163 Ind. 403 | Ind. | 1904
Action by tbe State, on tbe relation of tbe board of commissioners of Hamilton county, on tbe official bond of appellant Tucker, as auditor of tbe county, for tbe recovery of moneys belonging to tbe county alleged to have been wrongfully obtained and unlawfully held by him. Issues were formed, tbe cause was tried by tbe court, a special finding of facts was made, and conclusions of law were stated thereon. Judgment was rendere'd in favor of tbe appellee and against tbe appellants for $4,849.96. Tucker and bis sureties appeal.
Tbe errors relied upon for a reversal of tbe judgment are assigned upon tbe rulings of tbe court sustaining demurrers to tbe second, third, and ninth paragraphs of tbe answer, and upon each of tbe eight conclusions of law.
Tbe complaint was in two paragraphs. Tbe first alleged
The material facts stated in the special finding of the court were these:
(1) ' That at the November election held in 1892 the appellant Tucker was elected auditor of Hamilton county, Indiana, for a term of four years, beginning on the first Monday of March, 1893, being March 6, 1893. .
(2) That appellant duly qualified, and that he and the persons named in the complaint as his sureties executed the bond sued upon, and that the same was after-wards approved by the board of commissioners.
(3) That afterwards Gordon H. Timmons, one of the sureties on said bond, died insolvent, and that his estate was finally settled; that Ross and Neal, two other sureties, died also, and that the persons named in the complaint as administrators of their respective estates were appointed and qualified, and that the settlement of each of these estates is yet pending.
(4) That appellant Tucker entered upon the discharge of the duties of said office of auditor of Hamilton county, and served for four years from March 6, 1893.
(5) That by the provisions of section fifty of the act of March 9, 1891 (Acts 1891, p. 424), fixing the compensation, fees, and salaries of state and county officers, the salary of the auditor of said Hamilton county from March 6, 1893, to June 28, 1895, amounted to $6,240; that by the terms of section fifty of the act of March 11, 1895 (Acts 1895, p. 319), fixing the compensation of such officers, the salary of the auditor of said county from June 28, 1895, to March 6, 1897, amounted to $5,066.67, and that the total salary of the appellant as such auditor for £he full term for which he served .amounted to $11,303.67.
(7) That at the time of, and prior to, the payments made as above stated, the appellant Tucker claimed that the acts of 1891 and 1895 were unconstitutional as to him, and that he was entitled to receive compensation under the act of 1879, and that in furtherance of such claim he filed his petition with the board o^ commissioners of said Hamilton county, and caused and procured said board to make said several allowances for said amounts, and that the payment thereof out of the county treasury was made pursuant to the orders of said board in regular sessions, procured by said appellant Tucker on the petitions and claims therefor filed by him.
(8) That on December 13, 1894, the appellant Tucker was paid $2,272.03 in excess of the salary provided by the act of 1891 aforesaid; that on March 14, 1895, he was paid $263.79 in excess of the salary provided by said act; that on June 15, 1895, he was paid $549.51 in excess of the salary provided by said act; that on September 14, 1895, he was paid $81.80 in excess of the salary to which he was entitled under the acts of 1891 and 1895.
(9) That during the years 1893, 1894, 1895, and 1896, the appellant sat as a member of the board of review of said county, and from time to time claimed and was allowed and paid, in all, the sum of $208 for such services.
(11) That the appellant Tucker filed in said auditor’s office and with the board of commissioners the several claims with a detailed statement of the items and dates of all his. charges, averring in said claims that the county was indebted to him in the said several amounts; that said board of commissioners, at the times mentioned in the special finding, on proof thereof, allowed said claims on account of salary and services in said amounts as set out in paragraphs six, seven, and nine of said special finding; that said allowances, and each of them, were then and there entered and spread upon the records of the board of commissioners; that each of said amounts was paid to appellant Tucker on a warrant drawn on the county treasurer pursuant to the allowance thereof at the regular sessions of said board, except that the amounts allowed in August, 1893, and in August, 1895, were made and recorded at special sessions of said board; and that' no appeal has been taken from any of said allowances, nor have the same been set aside or modified.
The court’s conclusions of law on these findings were as follows: “.(1) The act of 1891 was and is valid and binding upon each and every of the defendants hereto; (2) that the act of 1895 was and is valid and binding upon each and every of the defendants hereto; (3) that the sum of $2,272.03 received by the defendant Tucker on the 22d day of September, 1894 — being the amount received by him in excess of his salary, as provided by the act of 1891, was illegally and wrongfully received and retained by him
The condition of the official bond executed by the appellant Tucker was that he would faithfully perform and discharge his duties as auditor of Hamilton county, and pay over on demand, to the person entitled to receive the same, all moneys that should come into his hands as such officer during his continuance in office. The breaches of this obligation charged in the complaint are that, notwithstanding the fact that he had been paid -and had received the full amount of his salary as allowed and fixed by law, he wrongfully taxed up other fees and charges, and, under color of his office, unlawfully demanded, extorted, and received payment of the same in his official capacity from said Hamilton county, upon the pretense that the fees and charges so taxed were due to him on account of his salary and compensation as such auditor. Did these acts constitute a breach of the conditions of the official bond of the auditor at common law, or under the acts of 1891 and 1895?
