200 F. 443 | D. Maryland | 1912
The United States Fidelity & Guaranty Company is the complainant. It is a Maryland corporation. The Title Guaranty & .Surety Company of Scranton is the respondent. It is incorporated under the laws of Pennsylvania.
The complainant was surety on a bond given by the First National Bank of Topeka to the state of Kansas. The bond recited that the Treasurer of the state, by and with the consent of its executive council, had designated the First National Bank of Topeka a depository for the collection of drafts, checks, or certificates of deposit which might come into his hands on account of any claim due. the state. It was conditioned that the bank should promptly collect all drafts, checks, and certificates of deposit that might be delivered to it by the Treasurer for collection, and should safely keep the proceeds of all such collections, and should promptly pay the same upon the Treasurer’s order. On July 3, 1905, the Treasurer’s official balance in the bank exceeded $547,000. On that day the Comptroller of the Currency put the bank into receiver’s hands. The state collected from the receiver the larger part of the money due it. It sued the complainant in its own courts for the balance. It recovered judgment therefor. This judgment complainant paid.
The respondent was surety on the bond of the State Treasurer. That bond was conditioned that he should faithfully discharge his official duties and pay over and account for all moneys that might come into his' hands by virtue of his office.
By its bill in this case complainant seeks to recover from the respondent $108,752.51, the net amount paid by it to the state, with interest thereon from April 14, 1910, the date of such payment. It says that the state’s money in the bank when it closed its doors had been put there by the Treasurer in violation of law. If he had not done what the law forbade him to do, the money would not have been in the bank and could not, therefore, have been lost by it. Complainant has been forced to make good the loss suffered by the state as a result of the Treasurer’s breach of official duty. For the .consequence of such a breach the respondent is liable to the state of Kansas. Complainant is entitled to be subrogated to the rights of
Respondent denies that the complainant has any claim upon it. It demurred to the bill of complaint.
A state, like an individual, may prefer to keep its money in its own strong box, instead of depositing it in bank. For many years such was the policy of Kansas, its statutes declared that all payments to the state should be made in either gold or silver, treasury notes of the United States or national bank notes, or United States post office money orders. They required the Treasurer to keep in the state treasury, without loaning, using, or depositing it in banks or elsewhere, all public money of whatsoever character paid into the treasury or otherwise, and at any time placed in his possession and custody as State Treasurer. For him to deposit any part of the public moneys with any company, corporation, or individual was embezzlement. General Statutes of Kansas 1901, §§ 7251, 7263, 7267.
This policy is not novel. Nor are the statutory provisions unusual. Since 1846 the federal government has had its independent treasury. The Kansas statutes above cited were obviously modeled upon acts of Congress. Sections 16, 18, 19, chapter 90, Act approved August 6, 1846, 9 Statutes at Large, 59; Rev. St. §§ 3651, 5490 (U. S. Comp. St. 1901, pp. 2626, 3704).
If Kansas had not used the hanks at all, this case could not have arisen. There would have been no occasion for such a bond as that given by complainant. Years ago, however, the state found it expedient to avail itself to some extent of the facilities furnished by the banks. As early as 1876 county treasurers in some counties were authorized to deposit the county funds in bank, and by 1887 all countv treasurers were .required so to do. Acts of 1876, c. 78; Acts of 1887, c. 131.
If the State Treasurer had to take checks and drafts, he must have some way of collecting them. The same act therefore authorized him, with the advice and approval of the executive council, to designate one or more banks in the city of Topeka as a depository for the collection of my drafts, checks, and certificates of deposit that might come into his hands on account of any claims due the state. A bank so designated was required to give security to the state for the prompt collection of all drafts, checks, and certificates of deposit that might be delivered to it by the State Treasurer for collection, for the safe-keeping and prompt payment on the Treasurer’s order of the proceeds of all such collections, and for the payment of all drafts that might be issued to such Treasurer by such bank. General Statutes 1901, § 7630. It was under the provisions of this statute that complainant became surety on the bond of the bank. Its undertaking was conditioned in the very words prescribed by the statute.
