Board of Commissioners v. Hall
This text of 99 N.E. 1009 (Board of Commissioners v. Hall) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
— This was an action by appellant against appellee to collect certain fees alleged to have been collected and converted by the latter to his own use while clerk of the Monroe Circuit Court.
In substance, the special findings show that appellee on November 19, 1898, became the clerk of the Monroe Circuit Court, and continued as the duly-authorized clerk of that court until December 31, 1902; that as such clerk, appellee charged,- taxed and collected and failed to report and pay into the county treasury certain fees; that he failed and neglected to charge, tax and collect certain fees for official services, and on account of such official neglect the county lost these amounts; that this action was commenced December 23, 1908, and after appellant had made a written demand on appellee to pay into the county treasury the fees claimed to be due it; that certain named fees, charged and collected by appellee during his said term of office* were entered in a small book, on the back of which was the word “Ledger,” and that no other record was kept by him of his official services in relation to such fees; that the fees allowed him during his term of office on account of insanity inquests, and paid out of the county treasury, were not recorded in a cashbook kept in his office, and were not entered on any other book kept therein, nor were the fees allowed and received by Mm as such clerk on order of the Monroe Circuit Court and by the board of county commissioners ever entered in a cashbook, or any other book kept in his office open to inspection by the public, [478]*478in which fees or allowances were recorded, except “during a part of the terms of court of which he was clerk; ’ ’ that all the fées taxed and collected and not entered of record in any book for that purpose kept in said office, and the fees which he failed to report and to pay into the county treasury, and the fees he neglected and failed to collect, were all for ■ things done and neglected to be done with reference thereto prior to December 1, 1902.
This was not an action against appellee and his sureties, but against him individually for moneys collected in his official capacity, and such action must be commenced within six years after it accrued. Ware v. State, ex rel. (1881), 74 Ind. 181; Hawthorn v. State, ex rel. (1877), 57 Ind. 286; State, ex rel., v. Walters (1903), 31 Ind. App. 77, 66 N. E. 182, 99 Am. St. 244; Landers v. Fisher (1891), 2 Ind. App. 64, 28 N. E. 204; Newsom v. Board, etc. (1885), 103 Ind. 526, 3 N. E. 163.
[479]*479
In the case of Jackson v. Jackson (1898), 149 Ind. 238, 243, 47 N. E. 963, it is said: “The concealment within the meaning of the statute cited, arises out of fraud, and there can be no concealment without fraud; and while the fraud in a particular case may be sufficient to give to the complaining party a right of action, still it may not, in the same case, be also sufficient to serve to conceal the cause of action within the contemplation of the law.” See, also, eases cited.
Appellant has not pointed out any pleading in this case wherein facts are alleged showing that its cause of action is not within the statute of limitations, nor has the court found as an ultimate fact that appellee concealed the cause of action from the knowledge of appellant, nor do the findings show such affirmative acts on the part of appellee as to warrant the necessary inference of concealment within [480]*480the rule stated in the case of Jackson v. Jackson, supra.
Judgment affirmed.
Note. — Reported in 99 N. E. 1009. See, also, under (2) 25 Cyc. 1053; (3) 3 Cyc. 418;.(4) 25 Cyc. 1218; (5) 25 Cyc. 1418.
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99 N.E. 1009, 51 Ind. App. 475, 1912 Ind. App. LEXIS 135, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/board-of-commissioners-v-hall-indctapp-1912.