33 N.W.2d 405 | Iowa | 1948
The case comes to us on appeal from a decision on the pleadings. Is appellant entitled, under the allegations of its petition, to a forfeiture of defendant Overturff's sheriff's bond for his alleged malfeasance and misfeasance in office? It is alleged the sheriff, by conspiracy with others, collected on false and padded expense claims of himself and his office force; also, that he permitted open, notorious and flagrant violations of law at certain favored places. The details are unimportant to this appeal. No question is raised by defendants as to the wrongful character of the alleged conduct. Their contention is that liability therefor, if any, could only be enforced by action to recover on the bond the amount of any damage suffered and not by a forfeiture of the entire amount of the bond; in their words, "the statutory bond of a public officer is not a forfeiture bond but a security and indemnity for the protection of the public body and the public." The trial court sustained this contention.
Plaintiff argues various considerations in support of the main proposition that an official bond is subject to forfeiture of its full amount upon failure of the officer to abide by its conditions. *1041
[1] I. The terms of the bond need not be set out here since all statutory requirements will be considered as included and nonstatutory provisions read out. In re Estate of Durey,
II. Code section
This is the full statutory condition of the bond. We have italicized the last clause as the only part that would seem to furnish any basis for treating it as anything but an indemnity bond. The four earlier clauses all clearly contemplate an accounting and a reduction of any claimed liability to liquidated form. Plaintiff does not concede this but argues that "the violation of one or more of the provisions * * * calls for a forfeiture of the entire sum."
The statutory language above quoted was in the Code of 1851 and has continued through all succeeding Codes to the present time. In the Code of 1897 first appeared some additional language: "and the sureties on such bond shall be liable for all money or public property that may come into the hands of such officer at any time during his possession of such office." Section 1183, Code, 1897. This identical language is preserved *1042
in succeeding Codes to the present Code section
There are other pertinent statutes. The amount of a sheriff's bond is not fixed by law but by the board of supervisors. Code sections
Other Code sections should be referred to:
"The official bond of a public officer is to be construed as asecurity to the body politic or civil corporation of which he is an officer, and to all the members thereof, severally, who areintended to be secured thereby. Section
"A judgment in favor of a party for one delinquency does not preclude the same or another party from an action on the same security for another delinquency * * *." Section
Section 452.15 makes the official bond liable for a fine of not exceeding $1000 levied against the officer for neglect or refusal to perform his official duty and "for the damages sustained by any person through such neglect or refusal."
"All bonds of public officers shall * * * be for the use and benefit of any corporation, public or private, or person injured or sustaining loss * * *." Section
See, also, section
[2] III. We are asked to construe these various statutes as permitting the sheriff's bond here to be forfeited in its entirety without reference to any definite pleaded or proven amount of defalcation or fraudulent overcharge by, or damage for misconduct of, the principal. This we cannot do.
The only Iowa case cited is Brown v. Cochran,
Plaintiff cites various cases from other jurisdictions involving bonds held to be subject to forfeiture upon violation of their conditions. None were statutory official bonds. Most of them belonged to the class of bonds given "to secure compliance with law" as discussed in 11 C.J.S., Bonds, section 130, on page 510; 9 C.J., Bonds, section 130. But this text cites no cases holding that bonds of public officers belong in that class.
Cases of the character just referred to are not in point here. We have to determine the nature of the bond in question from the applicable statutory provisions heretofore cited.
The statutory provision (now section
IV. The various Iowa statutes we have set out clearly contemplate that official bonds are for indemnity. Section
These provisions are quite inconsistent with any intention of making the bonds forfeitable either for violation of the general *1044 requirement "that he will faithfully and impartially, without fear, favor, fraud, or oppression, discharge" his duties, or for breach of any of the other conditions. Ouster proceedings and criminal procedure are the provisions for punishing officers who violate their duties or are guilty of misconduct. See Code chapters 66, 739, 740, and sections 452.14 and 452.15. The official bond is for the purpose of indemnifying the obligee or any person suffering injury or loss by reason of official malfeasance, misfeasance or nonfeasance.
There is another important legislative fact that stands in the way of plaintiff's contention. The statutes (sections
We would be reluctant indeed to hold the legislature intended the boards of various counties thus to fix "penalties" for official wrongdoing. The acts charged in plaintiff's petition here would be just as serious offenses in any other county as in Polk. The result of plaintiff's argument, if sustained, would be to penalize a Polk county sheriff $25,000 for acts that, if committed by the sheriff of some other county, would draw a "sentence" of only $5000.
We do not think the legislature ever intended to grant such power to county boards or that any board ever thought it was exercising such authority. It is too clear for argument that the intention was to permit the approving board to fix a largerindemnity in counties in which on account of size or other circumstance a larger amount seemed necessary or desirable.
V. The temptation is great to delve deep into the historical background and reasons for treating some bonds as forfeitable and others as indemnifying only. We must not indulge it. The doctrine of indemnity seems to have arisen in equity to mitigate in proper cases the common-law enforcement of forfeiture. An interesting discussion and quotations from various older authorities are found in Clark v. Barnard,
The usual form of the bond, read strictly, would create liability for the full amount upon conditions broken. It seems still to be the procedure in some jurisdictions to render judgment at law for the full amount (in case of violation of the conditions) subject however to being chancered, i.e., adjusted according to equitable principles. United States v. New Amsterdam Cas. Co., 1 Cir., R.I., 45 F.2d 93. That, of course, has never been the procedure in Iowa.
[3] VI. Plaintiff's contention here would in effect treat the "penalty" named in the bond as liquidated damages. The decision in Sanders v. McKim,
Much emphasis in oral argument and in the printed reply brief is laid on the language of Code section
In Sanders v. McKim, supra, it is pointed out there is "confusion in the decisions upon the questions of penalty and liquidated damages" and language is quoted from Seeman v. Biemann,
This comment is added in the Sanders v. McKim case:
"The right to the recovery of damages in all cases has its basis in the idea of compensation, that is, some reasonable sum which shall make the complaining party whole for some damage which he has sustained at the hands of the defendant."
And in Beeman v. Hexter,
"The courts will not even permit the language of a contract to obtain, wherein the term `penalty' or `liquidated damage' is used, if, upon a consideration of all the facts and circumstances, a different intent is shown"; and authorities are cited to the effect that use of these terms is not conclusive.
We cannot attach great significance to the words "penal sum." The term "penalty" of course originally meant, and in some connections still means, punishment, as its derivation suggests. The familiar test was whether the wrong sought to be redressed was a wrong to the public or one to the individual. Huntington v. Attrill,
But it has come, not infrequently, to mean also any extraordinary liability to which the law subjects a wrongdoer in favor of the person wronged, not limited to the damages suffered. Southern Ry. Co. v. Melton,
And in still other cases it has, when used in bonds, been construed to connote merely security for damage actually caused by the breach of the condition, with recovery thereon limited to an amount compensatory therefor, unless stipulated or liquidated damages are clearly intended. United States v. United States F. G. Co., D.C. Pa.,
Our own court has, notwithstanding the words "penal sum", held that bonds of public officers stand as security for funds lost or destroyed without any suggestion of fault or negligence (to say nothing of criminal conduct) on the part of the officer in whose custody they belonged. See Taylor District Township v. Morton,
In view of the elasticity of the expression "penal sum" its use in Code section
All JUSTICES concur.