American Surety Co. v. Hamrick Mills

4 S.E.2d 308, 191 S.C. 362, 124 A.L.R. 1147, 1939 S.C. LEXIS 98
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedAugust 1, 1939
Docket14929
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 4 S.E.2d 308 (American Surety Co. v. Hamrick Mills) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
American Surety Co. v. Hamrick Mills, 4 S.E.2d 308, 191 S.C. 362, 124 A.L.R. 1147, 1939 S.C. LEXIS 98 (S.C. 1939).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Mr. Justice Baker.

In this action, the appellant, the surety on the bond of H. M. Brown, former treasurer of Cherokee County, seeks to recover from respondents, on a plea of subrogation to the rights of the State of South Carolina and Cherokee County, approximately the sum of $3,000.00, which it was compelled to pay and which represented penalties accruing on the 1933 taxes due by respondents to said county and State while Brown, as treasurer, held without depositing or cashing checks of respondents given to him in purported payment of respondents’ taxes, and the penalty which had accrued at the time of the issuance of the checks.

The Transcript of Record on appeal in the case immedi- - ately hereafter referred to is made a part of the Transcript of Record in the present appeal.

Considerable of the history of this litigation may be had from a reading of the opinion in State ex rel. Cherokee *366 County v. Brown et al., 187 S. C., 223, 196 S. E., 889, and we will try to avoid repetition.

The complaints in each of the four cases are identical, except as to the amounts involved. The one against the respondent, Hamrick Mills, after setting out the corporate capacities of the parties, in effect alleges: That appellant was surety on the official bond of H. M. Brown, the duly appointed and qualified treasurer of Cherokee County, the condition of the bond being that said Brown should well and truly perform the duties of the office; that at the beginning of the year 1933, respondent was the owner of real and personal property in Cherokee County assessed for taxation at $275,000.00; that in due course the respondent became indebted to the State of South Carolina, and Cherokee County lawful taxes for the year 1933 on said property, and lawful penalties thereon in the aggregate sum of $14,418.25, which it became the official duty of said Brown as county treasurer to collect; that Brown collected on account of said taxes and penalties the sum of $13,744.50, leaving the balance of $673.75 uncollected, unpaid and due by respondent; that thereafter when Brown was called upon to account as treasurer by the State and county in an action brought against him and appellant as his surety for the recovery of the $673-.75, appellant notified respondent of said action, and of the nature and purpose thereof, and requested respondent to take part in the defense of the action, and that respondent had ever since been kept informed of the progress of the case; that the case, after appeal to the Supreme Court having resulted in final judgment in favor of said State and county for the amount of said taxes and penalties, this appellant paid same, together with interest and costs, in the further sum of $115.95; that thereupon appellant became subrogated to the rights of the State and Cherokee County against respondent to require payment of the balance of said taxes and penalties.

• The respondent, for a first defense, admitted the corporate 'capacities of the parties, and that appellant was the *367 surety for Brown as treasurer; admitted the valuation of respondent’s properly, and the collection as taxes and penalty for the year 1933 of the sum of $13,744.50; “admits that an action was instituted by the State of South Carolina and Cherokee County against the American Surety Company and H. M. Brown, former County Treasurer of Cherokee County, on his official bond for the recovery of alleged ‘penalties’ as ‘damages’ for the alleged breach of said bond but the defendant alleges that it was in no wise involved in said alleged breach of said bond on the part of the said H. M. Brown and was liable in no particular therefor and the judgment in said action to said effect is res ad judicata.” For a second defense: That on March 30, 1934, a check (or checks) on Merchants & Planters’ National Bank of Gaffney was delivered to Brown as treasurer to fully pay the taxes assessed, inclusive of a 2% penalty thereon, which had then accrued, and the said Brown had thereupon issued his official receipt showing payment in full of all taxes and assessed penalties for 1933; that it was an established custom to pay taxes with or by check, and that the checks would at all times have been paid upon presentation; that respondent treated the checks on its books as having been paid. For a third defense : That the action on the official bond of Brown was one at law for the breach of an official duty, and for resultant “damages,” “the alleged violation of duty on the part of said official being his failure to collect additional 5% penalties from the defendant corporation (respondent) for the year 1933, it having been alleged that said Treasurer held defendant’s (respondent’s) checks for payment at the bank until said additional penalties accrued”; that respondent had in the manner aforesaid discharged its obligation to the State and county; that appellant was charged with the knowledge of the custom'of accepting checks and issuing receipts,-and of the practice of Brown and of his conduct in the particular instance of not clearing checks within a reasonable time after their acceptance. For a fourth defense: Pleads a Statute of Limitation, to wit, Section 389, Code of 1932, Subsection *368 (2) in bar of this action; that the action being based upon the theory of subrogation to the rights of the State to sue respondent for penalties, pleads Section 390, Code of 1932, Subsection (2) in bar of the action. For a fifth defense: That the additional 5 % penalties not having accrued and not having been legally assessed pursuant to law, they were uncollectible by the State and county, and that in the circumstances of this case, to construe the statute law as permitting a recovery against respondent of a 5% additional penalty, would render said statutes violative of the due process clauses of the State and of the Federal Constitution (Section 5, Article 1 of the State Constitution and the Fourteenth Amendment to the U. S. Constitution, U. S. C. A.), in that it would be tantamount to a “taking of its property without due process of law.”

There is one pertinent fact, reference to which was unnecessary in the writing of the opinion in State ex rel. Cherokee County v. Brown, supra, to wit, respondents received regular monthly statements of their account from the bank and knew or should have known that the checks issued in purported payment of their taxes had not been presented for payment at the bank. There is one other pertinent fact disclosed in the present record. It is admitted that Brown, the treasurer, is without financial responsibility, and that an execution issued against him would result in a nulla bona return.

There being no dispute as to the facts of this case, though objection was made to the admission of certain evidence, it was argued before Honorable C. C. Featherstone, who by his decree of March 13, 1939, denied the appellant the right to subrogation on the ground that appellant had paid no debt of respondents, and dismissed the complaint.

Appellant comes to this Court upon six exceptions, but in printed brief states the “questions involved” :

“I. Is the judgment in the former case res adjudicata

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Bluebook (online)
4 S.E.2d 308, 191 S.C. 362, 124 A.L.R. 1147, 1939 S.C. LEXIS 98, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/american-surety-co-v-hamrick-mills-sc-1939.