41 Mo. 545 | Mo. | 1867
It appears from the petition of plaintiff, that at an election in and for the county of Lafayette, held on the 6th day of November, 1866, he received a majority of all the legal votes cast at said election for the office of sheriff of said county ; that he received a certificate of his election, and on the third day of January next thereafter the Governor of the State issued and delivered to him a commission as sheriff in conformity with the requirements of law ; that previous to the election he took and subscribed the oath of loyalty, and, after the receipt of his commission, the required oath of office ; that he thereupon executed his bond as ex officio collector of the revenue for that county, which was filed in the office of the clerk of the County Court (the court itself not then being in session) and approved by the justices thereof; that he thereupon proceeded to act as sheriff and collector of said county until the month of July following, when his office was declared vacant by the County Court. It appears that previous to the making of this order on the 24th day of May, 1867, the court made an order reciting the fact that plaintiff was then assuming to act as sheriff under his said commission; that the revenue of the county amounted to about the sum of $85,000 ; that plaintiff had “ failed to execute a bond as collector of the revenue as by law the sheriff
To this petition a demurrer has been filed, and the facts stated by plaintiff are to be taken as true for all the purposes of this investigation.
Passing over the general causes of demurrer assigned by the defendant, we shall proceed to examine only those that are special. First, it is averred that the petition fails to show that the plaintiff did within the time prescribed by law execute a bond to the satisfaction of the County Court in a penal sum double the amount of the revenue to be collected, or such a bond as the law required the court to approve; second, that it is not shown that the necessary steps had been taken to have the orders of the County Court vacated and annulled; and third, that the execution and approval of plaintiff’s bond as sheriff is a condition precedent to his right to exercise the functions and duties of collector, and there is no averment in the petition that such bond had been given and approved.
Next we proceed to notice the objection to the petition as stated in the demurrer, that it does not show that plaintiff
The demurrer will therefore be overruled, and it is ordered that a peremptory writ of mandamus be issued from this court, commanding and requiring the justices composing the County Court of Lafayette county to accept and approve the bond tendered to said court by the plaintiff as collector of the revenue in said county.
Opinion of the. Court upon motion for leave to file &ureturn to the alternative writ.
Fagg, J. — There can be no controversy about--the require ments of the statute in relation to the formal- steps to be taken in a case of this sort, where they are insisted upon at the proper time. It is clear that the issues should be made-up on the return to the alternative writ, and the practice in this court has been, for the purpose of reaching the legal questions involved, to assume that the necessary steps in pleading have been taken whenever i-t is apparent from the facts presented that such questions do-properly arise;
It can make but little difference what name is given to the paper filed by the, defendant to the alternative writ. The.
For the reasons stated in the opinion heretofore given in this case, all that portion that pertains to the legality of the election and the certificate issued to the plaintiff, as well as the allegation in relation to his failure to execute a good and sufficient bond as sheriff, must be excluded from consideration. The commission issued by the Governor was conclusive upon the County Court as to the right of plaintiff to the office of sheriff, and it is not within the province of that tribunal to inquire into the sufficiency of. his bond as such. Having treated the orders made by the County Court at the time of declaring the office of sheriff vacant, and such as were made subsequent thereto, as mere nullities and without any authority of law, it will not be necessary to consider so much of the proposed return as relates to them.
It seems to be admitted that the plaintiff did, within the time limited by the order of the court in relation to the filing of a new bond, appear and present for its approval a bond in the penal sum required in the order, but it is averred that in the mean time it had been ascertained that the revenue would actually amount to the sum of $100,000, and that
The proposed return, stripped of all the matters which we •have intimated do not properly belong to the investigation of this case, is narrowed down simply to the action of the County Court upon the bond presented by plaintiff as collector. It is therein admitted that the bond was presented within the time prescribed by the court. It is averred that it was insufficient in the amount of its penalty ; also that the sureties were not together worth more than half that sum, and that the court proceeded to hear all the testimony offered by the plaintiff to prove their solvency.
If, as alleged, there was at the time an examination into the sufficiency of the bond, some record of the fact as well as the judgment of the court ought to be shown in proof of it. There is nothing of that sort appearing, and the presumption arising upon the case as presented is that there was not in point of fact any judicial investigation or determination of that fact. A copy from the assessor’s books showing the several amounts at which the sureties upon the bond had been assessed is annexed to the return, and much weight seems to be attached to this sort of testimony for the purpose of sustaining the action of the court. We think it should not be held in any case as conclusive upon the amount of the property owned by any individual; but, in the absence of other testimony more direct and reliable in its character, it is not disputed but that a certain amount of weight might be attached to it. The fact is well known, however, as a part of the history of the State, that these assessments — almost without an exception — are very far below the actual value of the assessed property. The sworn statements of the parties themselves, as shown by the papers and exhibits in the cause, places the aggregate amount of the value of all their property at something more than $270,000. Assuming, however, that this is too high an estimate, and believing that the assessment is much too low, as it is ordinarily in almost every
We see nothing in the facts stated to change the conclusion reached in the former opinion, and the respondent’s motion, must be overruled.