and in which he stubbornly, erroneously, but perhaps sincerely persisted without apparent opposition. Under this misapprehension the bank functioned for years as a depository. Its ineffectual designation was unknown and unobserved. Under such circumstances it was a de facto depository. Bd. of Co. Commrs. v. State Bank,
4. Being such de facto depository, the surety had the same right to make its contract in reference thereto as if the bank had been a depository de jure. This is not a case where the surety attempted to limit its liability for the "faithful discharge" of the treasurer's duties. We may assume, without deciding, that such could not be done. It may, however, under the facts in this case and in view of the depository statute, make the limitation which it did, which is binding when the depository is actual whether it be a de jure or merely a de facto one.
The essential elements of a de facto depository are these: A law under which a bank may be made a depository; a bona fide attempt to create the depository, accompanied by a colorable compliance with the statutory requirements; and an actual user or exercise of the depository powers and duties pursuant to such law and attempted designation. All these essential elements are present. The possibility of a de jure depository is the only condition requisite to a de facto depository. It is not a sound test that the particular *435
constituents could not have become a de jure depository. Mabel First Lutheran Church v. Cadwallader,
These authorities would tend to support the conclusion we reach even if we should say that because of the statute the bank was ineligible, which we do not, to become a depository. The rule is, however, that there cannot be a de facto corporation unless there is a valid law under which such a corporation might exist de jure. 14 C.J. 215; Marshall v. Keach, 118 A.S.R. 247, note 255; L.R.A. 1916C, 216. Notwithstanding Richards v. Minnesota Sav. Bank,
The order from which the appeal was taken is affirmed as to George B. Aiton and reversed as to the United States Fidelity Guaranty Company. *436