145 Mo. 304 | Mo. | 1898
This is a suit begun by the Orrick school district, against John M. Dorton, as treasurer of said district, to recover from him the sum of $5,120.61, alleged to have been received by him as treasurer of said district which he failed and refused to account for, or pay over to said school district.
Defendant recovered judgment in the court below, from which plaintiff appealed. Since the appeal has been pending in this court John M. Dorton died and the suit was revived in the name of and against James G. Dorton and William H. George, his administrators.
Defendant put in issue the organization of plaintiff as a school district, and its right to sue as such.
The facts as disclosed by the record are as follows:
On the fifth day of July, 1895, one L. T. Parish was treasurer of said school district. His term of office expired on the fifteenth day of said month. On the date first named the board of directors appointed John M. Dorton treasurer of said board for the ensuing year, his term to commence on the expiration of the term of Parish. On the day that Parish’s term of office expired he filed his settlement as treasurer with the board of directors showing a balance in the treasury of $5,260.61. At this meeting a wai'rant was drawn on the treasurer in favor of one J. A. Settle for $20 and one in favor of Ball & Hamilton for $150. Dorton was required by the board to give bond as treasurer in the sum of $7,000.
“You will state if you knowwhere you were on the sixth day of July, 1895. A. I was up at Orrick late in the evening between four and five o’clock. I was at home that morning not feeling very well. It was after banking hours; both banks were closed. Q. State what took place after you got up there between you and Mr. Parish and the other parties. A. I will state it the best I can; I’m not a very good hand to give in evidence ; I goes up to Orrick and walking along and as I goes by the bank door Mr. Parish steps out and says, ‘John come in here directly, want to see you. ’ I went on and directly as' I comes back I called in-there; he had closed up the bank and he says, we have got to have a meeting here this evening, and we will get all the directors here. I didn’t say anything or speak anything about it. Q. What position did Mr. Parish occupy at that time? A. I might say that.he was the whole thing; he was cashier at the time. Q. What position did he occupy in relation to the school district? A. He was treasurer of what was called the Orrick school district. Q. Did you meet and have a meeting that evening? A. The directors and we had a little meeting. Nothing said about this school matter until we got through with this other business. Q. What other business?- A. He wanted to go off and attend to some other business and put me in as cashier. Q. Were you elected cashier that evening? A. Yes, sir. Q. What reason did he give for wanting you to*310 become cashier? A. He wanted to go to Archie, if I mistake not, and attend to some business there. Q. What else took place between you and Mr. Parish that evening? A. Very little, if anything. Q. Did you give him a receipt? A. Por this $5,260.61? Yes, sir. Q. State how you happened to give him that receipt; did Mr. Parish ever pay you any money? A, I never saw a dollar of that school money while I was in the bank; if I did I never knew it. Q. Never gave you a dollar? A. No, sir. Q. State thep how you happened to give him this receipt for $5,260. A. He and Mr. Ogg, Mr. Ogg was in the bank clerking at that time; he stated to us that everything was all right, and he stated he was on this bond for so many dollars and he was going to get off this bond if he could. We believed everything he said that evening; I never doubted his word before and never did until after that evening; I had always taken his word for everything. Q. He asked you to give him a receipt? A. Yes, sir, said he wanted to go down there; said he would be back in a few days; he says, ‘I want you to give me a receipt;’ I says, ‘I don’t want to do it, I have no bond.’ After-wards, at first I refused to sign that bond, etc. Q. When he resigned and you were elected cashier where did he say he was going? A. Q-oing to Archie to attend to some business there; said he would be back in a short time. Q. On the evening after banking hours after the receipt, did you have any knowledge that the bank books had given you credit for $5,260 as school treasurer and that this check of $120 was being charged up to you as treasurer? A. , No, sir, I had no idea of it, because I did not consider myself treasurer at that time and told Mr. Parish that I wasn’t treasurer; had given no bond and didn’t want to sign this receipt.”
At the time Dorton executed to Parish his receipt as treasurer for the school moneys, Parish, who was
After the bank closed for the day on the evening of the sixth of July, .1895, the bank directors were called together, when Parish resigned as cashier of the bank, and John M. Dorton was elected to succeed him. The amount of cash in the Farmers’ Bank at the time the check was drawn by Parish in favor of Dorton and in other banks subject to sight draft was $5,671.56. The amount of cash paid out by Dorton as cashier of the bank upon checks from July 6, to July 13, when it was found to be insolvent and closed its-doors, was $14,-441.19. On the same day Dorton returned the bond which had been given him by the school board for execution as treasurer of the school district, declined to further act as treasurer and denied that he had ever been appointed treasurer or that he received the money as such.