The writer of this opinion thinks that, independently of any liability for such acts imposed by statute, the officer and his sureties upon his official bond are responsible for the repayment to the county of the moneys wrongfully obtained from it by the auditor by means of the unlawful practices described in the complaint. The moneys so received by the officers can not, he thinks, be regarded as voluntary payments, or as payments made under such a mistake of law as precluded their recovery. The express covenant of the bond was for the faithful performance and discharge of his duties as auditor. One of the duties of the appellant as auditor was to render to the board of commissioners a true account of all moneys due or coming to him
Snell v. State, ex rel. (1873), 43 Ind. 359, was an action on the bond of a sheriff for collecting from the execution defendants a greater sum than was due upon the execution in the hands of the sheriff. The court said, hy Downey, O. J.: “Another objection made is, that the terms of the bond, and the liability of the parties thereto do not extend to such cases; that at the time of the execution of the bond, it was not expected or contemplated that the sheriff would receive from parties more than was due from them; that the bond was not for the purpose of securing the repayment of money so paid; and that the nonpayment of money so received would he no breach of the bond. This would be a very narrow and unreasonable construction to put upon the bond. The sheriff got the money by virtue of his office. He had no right to keep it. Justice and honesty required him to repay it. By the express terms of his bond, he agreed that he would ‘faithfully discharge the duties of the office of sheriff of said county of Madison, according to law, and safely keep and pay over according to law, to the proper person, all moneys which may come into his hands hy virtue of his said office.’ We hold that such a payment of money comes clearly within the terms of the bond, and within the spirit of the law requiring such bonds to be given.”
Again, in Armington v. State, ex rel. (1873), 45 Ind. 10, where a city clerk, under color of his office, filled up and signed certain city orders which had been signed in blank by the mayor, made them payable to himself, presented them to the treasurer, and procured the money thereon, when nothing was due him from the city, it was held that the issuing of the orders was an official act, and that this was a breach of his official bond for which his sureties were liable.
The appellant, as auditor, was entitled to such compensation only as was allowed by the statute. Legler v. Paine (1897), 147 Ind. 181. Fraud, dishonesty, and official misconduct in illegally and by color of his office procuring to be paid t'o himself, out of the revenues of the county, moneys to which he was not entitled, constituted a gross wrong upon the county, and a breach of the condition of the bond which required him faithfully to discharge the duties of his office. If his acts in this respect were not strictly by virtue of his office, they were done at least by. color of his office, and a public officer and his sureties are liable upon his official bond for wrongful acts done by color of his office as well as for those done by virtue of his office. State, ex rel., v. Walford (1894), 11 Ind. App. 392. The claim for moneys received by the appellant Tucker was made by him as auditor; it was for services performed by him in his official capacity, and the allowances and payment's were made t'o him as auditor, and in no other character. All moneys received by the auditor in excess of his salary and per diem as a member of the board of review were paid upon warrants drawn on the county treasurer by the appellant as auditor. These moneys could not have been taken, from the treasury without the official action of the auditor. §7974 Burns 1901. The drawing of the warrants was an official act, and in this respect the case comes directly within the rule laid down in Armington v. State, ex rel., supra; State, ex rel., v. Kent (1876), 53 Ind. 112; Graham v. State, ex rel. (1879), 66 Ind. 386. I conclude, therefore, that if the appellant Tucker obtained from the county, as fees or salary, moneys of the county to which he
A majority of the court, however, are of the opinion that as there is no averment in the complaint that the appellant Tucker, acting in his official capacity as auditor, drew his warrant or warrants upon the treasurer of the county for the said moneys, and thereby wrongfully obtained the same, or such other allegations in relation to the drawing of the warrant as make that the wrongful act of the officer, the complaint, as it now stands, is insufficient to sustain an action at common law. Furlong v. State (1881), 58 Miss. 717; People v. Foster (1890), 133 Ill. 496, 23 N. E. 615, and State, ex rel., v. Kent, supra, are referred to by them as sustaining their views.
But even if the complaint failed to state a common law liability of the appellant Tucker and his sureties, still, under the circumstances of this case, it seems clear to the writer that liability for such illegal charges is expressly imposed by the statute. Acts 1891, p. 424, §129; Acts 1895, p. 319, §128.
