54 Tenn. 638 | Tenn. | 1872
delivered the opinion of the Court.
The record embodies six distinct causes, which were consolidated and heard together in the Chancery Court of Sumner county. The defendant Blakemore was appointed Clerk and Master of said Court on the 10th of September, 1855, for. the lawful term of six years, and resigned said office in December, 1860. The complainants seek severally to hold the defendant and the sureties on his official bonds liable for official default on his part, in failing to pay over to them certain moneys belonging to them which came into his hands as Clerk and Master, and as Commissioner of Sales, under the orders and decrees of said Court. The questions submitted are important, and some of them novel in the courts of the State.
It is upon the first and fourth of these bonds that complainants seek to predicate the liability of defendants. The same persons became bound as sureties on each of these bonds, and among them were J. A. Blakemore, who is now dead, and whose estate is insolvent, and Jo. C. Guild. The first named was the father of W. H. Blakemore, the Clerk and Master. As the equities attaching to the several cases are somewhat different, they will be distinguished in this opinion as the Walsh case, the Lloyd case, the Terry case, the Wilson case, the Bailey case, and the
The Act of 1794, ch. 1, sec. 2, is in the words following: “ There shall be a clerk to each of the Circuit Courts, of skill and probity, who shall each of them give bond with security, payable to the Governor and his successors in office, of $10,000 for the safe keeping of the records and the faithful discharge of the duties of his office, which said bond shall be lodged in the Secretary’s office, and may be put in suit on the assignment of the Governor by the party or parties injured in his or their own name, and shall not become void on the first recovery, or if judgment be given against the plaintiff, but may from time to time be put in suit by action of debt until the whole penalty be recovered.” Car. & Nich., 155. All official bonds were by a late act made payable to the State of Tennnessee. In 1849, by ch. 150, it was enacted that all clerks of the Circuit, Chancery, or
The first section provides that it shall be the duly of the different County and Circuit Court Clerks in this State at the June Term, 1852, of the several County Courts in this State, to enter into bond and sufficient surety in the sum of $10,000, or such larger
It is under these several acts that the bonds of. defendant were given, and that it is sought to hold him and his sureties liable. The theory of the complainants is, that their respective demands will fall within the conditions of one or the other or both of these bonds, and that when the penalty of the one is exhausted they may resort to the other; that the first section of the act of 1849, ch. 150¿ making the Clerk liable for moneys collected as Special Commissioner or receiver, on the bond for the faithful discharge of his official duties, is still in force, and not repealed by the act of 1852, ch. 164, above quoted.
The facts necessary to illustrate the equities of the parties are these: In the Walsh case the complainant was entitled to a legacy of $3,000 under the will of Page P. Parker, to be paid upon his
In this case the Chancellor below decreed for the ■complainant the amount of the note with interest against the Clerk and his securities, but gave no decree for the remainder of the fund of $3,000.
In the Lloyd case these are the facts: In 1851 the Chancery Court of Sumner ordered the sale of a negro belonging to complainant. The negro was sold and James G. Webb became the purchaser at the price of $802.50, for which he executed his note with security, to the Clerk and Master. On the 6th of November, 1852, the Clerk reported that the note so given would fall due on the first of January, 1853, and that the complainant had no regular guardian. Thereupon the Court ordered the Clerk, after paying the costs of the proceeding and the attorney’s fee, to loan out the remainder of the fund arising from the sale of said slave so as to yield interest, and that he hold the fund at alt times subject to the order of the Court, or, should a guardian be appointed, subject to his order. In pursuance of this order the Clerk and Master collected a portion of the fund to pay costs, and loaned the remainder to the purchaser Webb, who executed his note with J. C. Guild as his security. The Clerk reported the condition of the fund to the. September Term, 1854, and that he held the note of" Webb and Guild for the sum of $759.40, due at one day. The Court ordered him to hold said note under previous orders. At the September Term, 1855, the Clerk and Master was ordered to have the note renewed and to collect the interest that had accumulated and pay the same to Mr. C. C. Lloyd towards the support and education of the minor Thomas Lloyd.
