26 Mo. App. 206 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1887
delivered the opinion of the court.
The appellants are sureties upon the official bond of
The petition alleges that Mitchell was elected treasurer of the corporation December 8, 1884, for a term of office, commencing on, or about, January 1, 1885, and continuing until his successor, in said office, should be elected and qualified by giving bond; that he executed the bond sued on, in the penal sum of two thousand dollars, on February 11, 1885, conditioned as follows:
‘ ‘ If said Albert Mitchell shall duly perform all of his duties as said treasurer, and shall account for, and pay over, all sums of money which shall come into his hands as such treasurer, whenever the payment of the-same shall be required by the said St. Louis Union Society, or its proper officers, and shall demean himself as a faithful officer of the said society, then this obligation shall be void, otherwise it shall remain in full force and effect.”
The petition further states that, while the said Mitchell was thus acting as treasurer, under said appointment, there came into his hands, as such, the sum of $8,397.90, out of which he paid, upon the plaintiff’s orders, the sum of $2,014.50, leaving in his hands the sum of $1,383.40, which he failed and refused to pay over, but converted to his own use.
The answer was a mere general denial.
The trial resulted in a judgment for the plaintiff for the penalty of the bond, with an award of damages for $1,383.40, as claimed in the petition.
The errors complained of are, substantially: (1) That there was not sufficient evidence of conversion of any part of the funds during the term for which the bond sued on was given. (2) That, even if the defendants could be held liable as sureties on this bond, up to the
The plaintiff, as part of its case, gave in evidence the articles of incorporation of the society, which, among other things, provide: “ Amendment first. The officers of this society shall be a president, vice-president, a secretary, - an'assistant secretary, a treasurer, a board of trustees, composed of seven members, and a committee composed of six members, all of whom shall be elected annually,.on the second Monday of December,, by members of the society, at a regular meeting, and shall hold their offices until their successors are elected and qualified.”
It thus appears that, while the bond sued on did not,, by its express terms, limit the liability of the sureties to-any definite time, the office of treasurer was an annual office by the articles, and the liability of the sureties on the bond was limited to one year, and until the successor of their principal was elected and qualified. Morse-on Banks, 225: Savings Bank v. Hunt, 72 Mo. 597, 599. The same instrument which fixed the duration of the tenure of office, also, provided that, previous to entering upon its duties, the treasurer should execute a bond,' with satisfactory sureties, and this was an essential part of his qualification.
This is a feature which distinguishes this case from Savings Bank v. Hunt (supra). There the tenure of office, though not limited by the terms of the bond, was-limited by a public law, which, for all intents and purposes, formed part of the contract, and the requirement to -give a bond was one of a by-law, which the court held the corporation might waive if it saw fit to do so. It
These preliminary remarks are pertinent in view of the first point made by the appellants.
It appears ■ that Mitchell was elected treasurer in December, 1884. He gave, under that election, the bond - sued on February 11, 1885. He was reelected treasurer in December,. 1885, and never gave another bond. The exact daté of his defalcation is not shown, but it is fairly inferable, from the testimony, that it was prior to February, 1886, in which -month he was arrested for larceny of the one thousand dollars hereinabove mentioned, and his connection with the corporation ceased.
January 14, 1886, Mitchell made a report as treasurer, showing a balance in his hands of $1,388.40, although it does not otherwise appear whether the money was in his hands or not. He was ordered, at the time, to present his bond or to renew it, and the board recommended that one thousand dollars of the funds be deposited with the Boatmen’s Bank, on interest for six months. On January 28, the board again met, the treasurer presented his bank book, and was ordered to
It was, also, in evidence that, though the officers are elected annually, in December, they are never installed into office until the third Monday of the succeeding January, and that some formalities of installation were gone through with other officers, in this instance, in January, 1886, but not with Mitchell, because the latter had failed to renew his bond, or to give a new bond as treasurer, and because, as it seems, the board had some •susjjicions as to the state of his accounts. It appeared, however, that he was permitted to receive moneys of the corporation as its treasurer, notwithstanding that he had failed to give bond, subsequent to the January meeting, at which the other officers of the corporation were installed.