■ Complainant says that the act of 1891 was avowedly an amendment of the taxation laws of the state. It is true it authorizes the deposit of any drafts, checks, and certificates of deposit that may come into the Treasurer’s hands on account of any claims due the state: In view, however, of its purposes, the checks and drafts referred to must have been those which were to be received from county treasurers for taxes, and those only. After the passage of this act, as be.fore, the State Treasurer could not receive from any one except county treasurers, and from them only when remitting taxes due the state, anything except gold or silver, treasury notes of the United States, national bank .notes, or post office money orders.
Complainant further contends that when the State Treasurer received a check for taxes from a county treasurer he could deposit it for collection, and for collection only. That means, in complainant’s understanding, that it was the duty of the Treasurer, so soon as a depository bank had actually collected the check, to draw the proceeds out of the bank in currency and-lock them up in the state vaults.
The construction which the Supreme Court of Kansas puts upon the laws of that state is, of course, binding on this court. It has held that the law does not require the State Treasurer to withdraw the proceeds of each check or draft deposited by him for collection so soon as such collection has been made. State v. U. S. Fidelity & Guaranty Co., 81 Kan. 660, 106 Pac. 1040, 26 L. R. A. (N. S.) 865.
Assuming, however, that the construction which the complainant puts upon the Kansas statutes is sound, has the complainant any claim against the respondent ?
The counsel for the parties to this cause have with industry and ability discussed the doctrine of subrogation in its various phases and aspects. Into this discussion it will not be necessary to follow them, it will be assumed that the right is broad etiough to include every instance in which one person is compelled to pay a debt which in justice, equity, and good conscience ought to be paid by another. It will be taken for granted that equity will surmount all obstacles, whether of substantive law or of procedure, which stand in the way of making that person pay the debt who in the last analysis should discharge it.
The bank’s surety says that the Treasurer’s surety stands in the same relation to it as does the Treasurer. That does not follow. The Treasurer’s surety has not knowingly participated in any violation of law. Both the sureties are entirely innocent. Both the principals, on the allegations of the bill and the assumption of the complainant as to
The cases relied on by complainant have been carefully considered. In none of them are the facts similar to those set up in the bill. In many of them a surety who has paid the loss has been allowed to recover from some one with whom it had no contractual relation, but wdio had knowingly participated in the illegal act which brought about the loss. Such is the case of American Bonding Co. v. National Mechanics’ Bank, 97 Md. 598, 55 Atl. 395, 99 Am. St. Rep. 466, and many others cited by complainant. The case most relied on by the complainant is National Surety Co. v. State Savings Bank, 156 Fed. 21, 84 C. C. A. 187, 14 E. R. A. (N. S.) 155, 13 Ann. Cas. 421. Upon the facts that case was a close one, as was evidenced in the division of the court itself. It is sufficient for the present purpose that the majority of the court upheld the liability of the State Savings Bank on the distinct ground that the loss had resulted from the “culpable negligence" of the defendant. The surety, the plaintiff in the case, was entirely innocent. There is no suggestion in this bill of any negligence on the part of the respondent, nor could there well have been.
Complainant makes one other contention. It says that the law authorizing the State Treasurer to make any deposits at all in the bank was repealed on the 18th of March, 1905, and that in spite of such repeal the Treasurer thereafter deposited nearly $100,000 in the bank. For this sum it says it was not liable. The bill does not disclose how or upon what principle the complainant was held liable by tile courts of Kansas for money deposited by the Treasurer after the law authorizing such deposit had been repealed. An examination of the case already cited of State v. United States Fidelity & Guaranty Co., in 81 Kan. 660, 106 Pac. 1040, 26 L. R. A. (N. S.) 865, shows that in point o i fact complainant was not held responsible for any sum so deposited. Technically it may be objected that upon demurrer this court is not entitled to take judicial cognizance of what was decided on the matters of fact involved in the case cited. The contention may be sound, although what was decided is dearly stated in an opinion to which both parties necessarily made reference for a construction of the laws of Kansas involved in this case. The bill itself, however, does not distinctly charge that the complainant was compelled to pay the state any part of the money deposited after the repeal of the statute authorizing the deposit. It is, indeed, said that of the amount on deposit at the time the hank closed its doors nearly $100,000 was the money which had been placed in the bank after the repeal. But in the portion of
For the reasons already stated, the demurrer will be sustained.