The four other cases of Terry, "Wilson, Bailey, and Thompson, rest upon the facts following: The real and personal estate of William Read, deceased, was sold under the decree of the Chancery Court of Sumner, based upon the award of Chancellor Ridley, acting as arbitrator for the parties. The sale amounted to $-. This sale was made by the Clerk and Master, and the fund collected by the defendant Blakemore. The style of the case thus submitted to arbitration was F. Rogan et al. v. W. H. Read et al. The complainants, Cornelia Terry, Mary Hill, Clarissa Aston, and Lea Read, deceased, were children of William Read, and entitled to an interest in said fund. After Blakemore went out of office his successor made a report touching said fund, and the result was as follows: There was a balance in the hands of the Clerk Blakemore and due to Geo. W. Terry and wife, she being styled Mrs. Cornelia Huffy in said report, of the sum of $1,894.83; to Mrs. Hill a balance of $445.25; to Mrs. Aston a balance of
The object of the two suits of Terry and Bailey is to recover the above sum with interest.
In the case of Wilson and others it appears that the real estate of complainants’ father was sold under a decree of the Chancery Court and the funds came into the hands of Blakemore, who failed to pay the same over to complainants. There is a balance claimed to be due them but the account does not appear.
In the case of Thompson, he claims in his own right, and as guardian, about $500 balance on sale of real and' personal estate belonging to P. P. Parker, deceased. The fund was collected and a part paid over, — but it is claimed that some $500 balance remained in the hands of Blakemore, the Clerk, which he failed to account for. The bill is filed by Thompson to recover this sum. The Court dismissed these several bills as to the sureties at the cost, of the complainants.
It is not seriously controverted by defendants that the defendant Blakemore, the Clerk and Master, was a defaulter in the manner charged in the several bills, but the amount of the several sums due complainants is not agreed. But the main defense set up is, that if there be any liability upon defendants at all it arises under the bond of their principal in the sum of $5,000, conditioned that he will pay over and account
In this condition of affairs Dr. Blakemore, being then a man of fortune, proposed to his co-securities, that if they would not abandon his son he would assume the liabilities, and indemnify them, and save
They do insist,' however, that their demands are equally mentioned, and are still unpaid, and that the bond of defendants was made to the State for the benefit and security of all litigants in the Court, and that said bond as to them could not be discharged by voluntary payments to others of demands not ascertained in a legal way to be just claims against the office.
The case thus stated presents questions of difficulty, some of which have not before been in judgment here. It is a rule of law that a party makes payments at his peril, and will be held bound to know whether the payee is authorized to receive the money. The true test is said to be whether or not the payor
The offices of receiver and commissioner were at com’mon law appointments of special trust which might be accepted or declined by the clerk, but which could not be forced upon him. Under the act of 1852,
The real intent and not the literal meaning of a condition is to govern. Cooke v. Graham, Admr., 3 C. , 229. In an official bond the words well and faithfully to execute the office and in all things relating to the same well and faithfully behave, mean faithfully to perform the trusts reposed. Bank US. S. v. Brent, 2 Cr. C. C., 696; Union Bank v. Forrest, 3 Cr. C. C., 218. And so it is said that the condition of an official bond well and truly to execute the duties of the office includes not only honesty, but reasonable skill and diligence. Miner v. Mechanics Bank of Alexandria, 1 Pet., 46. Thus also, it is held that the sureties of an officer upon a bond conditioned for faithful performance of the duties of an office are liable for the performance of all duties imposed upon him which come within the scope of his office, whether imposed by laws enacted prior or subsequent to the execution of the bond. Governor of Illinois v. Ridgeway, 12 Ill., 14; People v. Leet, 13 Ill., 261; Comph v. People, 12 Ill., 290.
The defendants then would be liable on the bond for the faithful discharge of the duties' of the office of clerk, for the non-performance of such duties as fall within the scope of that office, and on the bond as commissioner for a breach of the special condition of that bond, but not upon both. And this brings us to the consideration of the extent of that liability upon either. bond.
