68 Mo. 454 | Mo. | 1878
Action instituted in the Saline circuit court against Sappington, late county treasurer of Saline county, and the other defendants ás his sureties upon an official bond for $20,000, executed November 12th, 1868. The bond was given to the State of Missouri for the safe keeping and disbursement of the school fund of Saline county, and was duly approved by the county court. On April the 4th, 1871, while Sappington was still county treasurer, the county court made an order requiring him
I. Relative to the point of defendants still continuing liable notwithstanding the execution of the second bond, we are still of the same mind as when deciding the case of the State ex rel. Saline Co. v. Sappington et al., 67 Mo. 529. That case is decisive of this, in respect to the point referred to. We, therefore, rule that point against the defendants.
II. In reference to the legal capacity of the relator to institute to its use the present action, we have this to say: The county of Saline is the trustee of an express trust in regard to all ordinai’y suits relating to the school fund of that county. Bonds, for instance, for money loaned,, are required to be executed to the county to the use of the township to which the fund belongs, 2 Wag. Stat., § 82, p. 1258; and if any suit be brought on such bond, it is brought in the name of the county to which it is executed. But when a suit, as in the present case, is brought on a bond of an official given to the State for the faithful observance of his duties toward the school fund, there the action lies in the name of the State, to which the. obligors have bound themselves, and the State is the trustee of an express trust. 2 Wag. Stat., § 3, p. 1000; Meier v. Lester, 21 Mo. 112. If it be true that suits on official bonds must be brought in the name of the State, it would seem of necessity to follow, that under the exigencies mentioned in 2 Wag. Stat., § 42, p. 1251, although the county clerk, or a freeholder, may prosecute a suit on the bond of the defaulting treasurer, yet it by no means follows that
III. But if we concede that Saline county was not the proper relator, still this concession does not aid the defendants, and for this reason : If defendants were desirous of testing the question, they should have stood on their demurrer, since the alleged defect was patent on the face of the petition, and could only be taken advantage of by demurrer, and not by answer. 2 Wag. Stat., §§ 6, 10, pp. 10, 14, 15. When, therefore, the demurrer was overruled and defendants answered, they waived and abandoned whatever vantage ground they may have acquired by demurring; Ware v. Johnson, 55 Mo. 500; and could not raise the same question anew in their answer, in respect to a defect of parties. These considerations induce the affirmance of the judgment.
Affirmed.