It is conceded by defendants that John M. Dorton was legally appointed treasurer of the school district by its board of directors, but they contend that he was appointed for the ensuing year, commencing on July 15, 1895, and ending July 15, 1896, and that his appointment could not have taken effect at an earlier date than that of July 15, 1895, except in case of the death or resignation of the then treasurer, neither of which occurred. Upon the other hand plaintiff insists that Dorton accepted the office, and entered upon the discharge of his duties as treasurer at once, and as such received the moneys sued for, and is estopped to deny
■ School districts of the character of plaintiff derive their authority to appoint their treasurers and secretaries from section 8087, Revised Statutes 1889, which provides that the board of directors shall “on or before the 15th day of July of each year, elect a secretary and treasurer, who shall enter upon their respective duties on the 15th day of July.” Now the order appointing Dorton treasurer of the school district was made on the fifth day of July, 1895, ten days before the term of Parish expired. It is as follows: “On motion, J. M. Dorto'n was elected treasurer of school district for ensuing year.” At this same meeting L. T. Parish, treasurer, made a report which was read and' accepted, showing a balance of school moneys in his hands as treasurer of $5,260.61. Parish’s term of office not having expired at the time of the appointment of Dorton, there was no vacancy in the office of treasurer, and the board was without authority to appoint a treasurer for his unexpired term; besides it is manifest that they did not intend to do so.
But plaintiff insists that Dorton was de facto treasurer of Orrick school district, and was acting as such under color of his appointment and received the moneys sued-for in his official capacity. As the same office can not be in the possession of two different persons at the same time (Throop on Public Officers, sec. 641; Cohn v. Beal, 61 Miss. 398; Cronin v. Gundy, 16 Hun. (N. Y.) 520), this position seems to us to be untenable, and we have already said that Parish’s term of office had not expired at the time it is contended that Dorton was appointed his successor. In Boardman & Perry v. Halliday, 10 Paige (N. Y.) 232, it is saiff: “Where there is but one office there can not be an officer de jure, and an officer de facto, both in possession of the
If Dorton can be held responsible as treasurer of the school district for the moneys claimed to have been received by him as such it must be upon the ground of estoppel, and not.otherwise.
Biglow on Estoppel [4 Ed.] 445, says: “Estoppelin pais may be defined to be a right arising from acts, admissions, or conduct which have induced a change of position in accordance with the real or apparent intention of the party against whom they are' alleged.”
The facts and circumstances upon which it is insisted by plaintiff that Dorton is estopped to deny that he was treasurer of the school district, are that he was present at the time of his appointment and made no objections to the same; received the cheek for the moneys from Parish as treasurer, payable to him as treasurer; received the pass book with a credit thereon to him as treasurer; the transfer of the funds on the books of the bank from the credit of Parish as treasurer to himself as treasurer and his instruction to the clerk in the bank to do just as he had been doing with respect to paying out the school moneys.
To the first proposition we are unable to agree, for, it is impossible that Dorton could have accepted the appointment of treasurer of the school district for the unexpired time of Parish, for the obvious reason
The question then is, do the other facts relied upon by plaintiff by way of estoppel bring the case within the rule announced by Biglow, supra? Dorton did not in fact receive from Parish a dollar of the moneys belonging to the school district, nor did he have any legal right as treasurer or otherwise to receive it. But the evidence showed that Parish had to his credit as treasurer of the school district in Farmers Bank of Orrick the amount of money sued for, and, that he gave Dorton as treasurer his check as treasurer, for said amount, which was accepted by Dorton and the money transferred to his credit upon the books of the bank. This check was a transfer to Dorton of the amount of Parish’s deposit, and when accepted by the bank and the funds transferred to Dorton’s credit as treasurer upon its books with his knowledge and consent, and he received the bank pass book given to him by Parish, showing that the fund had been placed to his credit as treasurer, he will be estopped from asserting the contrary.
Bush v. Johnson Co., 48 Neb. 1, was an action against a treasurer who had not in fact received the money sued for, but had received a certificate of deposit therefor in a bank which subsequently failed. The court said: “The fact that he elected to take a certificate of deposit, evidencing the indebtedness of a bank to his predecessor in office for the amount, instead of coin or currency, and to have the certificate canceled and a new one issued payable to himself as county treasurer,
The board of directors were misled by Dorton. He induced them to believe that he had the money,- and in confirmation thereof exhibited his bank pass book, showing that the amount of the school money had been placed to his credit by the officers of the bank.
It is also insisted by defendants that there was no evidence adduced tending to show that plaintiff was ever incorporated as a school district, and, that as that question was put in issue by Dorton by- affidavit, the plaintiff is not entitled to recover. But that question can not be raised by defendants in this case for the reason that Dorton received the money sued for as treasurer of-the school district, and can not now', when sued for the money, deny its corporate existence.
This case is not like that of Orrick School District v. Dorton, 125 Mo. 439, which is relied upon by defendant.
Our conclusion is that the judgment should be reversed, and the cause remanded for further trial. It is so ordered.