9 S.D. 84 | S.D. | 1896
In this action a demurrer was sustained, on the ground that the complaint does not state facts sufficient to
The complaint contains the following material facts, after eliminating legal conclusions and unnecessary repetitions: First cause of action: Defendant was the commissioner of school and public lands during the term which began January 8, 1893. June 15, 1893, there was in the hands of the state treasurer 868,443.72, in cash, to the credit of the interest fund of each class' of public lands, the interest fund of the 5 per centum paid by the United States, and the amount received from leases of school and public lands. This amount appeared on the books in defendant’s office, and he was notified of the fact by the treasurer on or about the last-mentioned date. Prior to July 1, 1893, the county superintendents of the state reported to the defendant the enumeration of persons in their respective counties of school age. Defendant willfully, and without cause, neglected to apportion the aforesaid fund, or take any action in respect thereto, until October 3l, 1893, when an apportionment w.as made. By reason of such neglect, it is claimed, plaintiff and its beneficiaries, the public schools, sustained a loss equal to the interest on the aforesaid sum, at 6 per cent, per annum, from June 15, 1893, to October 31, 1893, amounting to 81,539.99, and that they have been damaged to that extent. Second cause of action: Defendant, as commissioner of school and public lands, without cause, willfully and negligently failed to make any estimate on or before May 10, 1893, of the amount of permanent school and other educational funds which would be in possession of the state treasurer and uninvested July 1st thereafter. He further, negligently, and without cause, failed to notify the county auditors of the state of any apportionment of such estimates. In consequence of such negligence, no application for loans of such funds were received prior to July 1, 1893. June 30, 1893, 875,526.93, belonging to said funds, was in possession
For convenience, the school funds involved herein will be designated as the “permanent” and “income.” The state constitution provides what shall constitute the permanent fund and that it shall be deemed a trust fund held by the state. The principal shall forever remain inviolate. It may be increased, but shall never be diminished, and the state shall make good all looses thereof which may in any manner occur. The interest and income of such fund, together with net proceeds of all fines for violation of state laws and all other sums which may be added thereto by law, shall be faithfully used and applied each year, for the benefit of the public schools of the state, and be apportioned among the several school corporations, in proportion to the number of children of school age. No part of either the permanent or income fund shall ever be
An officer, such as defendant was, who, without legal excuse, fails to perform a mere ministerial duty, is liable for the proximate results of his failure to any person tb whom he owes performance of such duty. This firmly established proposition includes three essential elements: (1) The duty must be merely ministerial; (2) The injury sustained, a proximate result of the failure to perform; and (3) .the person injured, one to whom performance is due. Defendant is charged in the first cause of action with having, without legal excuse, failed to distribute the income fund on hand June 15, 1893, until October 31, 1893. Assuming, without deciding, that defendant disregarded a merely ministerial duty, by failing to make the apportionment prior to October 31st, in consequence of which the sum named remained with the state treasurer, when it should have been with the local school '. 'corporations, there was no
It is charged in the second count that by reason of defendant’s failure to m'ake an estimate of the permanent fund which would be on hand July 1, 1893, and notify county auditors thereof, $75,526.92 remained uninvested until October 3d, causing a loss of interest which would otherwise have been received, to the amount of $1,158.08. The constitution provides in what class of securities the fund shall be invested, and requires continuous investment as far as possible. Art. 8, Sec. 11. It was defendant’s duty to make an estimate on or before May 10th, apportion the amount thereof among the organized counties in proportion to population, and, forthwith notify the county auditors of the amount so apportioned. Laws 1893, Chap. 144, Sec. 1. He had no alternative but to act. In making the estimate, he was, of course, required to exercise judgment and discretion; bur the law did not permit him to decide whether or not any estimate should be made within the time specified by the statute. We think, in failing to act at all, he disregarded a plain provision of the law, and failed to perform a merely ministerial duty. It is the nature of the particular duty, and not the character of the office, which determines whether or not a duty is ministerial. It is alleged that, in consequence of defendant’s failure to perform this duty, a certain sum belonging to the permanent fund remained for a time un invested, which otherwise would have ’drawn interest, and thereby caused a loss to the income fund of $1,158.08. We think this was a loss to one of the educational funds of this
In the third and fourth counts it is charged that defendant failed to distribute certain funds among the several counties within the time required by law, and that these funds were lost through the defalcation of the state treasurer. Assuming, for the. purpose of construing these counts, that a loss was sustained which plaintiff was required to make good, and that defendant failed to perform a merely ministerial duty, it becomes necessary to determine what was the proximate cause of such loss. It is not alleged that defendant’s conduct was corrupt, or that he was guilty of any wanton wrong. The maxim, “causa próxima non remota spectatur,,> is applicable. This maxim is universally admitted, and the difficulty in its practical application is quite as widely conceded. The difficulty results, not from any defect in the rule, but in applying a principal stated in general language to the facts of each particular case. Dubuque Wood & Coal Ass’n v. City and County of Dubuque, 30 Iowa 176. This rule is exhaustively discussed by the supreme court of the territory in Pielke v. Railway Co., 5 Dak. 444, 41 N. W. 669. In that decision Mr. Chief Justice Tripp quotes with approval from Railway Co. v. Kellogg, 94 U. S. 469, as follows: ‘ ‘The question always is, was there an unbroken connection between the wrongful act and the injury — a continuous operation? Did the facts constitute a continuous succession of events, so linked together as to make a natural whole, or was there some new and independent cause intervening between the wrong and the injury? It is admitted that the rule is difficult of application. But it is generally held that in order to