The defendants claim that, this state of facts being shown, their liability as sureties of Mitchell was determined, atthedate of the first regular meeting, in January, 1886, or, at least, within a reasonable time thereafter, and that they are not responsible on the bond for any ¡misconduct of their princijjal, after that date. There is some warrant for this view in the decisions of other states. City of Montgomery v. Hughes, 65 Ala. 201; People's Ass’n v. Wroth, 43 N. J. Law, 70; Chelmsford Co. v. Demarest, 7 Gray, 1; County of Wapello v. Bigham, 10 Ia. 39. But the rule in this and some other states has always been othei’wise. Long v. Seay, 72 Mo. 648; The State ex rel. v. Kurtzeborn, 78 Mo. 98; The
Nor are we prepared to say that, under all the circumstances of this case, more than a reasonable time-elapsed between the time that Mitchell was required to furnish a new bond, to-wit: January 14, 1886, and the-time he finally vacated the office, which was in February of that year. His sureties are not sought to be held liable for any funds that came into his hands thereafter, because his report, made January 14, shows a balance of $1,383.40 in his hands, and there is no pretense that lie-accounted for any part of such balance, unless it be the-one thousand dollars hereinafter mentioned. The first point made by the appellants must, therefore, be ruled against them.
The second and third points, which are closely con-, nected, will be considered together, and present a question of greater nicety. It appears that, when Mitchell was pressed by the committee of the board to make a, settlement, he brought, on or about February 16, a package of nice, crisp notes, containing one thousand dollars, and delivered it to the committee, who, immediately thereafter, as ordered by resolution, took the money to-the Boatmen’s Bank, made a deposit of it, and took a. certificate for the amount, payable to the corporation.
The defendant, Mitchell, in February, 1886, was employed as porter of the Missouri Pacific Railway Company. On the fifteenth of February, the money clerk of that corporation delivered to him a package containing $2,469.82 in money, of which the sum of one thousand dollars was in new silver certificates. The envelope, in which this money was delivered by the money clerk to-, Mitchell, was produced upon the trial. There was no evidence tracing this money package or its contents, after it was delivered to Mitchell, except the declaration of
The testimony on the subject, whether the one ■thousand dollars, paid by Mitchell to the trustees, was part and parcel of the money delivered by the money .clerk to Mitchell, for transmission, by express, seems to rest, almost exclusively, upon the declarations of Mitchell, and is as follows:
The secretary of the plaintiff, upon his examination :in chief, gave the following testimony :
“He (Mitchell) was asked for one thousand dollars, and he brought the money to us, and I took it down to the Boatmen’s Bank; and I think it was three days : afterwards that Detective Furlong came after me, and I had to give the money up. He stole the money from the railroad company, or express company, I don’t know ■which.”
“To pay the one thousand dollar order?” “Yes, •sir; and I went to the jail to see him, and I said to him : ‘ Is the money that you gave me, the money that you took from the company!’ and he said, ‘Yes, and you Jiave to give it back.’ ”
Question, by the defendants’ counsel: “Do you know when he took the money?” A. “I don’t know the exact date. He told me that he took it, though.” {Counsel for the defendants objects to the introduction ■of any evidence arising from what Mitchell told this witness, as such evidence is incompetent, as far as affecting the defendants is concerned). Sustained.
Q. “ This was money stolen from the Missouri Pacific Railway Company ? ”
A. “Yes, sir; from the express company.”
Q. £ £ And you voluntarily gave this money up, didn’t you?”
A. “Yes, sir.”
Thus, it will appear that, although the evidence of Mitchell’s statements was first excluded by the courtr upon objection of the defendant sureties, the same evidence was, subsequently, elicited by counsel for the defendant sureties, and was before the jury, without objection.
