187 Wis. 410 | Wis. | 1925
The controversy in this case is between the bondsmen for the years 1921-1922 and the bondsmen for the years 1922-1923. By the settlement of March 28, 1922, Gresch was charged with $6,138.75. If he had that sum on hand on that date or at any time during the subsequent term made it up, the judgment in this case is right. If, however, he did not have the amount with which he was charged On hand or did not subsequently make it up, the bondsmen for the tenm 1921-1922 are liable for such sum as was not on hand and was not subsequently made up, for the conversion occurred during the first term, as we shall call it for convenience. It appears quite conclusively that on the 4th day of April, 1922, seven days after the making of the settlement referred to, Gresch had on hand in four banks the sum of $3,047.92. There is no doubt that the law will presume that a public officer has on hand the amount of moneys with which he is justly chargeable. To indulge in any other presumption would be to indulge in a presumption of wrongdoing on the part of a public official. This presumption, however, is not conclusive and must yield in every case to established facts. Gresch had been town treasurer prior to the two terms in question. At the settlement in 1921 he had been short in his accounts, but it appears conclusively that the amount was made up during the term of 1921-1922. He had claimed consistently that he had been
The orders issued on and subsequent to April 1, 1922, and up to and including December 3, 1922, amounted to $2,482.95. It is evident, therefore, that there was on hand sufficient funds on April 4, 1922, to pay all of said orders and leave a balance in the town treasury of $564.97. In the meantime the treasurer had received on account of collections due the town $4,342.30, so that on December 3, 1922, the treasurer, without having put any of his individual money into the town funds, would have on hand the sum of $4,907.37 of town funds. On December 4 and 5, 1922, the town board issued orders amounting $7,573.81. These orders were all for road work and were drawn in the form prescribed by statute, to be paid out of the road fund in accordance with the provisions of sec. 60.35. It is the contention of the appealing defendants that these orders were not paid; that about one third of them was paid and that the remainder was used in payment of taxes, and the evidence in the case strongly corroborates this claim. The clerk testified :
“The orders were not in fact given to those various people entitled to them until tax-paying time.”
*415 “For their convenience, I went over to the village about the first of January, I think, to make it convenient for the people and they would come and get them around the first of January.”
It is the contention of the bondsmen for the first term, however, that if Gresch did not pay these road orders out of the road fund as he was required by law to do, but took them in payment for taxes, he used a fund which he had no right to use to make good the default in not having the money in the road fund, thus clearly bringing a defalcation within the last term. Citing Milwaukee Co. v. Pabst, 45 Wis. 311.
The difficulty with this argument is, that while Gresch may have been guilty of an irregularity he did not in fact make up the shortage which existed on 4-pril 4, 1922, at the beginning of his last term of office. If, as we hold, the fact of defalcation was established in the prior term, the burden is then clearly upon the bondsmen for the first term to establish by satisfactory evidence that the amount for which they were liable has been paid by Gresch out of his own funds or discharged during the last term in some other way. The fact that he did not segregate the funds belonging in the several accounts did not amount to a conversion, nor did it increase or diminish the amount of funds in his hands. None of the funds in this case were in any way earmarked. Gresch kept the funds of the town in the bank intermingled with his own. There is nothing but a bare presumption that the funds which were on deposit in the banks on March 28, 1922, were in fact the funds of the town rather than Gresch’s personal funds. It appears that some checks were issued against the funds in the banks and unpaid on April 4, 1922. Nevertheless the money was on hand. If checks on account of orders issued during the first term were paid out of it, it leaves the accounting just the same as between the bondsmen. It appears from the evidence that on election day, 1922, Gresch had on hand $160 in cash with which he paid town orders. It further appears that on that day he borrowed an additional $20, making a total of $180, with which
By the Court. — Judgment is reversed, and cause remanded with directions to the court to enter judgment in favor of the plaintiff and against the appealing defendants for the sum of $3,227.92 and against the defendants Eivert and Zahn for $2,910.83.