27 N.C. 105 | N.C. | 1844
Debt on bond of the defendant Pool, as sheriff of Pasquotank, (106) and of the other defendants as his sureties.
In 1840 Joshua A. Pool was elected sheriff of Pasquotank for two years, and at September Term of the county court he gave the usual *81 bond for the performance of his duties. At September Term, 1841, he and the other defendants, as his sureties, entered into another bond payable to the State, in the sum of $10,000, with a condition, after reciting his election by the qualified voters of the county for the term of two years, that "If the said Pool, sheriff as aforesaid, shall well and truly execute and due return make of all process or precepts to him directed, and pay and satisfy all fees and sums of money by him received by virtue of any process, to the proper person to whom the same by the tenor thereof ought to be paid, or to the proper person or persons to whom the same shall become due, and in all things well and truly and faithfully execute the said office of sheriff of Pasquotank during his continuance therein, then this obligation to be void; otherwise, to remain in full force and effect."
At the time the bond was accepted by the court there did not appear from the record that there were more than three justices of the peace in court, and that number was less than a majority.
An action of debt was brought on the foregoing bond by William Jordan and Louisa Jordan, as relators; and the breach alleged was that Pool, the sheriff, refused to pay to the relators certain sums of money belonging to them which he received under the following circumstances: On 28 October, 1840, Josiah Jordan conveyed by deed of bargain and sale to the said Pool a certain tract of land in fee, in trust to sell the same and out of the proceeds of the sale to pay certain debts in the deed mentioned, and in case the debts should be paid without selling the whole of the land, in trust to convey such part as should not be sold to the said Josiah Jordan or his heirs. Afterwards a judgment was obtained against Josiah Jordan for a debt not secured by his deed, and a fieri facias thereon was delivered to Pool, and he levied (107) the same on the equity of redemption of Jordan in the land so conveyed to him in trust; and then Jordan died, and before the return of the writ Pool sold the equity of redemption under it for a sum which paid the debt on the execution and left a surplus of $1,284.52; which sum Pool sued for as sheriff and recovered from the purchaser, and is that for the nonpayment of which this suit is brought by the relators, who are the heirs at law of Josiah Jordan. The pleas were, non est factum, conditionsperformed, by the sureties. Pool himself suffered judgment by default.
On the trial the relators offered to prove that a majority of the justices of the county were on the bench when the bond was accepted, but the court rejected the evidence.
For the defendants it was insisted that there was not a proper acceptance of the bond, and, therefore, that it was not in law the bond of the defendants. *82
It was further insisted for them that the excess of money received by the sheriff over and above the sum due on the execution was received and held by him in his natural and not in his official capacity, and was not in the condition of the bond; and that, as he was the trustee, he had a right to it as the legal owner.
It was agreed by the parties that if the court should be of opinion that the defendants would be liable to the plaintiffs upon the bond, if it had been properly accepted by a sufficient number of justices, then a judgment should be entered against one of the parties, who is named, for $428.17. But the court held that none of the defendants were liable, and nonsuited the plaintiff, who appealed. Although arising, no doubt, merely from inadvertence, there is a sufficient error for which the judgment would, at all events, be reversed. The court nonsuited the plaintiff after a judgment by (108) default against one of the defendants, upon which the case was standing for an inquiry of damages from the alleged breaches. The relators had established a cause of action against the defendant, and could not be nonsuited.
But we think there was also error on the merits. Even if the bond had been held to be valid, the court decided that the relators were not entitled to an action on it. We think they are entitled to the money, and could maintain an action for it on the sheriff's bond, if duly executed.