Counsel for appellants assume that the sections mentioned, viz., §129 (Acts 1891, supra) and §128 (Acts 1895, supra), which declare the officer liable upon his bond for any damage or loss sustained by the county by reason of illegal charges for official services, are penal statutes, and must therefore be strictly construed. This is doubtless true of so much of each section as provides that the guilty officer may be fined and imprisoned for a violation of the act. But that portion of each section which declares that the delinquent shall be liable upon his bond for any damages or loss sustained by the county in consequence of false claims or overcharges for salary or compensation, is remedial only. It authorizes indemnity, but not punishment. American, etc., Co. v. Ellis (1901), 156 Ind. 212, 218-223. The rule in such cases is that the stat
The section under consideration is in these words: “Section 129. If any of the officers named in this act shall tax any fees or make any charges for services not by him actually performed, or shall charge for such charges [services] any other rate than is allowed by this act, or shall wilfully fail or refuse to enter, tax or charge at the proper time, the proper fee for such services any such officer shall be fined in any sum not less than $5 [to] which may be added imprisonment in the county jail for any period' not exceeding one year, and in addition he shall be liable personally upon his bond for any damage or loss sustainedi by the county.” In a civil action on the bond of this officer, the obvious meaning and natural construction of the section require that it should.be read thus: “If any of the officers named in this act shall tax any fees or make any charges for services not by him actually performed, or shall charge any other rate than is allowed by this act, or shall wilfully fail or refuse to enter, tax or charge the proper fee for his official services * * * he shall be liable personally upon his official bond.” It follows that the suit was properly brought against the appellant Tucker and his sureties, and that if he did in fact
Section fifty of the act of 1891 fixed the salary of the auditor of Hamilton county at $2,700. The act of March 11, 1895, amended the act of 1891, and allowed the auditor of Hamilton county a salary of $3,000, and this act took effect June 28, 1895. It also amended section 129 of the act of 1891, so that the same read as follows: “If any of the officers named in this act shall tax any fees or make any charges for services not hy him actually performed, or shall charge, tax or collect any fee other than herein specified or shall charge, tax or collect for any services any other fee than herein named, or shall charge for any services any other rate than is allowed hy this act, or shall wilfully fail or refuse to enter, tax or charge at the proper time the proper fees for such services, any such officer shall he fined in any sum not less than $25, to which may he added imprisonment in the county jail for any period not exceeding one year, and in addition he shall he liable personally upon his bond for any damage or loss sustained hy the county.” Acts 1895, p. 319, §128.
As we have seen, the term of office of the appellant Tucker began March 6, 1893, and ended March 5, 1897. Erom March 6, 1893, until June 28, 1895, a period of two years, three months, and twenty-two days, the act of 1891 was in force, and from June 28, 1895, until March 5, 1897, 'a period of one year, eight months and seven days, he was governed hy the act of 1895. The appellant Tucker filed claims for fees and compensation with the hoard of commissioners from time to time, and allowances were made to him as follows: December 13, 1894, $2,272.03; March 14, 1895, $263.79; June 15, 1895, $549.51; Sep
It is earnestly contended by counsel for appellants that when these claims were allowed and paid such allowances and payment's were authorized by the construction of the statute announced by this court in State, ex rel., v. Boice (1895), 140 Ind. 506; that they were in the nature of judgments in favor of Tucker and against the county; and that the auditor and his sureties thereby acquired vested rights of which they could not be deprived by a subsequent change of opinion of the court.
It was held in Board, etc., v. Heaston (1896), 144 Ind. 583, 55 Am. St. 192, that the allowance of a claim against a county by, a board of county commissioners was merely an administrative act of the board, and not a judicial determination of the validity of the claim. That case was a thoroughly considered one, and has since been frequently cited and approved. We have carefully reexamined it, and are satisfied that it was correctly decided, and that it is fully sustained by reason and authority. The language of the statute authorizing the board to make such allowances' is inconsistent with the idea that the allowance is a judgment. In such cases, the proceedings of the board are similar to those of a common council of a city when it approves claims against the corporation, or of a board of directors of a private corporation when such board audits claims against the company. The allowances made to the auditor by the board were not judgments, but amounted, at most, to acknowledgments of the correctness of the accounts presented.
It was said by this court in Gross v. Board, etc. (1902), 158 Ind. 531, 58 L. R. A. 394: “The decision in State, ex rel., v. Boice [1895], 140 Ind. 506, afterwards overruled by Walsh v. State, ex rel. [1895], 142 Ind. 357, did not operate to give county officers a right to charge
The second, third, and ninth answers, which set up the allowance of the claims of the auditor by the board of commissioners, were insufficient, and the court did not err in sustaining demurrers to them.
The first, second, third, fourth, fifth, and sixth conclusions of the court were in harmony with the views expressed in this opinion.
The seventh conclusion, to the effect that the allowances made by the board to the auditor for his services as a member of the board of review, to the amount of $208, were unauthorized by the statute, was erroneous. This court held in Seiler v. State, ex rel. (1903), 160 Ind. 605, that the auditor was entitled to the per diem named in the statute in addition to his salary.
The eighth conclusion, likewise, is erroneous for the same reason, to the extent that it declares that the appellee is entitled to recover from the appellant and his sureties
It is the opinion of a majority of the court that no action is maintainable against the appellant Tucker and his sureties upon the statute. They think that its terms do not apply to claims presented by the officer, such as those in this case, and allowed by the board, or to any claim except for services not performed, or for fees not given by the statute, or for chai’ges for services at a different rate from that fixed by the statute. Furlong v. State (1881), 58 Miss. 717; People v. Foster (1890), 133 Ill. 496, 23 N. E. 615; State, ex rel., v. Kent (1876), 53 Ind. 112.
The judgment is reversed, with instructions to the court to carry back the demurrers to the answers, and to sustain the same to each paragraph of the complaint, and for further proceedings in conformity to this opinion.