We do not feel called upon, under this state of the evidence, to pass upon the question, whether the declarations made by Mitchell, at the time and under the circumstances, would have been admissible as against his-sureties. It must be remembered that, although Mitchell was lying in jail at'the time, there is no evidence in the record that he had ceased to be the treasurer of the plaintiff, or that the relation of principal and surety between himself and his co-defendants had been determined. However this may be, the evidence was subsequently elicited by the defendants, themselves-, on cross-examination, and the court was not thereafter requested to exclude it from the consideration of the jury, either by motion or instruction, so that, in neither view, are the defendants in a position to complain of any error on the part of the court in its rulings upon the testimony.
Nor are we even prepared to say that all the facts offered in evidence, outside of these declarations of Mitchell, do not furnish prima facie inferential proof
Moreover, the following instruction, asked by the defendants, seems to concede that there was evidence before the j ury warranting them to find that the money paid by Mitchell to the trustees, was stolen money, and the property of the Pacific Railroad Company :
“8. Even though the jury may believe, from the evidence, that some part, or all, of the money, delivered by Mitchell to the officers of the plaintiff, was stolen money, yet, as between the plaintiff and the sureties, the delivery of such money to the plaintiff’s officers, paid Mitchell’s indebtedness to the plaintiff to that extent, and the sureties can not be held liable for the amount so paid.”
This instruction the court refused, and gave, upon the plaintiff’s request, the following instruction :
“4. The court instructs the jury that if they be*216 lieve, from tlie evidence, that the one thousand dollars paid over to the plaintiff, by the defendant, Mitchell, was money which said Mitchell had stolen, and that the plaintiff was called upon to pay it back to the person from whom it had been stolen, and that the plaintiff did pay it back to the person to whom it belonged, then the defendants are entitled to no credit for, or on account of, said one thousand dollars.”
The question raised by this instruction is the most serious question in the case.
The defendants contend that, nonceding that Mitchell stole the money, yet, if he paid it out in the usual course of business, to the plaintiff, it was a valid payment, and discharged the sureties pro tanto ; that the Pacific Railroad Company never could have recovered the money from the plaintiff if the plaintiff received it in good faith, and the defendant sureties can not: be prejudiced by the fact that the money, or its representative, was voluntarily returned, by the plaintiff, to the said company.
This proposition is unquestionably correct, as between strangers. If Mitchell had been a stranger to the railroad company, and a stranger to the plaintiff, such would have been the result. Miller v. Race, 1 Burr. 452; Peacock v. Rhodes, 2 Doug. 633; Ringling v. Kohn, 4 Mo. App. 59; Tyrell v. Railroad, 7 Mo. App. 298. The unqualified statement of the proposition by the defendants, ignores the peculiar circumstances of a case like the present, where it is inapplicable, for the following reasons:
(1) Mitchell was a bailee of the railroad company, and stood toward that company in a trust relation. The abuse of that trust by him could confer no rights on any person in privity with him. If the property, in its original state and form, was covered with a trust- in favor of the principal, no change of that state and form could divest it of the trust. Taylor v. Plumer, 3 Maule & Selwyn, 574; Clark v. Shee, Cowp. 197. That excep
(2) Mitchell was not a debtor of the plaintiff, in the sense in which the delivery of trust funds by him to the plaintiff would constitute the payment of a debt, in the ordinary course of business] The funds in the plaintiff’s treasury were not his property, but the property of the plaintiff. He could not make himself a debtor of the plaintiff by abstracting them. Quo ad hoc, he was a simple representative of the plaintiff. If he stole these funds and placed them in the plaintiff’s treasury, the plaintiff could get no more title to them than if any other officer of the plaintiff had stolen funds and placed them in the plaintiff’s treasury. A corporation, in the very nature of things, can act only by its agents, and it admits of no controversy that it is responsible for the acts of its agents, whether authorized or not, to the extent of the benefit it derives from them. We can not see how the mere fact that the funds were not placed by him directly in the plaintiff’s treasury, but, after being stolen, were delivered to a committee, and placed by the committee in the plaintiff’s treasury, can vary the matter.
It results, from the foregoing statements, that neither of the errors assigned by the appellant, is well assigned.