Adams v. Weisberger

87 N.W. 16, 62 Neb. 325, 1901 Neb. LEXIS 190
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedJune 19, 1901
DocketNo. 9,807
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 87 N.W. 16 (Adams v. Weisberger) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Adams v. Weisberger, 87 N.W. 16, 62 Neb. 325, 1901 Neb. LEXIS 190 (Neb. 1901).

Opinion

Ames, C.

This was an action in the district court for Douglas county against a constable and his sureties upon his official bond, for having taken insufficient security upon a replevin bond in a suit pending before a justice of the peace. The property taken in replevin was appraised at the value of $200, and the penalty of the replevin bond was double that amount. The replevin suit proceeded to judgment, before the justice, in behalf of the defendant for a return of the property, or, in case a return could not be had, for the value of the interest of the defendant therein which was adjudged to be $200 and for costs. Execution upon this judgment was issued and returned unsatisfied for want of goods or chattels whereof to levy the same. Thereupon the defendant in the replevin suit brought an action in the county court of Douglas county upon the replevin bond against the principal and surety thereon to recover damages for the breach of that bond on account of the failure of the plaintiff in the latter action to obtain satisfaction of his judgment in replevin. The suit upon the bond proceeded to judgment in favor of the plaintiff therein for damages and costs on account of the breach alleged, and upon this judgment, execution was also issued and returned unsatisfied for want of goods or chattels whereof to levy the same. Still subsequently, this action was brought in the district court for Douglas county against the constable and his sureties, upon the official bond of the former, to recover damages for a breach of that bond on account of the above related transactions, and because of the alleged insufficiency of the surety in replevin. An-SAvers Avere filed by the sureties admitting the official bond and official character of their co-defendant, Adams, but denying generally every other fact alleged against them. The answer of Adams denies the insufficiency of the surety upon the replevin bond and pleads affirmatively that he used due diligence in the matter of taking the bond and that he made diligent inquiry as to the financial worth and [327]*327responsibility of the surety thereon and required the latter to justify, by making oath as to his responsibility to the effect that he was worth in real and personal property situate in Douglas county, and not exempt from execution, at least the sum of $700, and that from such oath and as the result of such inquiries he had good reason to believe and did, in fact, believe that the surety was sufficiently responsible, and that in accepting him as such he exercised due diligence and was free from negligence, and denies the other matters alleged in the petition against himself. The action below was tried before Judge Slabaugh and a jury and resulted in a judgment and verdict for the plaintiff and is brought here on error by thé constable and his sureties.

It is first assigned for error that the court overruled an objection by the defendants to the introduction of any evidence on the ground that the petition does not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action, and it is argued in support of this objection, that the petition is fatally .defective in failing to set forth the suit upon the replevin bond and the failure of the plaintiff to obtain satisfaction thereby. The- petition, however, contained the following allegation; “The plaintiff alleges 'that said replevin bond given in said action, and signed by The Bates Company and C. D. Cannon, as obligors, was worthless and was not sufficient security, and that said obligors, The Bates Company and C. D. Cannon, were not sufficient surety, and that they and each of them were insufficient surety, and that in accepting said bond, said W. R. Adams, constable, took insufficient security to the plaintiff’s damage in the amount of the judgment and costs rendered in said action, to-wit, in the sum of $225.” The statute enacts that “if the officer deliver any property so taken, to the plaintiff, his agent, or attorney, or keep the same from the defendant without taking such security within the time aforesaid, or if he take insufficient security, he shall be liable to the defendant in damages.” Code of Civil Procedure, sec. 1040. The defendant in error contends that in an action [328]*328on the constable’s bond it is sufficient to assign the breach in the language of the statute, which he has in substance done, and that the record of the suit on the replevin bond is part of the evidence merely, by which the existence of the breach is proved, and that, as in case of other evidence, it is neither necessary nor proper to plead it. The defendant in error has the best of the argument. The defendant in replevin suing upon the officer’s bond need not plead how he expects to prove that the security was insufficient. It is enough for him to allege that it was insufficient and that in consequence of that fact he has suffered damages. The record of the suit on the replevin bond is not the only, or conclusive, nor yet the complete evidence requisite to support the claim. A case is conceivable in which, notwithstanding a fruitless prosecution of the replevin bond, he has suffered no damage, and, besides, he may even have suffered damage without legal injury. The officer is required to take security which shall be sufficient at the time it is taken, not such as shall remain sufficient for an indefinite time and until the determination of two suits, one of which is just begun and may consume years in its progress, and the other of which can not be begun until after the former has terminated.

It is further objected that the petition does not allege the taking of insufficient security to have been wrongful or negligent. The reasoning applicable to the former objection applies in a measure to this also, but there is another consideration even more radical and conclusive for denying its validity. The statute above quoted enacts, without qualification or exception, that the officer shall be liable in damages “if he take insufficient security.” The official bond sued upon is conditioned as required by section 12 of chapter 10 of the Compiled Statutes, for the faithful discharge of all duties required of the officer by law. This court has held, after mature deliberation, that this condition requires of the principal, who is a custodian of public moneys, the absolute accounting for and payment over of such moneys coming into his official possession, [329]*329and that the utmost care and diligence on his part, or the loss of the funds by inevitable accident which no human foresight and skill could have guarded against, will not excuse him or his sureties for not having them forthcoming when required. Bush v. Johnson County, 48 Nebr., 1. No reason can be assigned for the existence of this rule in the case of fiscal officers that does not apply with equal or greater force to officers who accept sureties upon judicial bonds and recognizances. Indeed, the justness of the rule is more apparent in the latter case than in the former. The public may and does supervise its treasurers to any extent it deems advisable, requiring of them frequent accounts, and subjecting their books and records to frequent examinations, and summarily removing them from office in case of actual or threatened delinquency. The private litigant has none of these rights or powers, but is absolutely at the mercy of the officer entrusted with the authority to substitute personal security, a mere chose in action, for his rightful possession of his own property. But in the case at bar it may seem to be a work of supererogation to speculate as to the wisdom of the law or the motives which may have prompted its enactment.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
87 N.W. 16, 62 Neb. 325, 1901 Neb. LEXIS 190, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/adams-v-weisberger-neb-1901.