27 Wis. 349 | Wis. | 1870
The decision in this oause was announced at the January term, 1870.
The circuit court did not feel called upon to go through and enter item by item into a computation of the accounts showing the indebtedness of .the plaintiff to the county, and we do not. It would be a tedious and useless task. It is enough to say, that if the several witnesses examined on the part of the county are to be believed at all — and their correctness and veracity are certainly not impeached — the indebtedness found was established beyond any reasonable doubt. It is also enough to
The plaintiff, at the end of the first year of his term of office as county treasurer, had a full and fair settlement with the board for that year. Several years after this, and after the expiration of his term, it was claimed that there was a deficit in his account for the first year, and suit was threatened. To relieve his bail from apprehension, he deposited securities, to the amount of a thousand dollars, with the clerk of the board, which were to stand as security for any amount he might be found to owe the county. As no suit was brought against him, he subsequently brought this suit to recover the amount of those securities. There was nothing in this transaction of the deposit that can have any just effect to deprive the plaintiff of all the benefit of his settlement with the county. And although he is the plaintiff in the action, he has established a prima facie right to recover when he shows the settlement, according to which there was a balance in his favor; and the burden is
It is not denied that it may be impeached for mistake ; but the mistake should be clearly and definitely shown. This I think has not been done. The first committee which settled with the plaintiff was composed of competent accountants. One of them, at the time his testimony was taken, was acting as such in the office of the state treasurer. They spent several days in trying to make a settlement upon the books of the plaintiff; but they were found to be so full of errors, and so utterly unreliable, that they were rejected entirely, and the- committee resorted to other sources, and required the plaintiff to produce vouchers or satisfactory evidence of everything with which they credited him. In this manner the settlement was made. Now, to show a mistake in it, the county, giving to its testimony all the effect that is claimed for it, has simply shown that the official records at the original sources from which the plaintiff would receive money, and where he would disburse it, as treasurer, do not show that he either received or paid out as much as he was charged and credited with in that settlement. It may be admitted that these official records ought to show everything. It may be admitted that they would, in the absence of any other evidence, be held to be prima facie correct and complete. But I do not think that is sufficient. The settlement is also presumed to be prima facie correct. It is sworn, by those who made it, to have been made upon satisfactory proof of every credit that was allowed. It appears that the committee charged the plaintiff with several thousand dollars more than these official records, as explored by the subsequent committee, disclosed that he had received. I cannot regard, therefore, the prima facie presumption of cor
By the Court. — The judgment is affirmed,