It is insisted on behalf of the complainants that
It being therefore the well settled doctrine of the common law that as against the surety at least the recovery can not exceed the penalty of the bond, any modification of the doctrine by statute can not be assumed without a clear and express provision to that effect. And no such intention as to official bonds is manifest in the terms of the statute. Indeed the contrary intent is imported in the very fact that the statute under which the bond is given is silent upon the subject, and the authority is given to the court to fix the penalty without limit as to its maximum amount. The payments then by one of the securities having overrun the penalty of the bond as commissioner, and having been made after the defalcations of which the complainants seek to charge the defendants, the question recurs how do these payments affect the liability of the other securities on this bond? It was the payment of a valid subsisting debt due from all the sureties under the condition of their bond. The justice of the demand is not disputed) nor is the fact contested that the liability accrued upon the bond
It is argued that the State is the payee of this bond and held the same in trust as an indemnity for all losses to any of its citizens by a breach of its conditions; that any payments on account of its broken covenants should have been made on the demand of the State; and that payments without judgment were payments without an ascertained indebtedness.
If the complainants had made it appear that the debts to the amount of $10,395 actually paid by Dr. Blakemore on account of the breach of the commissioner’s bond under which only $5,000 could have been demanded, were not bona fide debts and due upon this bond, then their equi ties would be presented in a different aspect. But we have the undisputed facts here that the debts of the sureties had accrued under this bond; that they were valid debts which might have been recovered in an action; that
To this we might reply in the words of Lord Denman already cited: “No man is entitled to inflame his account against another by incurring additional expense in an unrighteous resistance to an action which he can not defend.”
But it is ingeniously said that this payment was made by the father for his son, and is but the payment of the Clerk himself at last, and that in this view the covenants and obligations of the bond are still intact as to parties whose claims were not so paid.
We hold upon the facts before us that the payments were made to save the co-securities harmless, as well as to avert the threatened exposure of the son. The parties whose money had been squandered were about to sue the securities, and to prevent this, and to indemnify the co-securities, as well as to save the reputation of his son, this co-security came forward and paid the penalty of the bond. The fact that he voluntarily relinquished the right of contribution can not change the legal effect of the payment. There can be no doubt, as has been held, that “co-securities otherwise entitled .to contribution may, by agreement aipong themselves, so far sever their unity of interest and! obligation as to terminate the right of contribu
It is the misfortune of complainants, and not the fault of defendants, that this bond was not larger. The penalty might have been fixed at fifty thousand dollars, but the Court saw proper to fix it at five thousand. It has performed its office, its penalty is extinguished, and upon no sound principle can it be galvanized into life again to be made the instrument of wrong and injustice.
Nor can the fact that some of the sureties have as yet paid nothing under this bond affect the legal question. With the private arrangements of the defendants the complainants have nothing to do. They became security for the son at the instance and request of the father. The father had a right to do as he pleased with his own. The suretyship was a sufficient consideration for the indemnity he has given them. The fact that he relinquishes his right to contribution was his own concern. He had a right to do it. It results therefore that the bond as commissioner is satisfied and extinguished, and there can be no recovery upon it. The agree
The complainants will be entitled to a decree on the “bond of office” to the extent of its penalty for all such demands as properly fall within its condition, according to the principles of this opinion. The defendants will be credited with all payments made by them, or by Dr. Blakemore, for the indemnity on claims which would be recoverable under said bond of office. A full account will be taken of the payments and the account upon which they were made, — classifying them so as to show to which bond they should be lawfully applied, — and to this end the cause will be remanded to the Court below for said account, and for further proceedings in accordance with this opinion.
It is not intended to disturb the decree of the Chancellor on the note for $2,490, or executed by James A. Blakemore and J. C. Guild on account of the Walsh defalcation, that part of the decree not being appealed from. The principles of this opinion settle the rights of the parties as to the amount already assumed or paid on the same, as well as to the balance of that fund, as of all others.
Under the peculiar facts in this case, we think the