Such an interest as remained in Josiah Jordan after his deed to Pool was liable to execution as an equity of redemption, under the act of 1812. Poolv. Glover,
As we are not aware on what point his Honor's decision against the plaintiff was founded, it is our duty to consider each of them. Having held that the relators are entitled this money, we are to consider, next, whether they can recover it in this form of proceeding and from these defendants: that is, supposing the bond to have been duly delivered. Upon this point, also, our opinion is with the relators. A purchaser must undoubtedly pay his whole bid to the sheriff, after getting enough to discharge the execution; must see that the purchaser satisfies the surplus to the owner of the property before he can make a conveyance to the purchaser. Otherwise, the defendant in the execution loses his property and is without any security for a part of the price. That the law never intends. Then, how does the sheriff receive this surplus? It is true that he does not make that money by direct mandate of the writ, nor is he bound by the tenor of the process to return the surplus into court with the writ; for the writ only commands him to make the sum recovered by the plaintiff and bring that into court. Yet as he is obliged by the law to receive the surplus, as a duty to the defendant, it is necessarily to be regarded as a duty of office resulting from the prior duty imposed by the writ, of making the sale. The money in the sheriff's hands, therefore, may not be deemed in custodia legis, so as not to be stopped by attachment or other means which may prevent the sheriff from paying it into court with the writ, yet his only authority to receive it arises out of his office, and for all money received virtute officii the sheriff's bond is a security, whether it belong to the plaintiff or defendant in the execution. We think this within the words of the bond in this case. It is money "received by virtue of process"; not payable, indeed, to the relators "by the tenor thereof," but payable to them "as the proper persons to whom the same is due." Even if those words in the bond did not cover this liability, the general terms, "in all (110) things well, truly, and faithfully execute the said office," would be sufficient; and it is the duty of the Court to interpret the obligation so as, if possible, to secure all money which the sheriff can rightfully receive for the citizen.
As the Superior Court did not give judgment against that surety who submitted to a judgment for $428.17, upon the proviso there could have *84 been a recovery upon a good bond, it must have been his Honor's opinion that the relators had no cause of action against the sheriff for an official default; and for the reasons given this Court holds that to have been erroneous. It would not, however, be necessary to send the cause back to another trial if the omission to give the plaintiff judgment for that sum were the only error; because this Court is authorized to render such judgment as the Superior Court ought to have rendered, and, consequently, judgment might ordinarily be given here for that sum of $428.17, as agreed on. But we cannot give it in this case, because there is no method in which this Court can dispose of the judgment by default against one of the defendants, which makes it absolutely necessary to reverse the whole judgment and send the case to the Superior Court for further proceedings. That, however, we should not feel bound, or even authorized to do, however erroneous the opinion of the court might have been on the other points of law, if the bond sued on were so radically defective that no action could be sustained on it against any person, since it would be useless to send a case to another trial if the record itself showed that the plaintiffs never could recover.
It becomes our duty, then, to inquire whether this bond be thus defective. In pursuing that inquiry, and applying the result of it to the case, we find that the cause is brought into a singular state in consequence of the manner in which it was concluded in the Superior Court, and the legislation of the recent Assembly pending this appeal. We think the bond is made good and effectual by the acceptance of it for the State by the Legislature, though at the time of the institution of the writ, and the decision in the Superior Court, no judgment could have been rendered on it. By the Revised Statute, ch. 109, secs. (111) 8 and 9, a majority of the justices, or, if not, nine at least, are required to take the sheriff's bond, and being taken by a lesser number, this bond was not duly delivered, and did not then legally become the instrument it purports to be. S. v. Shirly,
But unfortunately for the defendants, they caused the case to go off by way of nonsuit, when, owing to the condition of the suit, the plaintiffs *85 could not legally be nonsuited; which makes it our duty to reverse the judgment and order the issues of fact to be tried by another jury. Therefore, we are not now to look to the question whether this was the bond of the defendants when the case was before tried or attempted to be tried; but we are to see whether in law this instrument must be held to be their bond upon the trial that is to take place according to our judgment of reversal. If it must be so held, the plaintiff may recover, and, therefore, there should be a venire de novo. Now, we think the act of 1844, ch. 38, sec. 2, accepts this bond and makes it effectual from the beginning. There is no doubt of the capacity of the State to take a bond; and the only question is whether the assent of the State has been given to this bond. If taken in the case prescribed by law by those appointed by law to take bonds on behalf of the State, then we have held that the bond is good, because delivered to and received by those who had authority from the State to accept the delivery for her. But when the delivery is not made under those circumstances, and to those thus (112) previously authorized, then we have held that the instrument is not effectual, unless "the want of precedent authority be supplied by a subsequent ratification." Shirly's case, supra. By whom can such ratification be given, and what shall be the effect of it? Whatever doubts may be entertained as to