48 Mo. 331 | Mo. | 1871
delivered the opinion of the court.
Defendant Moeller was charged with collecting, as clerk of the Carroll County Court, certain moneys belonging to the school fund of the county, to-wit: the proceeds of the sale of the swamp lands,' of the sale of section 16, and money received ' under the stray act. This suit is upon his official bond, and his sureties, claim in defense that it was no part of the clerk’s official duty to collect such moneys, and consequently that they are not holden on the bond for their reimbursement.
Counsel for relator base the liability of defendant upon Gen. Stat. 1865, ch. 46, § 81; Wagn.' Stat. 1259, § 79, which provides that “the said county clerk shall collect or cause to be collected the fines and penalties, and all other moneys for school purposes in his county, and pay the same over to the county treasurer on account of the school fund,” etc.
If this provision is construed to authorize the payment to the clerk of moneys arising from the swamp land and section 16 school fund, and from the sale of strays, it contradicts other provisions of the statute. Sections 22 and 23 of the stray act (Gen, Stat. 1865, ch. 83; Wagn. .Stat. 1300) provide for payments “ into the county treasury for the use of the school fund of such county.” Chapter 49 of the General Statutes provides for the sale or lease of section 16 for the use of the school fund, and section 22 (Wagn. Stat.- 862 ) expressly requires that rents be paid into the county treasury, and that the treasurer shall give duplicate receipts therefor; so, when the
The provisions of our school act in regard to collections seem to be made somewhat contradictory by the clause quoted, authorizing county clerks to collect, which was thrown into the revision of 1865. No other provision was expressly repealed, and, upon well-settled principles, we cannot hold them repealed by implication if any other construction can be reasonably given. Here, then, we have a general clause directing the clerk to collect, or cause to be collected, fines, penalties, and all other moneys ; while the statute had specifically provided for the collection of each specific fund' in a different manner. There is nothing else in the statute that authorizes the clerk to collect anything but his own fees, and there are greater difficulties in giving this provision the construction indicated by a literal interpretation of its terms, than even by holding it nugatory. The phrase is “ all other moneys,” and by such interpretation it would include those collected by the county collector upon the tax books, and everything that belongs to the school fund. It will hot be seriously claimed that this clause makes the clerk the general collector for the county of school moneys, and yet its. literal interpretation would have that effect. If not the general
We are then forced to the conclusion that the section quoted is not authority to receive money, but that it imposes the general duty upon the clerk, as the keeper of the public accounts and the custodian of the evidences of indebtedness, to see that collections are enforced. He alone is supposed to know when payments become due, and he should look sharply after every description of indebtedness, bring the matter before the proper authorities or tribunals, and see to it that the school funds do not suffer from inattention or delay. But we- cannot make him a county treasurer or collector proper, without nullifying other provisions of the statute and throwing into confusion our whole system of county finances.
The Circuit Court held that the clerk was authorized to 'make these'collections, that they came within his official duties, and hence that the sureties upon his official bond are bound to make good any default on his part in accounting for them. Under the view we hold, its judgment must be reversed.