Board of Supervisors of Monroe Co. v. . Clark

92 N.Y. 391, 1883 N.Y. LEXIS 157
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 8, 1883
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 92 N.Y. 391 (Board of Supervisors of Monroe Co. v. . Clark) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Board of Supervisors of Monroe Co. v. . Clark, 92 N.Y. 391, 1883 N.Y. LEXIS 157 (N.Y. 1883).

Opinion

Ruger, Ch. J.

This action was against the surety upon a treasurer’s bond to the county of Monroe. The term of Baker, the treasurer, whose faithful performance of the duties of the office the bond was designed to secure, extended from October, 1861, to October, 1864. Many questions which were litigated before the referee and some of those discussed at General Term have been eliminated from the case by the acquiescence of the parties against whom they were determined, and this opinion will be confined altogether to the discussion of the remaining points.

It was claimed on the trial by the defendant that by reason of the imposition upon the treasurer during his term of office by the plaintiffs of the duty of raising, keeping and disbursing large sums of money during the war for bounty purposes, which was in addition to the usual and ordinary duties of his office, that the contract of suretyship was so changed by the obligees, that the surety was discharged not only from liability on account of such increased duties, but from his entire obligation upon the bond. This claim was based upon the well-settled principle that a change in the terms or obligations of a contract by the principal without the consent of the surety operates to discharge him from his liability.

The referee held that the surety was not liable for the acts of the treasurer concerning the moneys received by him by reason of the additional duties imposed upon him, but decided that his obligations upon the bond having reference to the usual and ordinary duties of the treasurer remained unaffected by the increase of the duties enjoined upon him. The plaintiff did not appeal from that part of the. decision which relieved the *394 surety from responsibility for the treasurer’s default in accounting for the enlarged receipts of the office, and can, therefore, raise no question as to its correctness. The defendant appealed, alleging that he should have been altogether discharged from liability upon his bond.

The General Term having affirmed the referee’s views of the liability of the surety, the defendant now comes to this court and asks for such total exemption from liability. 3sTo claim is made, that any change was attempted in the literal terms of the contract between the parties or the general nature of the duties or subject to which it applied, but it is argued that because the always indefinite sum of money which is liable in any year to come into the treasurer’s hands has been increased beyond the supposed contemplation of the parties when they entered into it, that, therefore, the party is relieved ipso facto from his contract liability as a surety.

We think that the decisions of the courts below were quite as favorable to the defendant upon this question as he could justly have expected upon the evidence. They held that the statutes authorizing the issue of bounty war bonds by the county of Monroe did not, under the circumstances of this case, impose any additional legal duty upon the treasurer, and that, therefore, the surety was not liable for a defalcation by the treasurer in the funds so raised. The proof showed that the treasurer acted in conjunction with a committee of the board of supervisors in raising moneys' and disposing of a large amount of bonds. Many of the bonds (the amount not appearing) were issued and delivered directly to recruits in payment of bounties, while others, the amount of which is equally uncertain, were negotiated, and the money realized was paid to recruits by the treasurer and other agents of the county. It is safe to assume, however," that the moneys passing through the treasurer’s hands on account of these transactions were much larger in amount than those which he would usually have manipulated, and the question arises whether the possession and disbursement of these moneys by the treasurer with the knowledge and consent of the supervisors vitiated the ob *395 ligation of the surety upon his bond. A well-settled distinction between the obligations assumed by sureties upon the bonds of public officers and by those liable upon private contracts is recognized. In the case of the former, the parties’ contract, having reference to the acknowledged power of the legislature to vary and change the power and duties of such officers.

It has been repeatedly held in our courts that unless the territorial jurisdiction of such officer has been enlarged or the general nature or functions of his office changed, a surety upon his bond will not be discharged on account of changes made in the official duties after the execution of the contract. This point was considered in People v. Vilas (36 N. Y. 459), where it was held that the sureties upon the bond of a public officer were not discharged by the subsequent imposition through an act of the legislature of new duties similar in their nature and character to those which the officer originally performed. In that case a loan commissioner was required by an act passed subsequent to the execution of his bond to take charge of an additional sum of money which had previously been in the custody of another commissioner. This decision goes further than we need go, for here we are to consider the effect merely of such additional duties upon the original obligation of the bond.

We are referred to a large number of authorities upon this question and with few exceptions they support the proposition that a surety is responsible for default in the performance of the duties of his principal as they existed at the time of his assumption of liability. Gaussen v. United States (97 U. S. 584) is directly in point. There Hr. Justice Strom, in his opinion, said: If it be conceded, as it may be, that the addition of duties different in then nature from those which belonged to the office when the official bond was given, will not impose upon the obligor in the bond, as such, additional responsibilities, it is undoubtedly true that such addition of new duties does not render void the bond of the officer as a security for the performance of the duties at first assumed. It will *396 still remáin a security for what it was originally given to secure.”

Not only does the case of People v. Vilas (supra) sustain the same doctrine, but such is the uniform course of decisions in the United States, and the rule is now too well settled to be controverted. (Commonwealth v. Holmes, 25 Gratt. 771; Hatch v. Inhabitants of Attleborough, 97 Mass. 533 ; United States v. Kilpatrick, 9 Wheat. 720; White v. Fox, 9 Shepley [Me.], 341; Colter v. Morgan’s Adm'rs, 12 B. Monr. 278.)

The case of Pybus v. Gibb (6 Ell. & Bl. 902), which supports the contrary rule, has been uniformly repudiated in this country whenever it has been cited as an authority.

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Bluebook (online)
92 N.Y. 391, 1883 N.Y. LEXIS 157, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/board-of-supervisors-of-monroe-co-v-clark-ny-1883.