the authority of any other person or body to ratify the delivery to a third person of a deed in the name of the State, there can be no question that such power resides in the Legislature. That is the lawmaking branch of the Government, with which it rests to collect and declare the public will within the limits of the Constitution and make contracts for the State, or appoint and empower other persons so to do. Here the bond was not delivered to the persons appointed by law to receive it, and, therefore, it was necessarily to be treated as if it were a bond made to the State, when there was no law to authorize any person to accept it for the State. But it is not, for that reason, so absolutely void as that it can never become the deed of the party who made it, and as if that person had no capacity to make it; for there was an actual sealing and an actual delivery of the instrument by competent obligors; indeed, a full execution of it in all respects, except that it was not delivered to the State or to any agent of the State, but the delivery was to a stranger for the State. If in such a case the bond had been to a natural person, it would have been the deed of the party instantly, though delivered to a stranger, for it is good until the obligee refuse it; but then it is voidab initio. Butler v. Baker, 3 Rep., 26; per Gould, J., in Wankford v.Wankford, 1 Salk., 301. But in the case of deeds to the State the rule is otherwise, as was held in S. v. Shirly, supra, with much hesitation (and, I own, against my impression), the rule being that they do not become the deeds of the party unless they be *86 accepted by the State. But that has been done by the act of 1844, ch. 38. It enacts that all persons who shall be admitted by the county court, and sworn into office of sheriff, coroner, or constable, shall be held and deemed to be rightfully in office until ousted by due course of law; (113) and that all bonds which have been or may hereafter be taken by any court of pleas and quarter sessions upon admission of any person in either of the said offices shall be held and deemed to be valid and effectual to all intents and purposes, notwithstanding any defect, insufficiency, or irregularity in the election, appointment, or admission of such person, or in any of the proceedings of the court in relation thereto." This is as absolute an acceptance of all such bonds as could be declared. It does not, indeed, profess simpliciter to accept the bonds; but there is a necessary implication of such acceptance from the enactment that all such bonds shall be held to be effectual in law, since they could not be effectual unless the State accepted the delivery to the stranger as the delivery to the State. This, then, supplies the desideratum that was wanting in Shirley's case. The bond has been accepted, and, therefore, is is now an effectual bond of the obligors.
The remaining question is as to the time from which the bond becomes effectual: Is it from the passing of the act by which the acceptance of the Legislature was declared, or from the execution of the instrument? It would seem that for the like reason on which a bond is voidab initio, which is delivered to a stranger and refused by the obligee, it must become good ab initio when accepted by the State upon such a delivery to a stranger. It must be so upon the intention of the parties; and, at all events, that must be the presumed intention in relation to official securities of this kind, and was unquestionably the actual intention of the Legislature in the act of 1844. As has been before remarked, the bond, though not effectual by the delivery, because to a stranger, was not absolutely void in the sense that it would have been if there had been no delivery at all, but the obligor had kept it in his own pocket; for if that were so, there could be no operative acceptance by the State subsequently, as it requires the concurrence of the obligor in tendering and of the obligee in accepting the delivery to render the deed complete and effectual. But it is sufficient that there should be such concurrence in asenting [assenting] to the contract, though there may not be a concurrence as to the time of expressing that assent. The actual delivery, therefore, has some effect; and the effect, as the (114) delivery was not absolute and final, is to be deemed a conditional delivery, and must be in the nature of a delivery as an escrow. It can mean nothing less than this, that the obligors delivered the deed to the justices, to be their deed to the State if the State would vouchsafe to receive it. It might have been held, as it once seemed to me, that *87 by allowing the party to remain in the office, upon his admission into which he gave the bond as a security for the faithful performance of its duties, instead of ousting him because he was improperly admitted without having given bond, the sovereign sufficiently manifested an acceptance of the official bond. But supposing an express assent to be necessary, it is here given: and the question is as to the operation of it as given. Such a conditional delivery is binding on the obligor, and he cannot recall the deed. It is true that when a deed is delivered as an escrow it is of no more force, until the conditions be performed, than if he who made it had kept it. Yet when the conditions are performed the deed is thereby made good without any further delivery, unless such second delivery be prescribed as one of the terms of delivery. Of that position a question, it seems, has been made, and some have thought that to make the deed perfect the person to whom it was delivered by the maker should make a second delivery of it to the party himself. But the contrary is laid down for law in Shepherd's Touchstone, as deduced from 5 Rep., 84, and 3 Rep., 36; and it is there said that if the party that doth make the deed be not, at the time of making thereof, disabled to make it, the first delivery is good, "for if either of the parties to the deed die before the conditions be performed, and the conditions be afterwards performed, the deed is good; for there wastraditio inchoata in the lifetime of the parties; and postea consummataexistens by the performance of the conditions, it taketh effect by the first delivery, without any new or second delivery." Touch., 59. The truth, however, probably is that a second delivery will be required or dispensed with according to the nature of the case, (115) and as it may best comport with the intention of the parties and the purpose they had in view to hold the deed, upon the performance of the conditions, to be a deed only from a second delivery, or from the original delivery by relation; for in the same book, p. 72, it is said that escrows "shall take effect from and have relation to the time of the first delivery, or not, as circumstances may require, and ut res valeat; for if relation will hurt and make the deed void (as in some cases it may), then it shall not relate; but if relation will help it, as in case where a femesole deliver an escrow and before the second delivery she is married or dieth, in this case, if there were not a relation, the deed would be void, and, therefore, it shall relate. So, if one disseize me of an acre of land in D., and I release him all my right in my lands in D. and deliver it to a stranger as an escrow until a time, and before that time he disseize me of another acre there: in this case this release shall not by relation extend to this other acre, to bar me of that also. But as to collateral acts, there shall be no relation at all in this case. And, therefore, if the obligee release before the second *88 delivery, the release is void, and will not bar the obligee of the fruit of his obligation." Upon the passage quoted, Mr. Preston, the learned editor of the work, remarks that the relation depends on the nature of the transaction and the presumable intention of the parties. In point of title (admitting the parties, who are grantors, are competent as to ownership, and free from disability), the deed will take effect from the first delivery, so as to overreach all intermediate encumbrances. These principles and authorities seem to settle this case. There can be no hesitation as to the intention to be presumed in the obligors in making and in the Legislature in accepting this bond. This is a sheriff's bond, given upon entering into that valuable office, in which he may serve for one year, if the State will accept his bond and allow him. But he is liable to be ousted at any moment, as having been admitted without lawful warrant, inasmuch as he failed to give such a bond as the law required, and he cannot expect the sovereign (116) will allow him to remain in office without any security for the discharge of his duties. Therefore, by giving this as his official bond, there is an irresistible implication of an intention of the sheriff, and, by consequence of his sureties, that in case it was not a proper official bond according to the statute, it should, nevertheless, be the bond of the obligors for the purposes expressed in it, if the State would accept it as such, and allow this person to serve in his office accordingly. There being such an intention, it is the plain duty of a court to give effect to it and uphold the obligation, if it can be done consistently with the law, as the bond is not for any immoral or unlawful purpose, but is for the beneficent purpose of securing the public and the citizen from any injury by the malversation of the principal obligor in an important office. It cannot be, in such a case, that it was intended the deed be delivered the second time or that it should operate only from the time it was expressly accepted; for, being given to the State, there can be no actual delivery to the obligee, and the intention was that the State, by accepting it, should make it a security for the whole term of office, as well the past as that to come. So, too, it is clear that, with that view, the Legislature accepted it. The provision that all bonds which have beentaken shall be held to be good is conclusive as to the legislative intention. If it be said that those words refer to bonds taken from persons before the passing of the act who were in office at the making of the act, which prima facie would be the proper construction, as statutes are not to be deemed retrospective but from necessity, the answer is that such an interpretation cannot be received, forasmuch as it would render those words, "have been taken," altogether inoperative; for, as soon as the inconveniences were understood which would arise from the principle ofShirly's case, *89 the Legislature proceeded to provide a remedy by enacting in 1842, ch. 61, "that whenever thereafter any instrument shall be received under the sanction of a court of record, purporting to be a bond to the State for the performance of any duty of any office, such instrument, notwithstanding any irregularity or any variance in the conditions or penalty from the provisions prescribed by (117) law, shall be valid, and may be put in suit for the benefit of any person injured." That act, therefore, covered every case that might happen after 1842, in terms still more conclusive, if possible, than those of the act of 1844. Now, the offices of sheriff, coroner, and constable are but from year to year, as their bonds are to be renewed annually. Consequently, there could not be at the end of 1844 any person in either of those offices whose bond had not been given under the act of 1842; and, therefore, the act of 1844 must have been directed solely to such bonds as had been given by such officers before 1844, and must be held to embrace them. There was no other occasion for the act but to embrace them.
Then we have the case in which the obligors delivered their bond to a stranger, payable to the State, on the condition that the delivery should be deemed absolute, and the instrument be their deed, if the State would accept it, with an intention on their part that the instrument, if accepted, should cover a whole official term, as the same is, indeed, expressed in it, and in which the State has expressly accepted it, through the Legislature, with the same intention plainly declared: In such a case we think it our bounden duty not to defeat the intention, but to give effect to it, upon the principle, ut res magis valeat quam pereat, which can only be done by holding it to be the deed of the parties by relation abinitio. Consequently, the judgment must be
PER CURIAM. Reversed.
Cited: S. v. King, post., 205; S. v. Reed, post., 358; S. v. Read,
(118)