Board of Trustees v. Baker

24 Ill. App. 231, 1887 Ill. App. LEXIS 503
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedOctober 5, 1887
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 24 Ill. App. 231 (Board of Trustees v. Baker) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Board of Trustees v. Baker, 24 Ill. App. 231, 1887 Ill. App. LEXIS 503 (Ill. Ct. App. 1887).

Opinion

Wilkin, J.

This was a suit below on the official bond of defendant in error, James D. Baker, as Township Treasurer, to recover certain funds belonging to school district number three in his township. The breach assigned in the declaration is, that there came to the hands of the said Baker as such treasurer, money belonging to said district three; that it was his duty not to loan the same except on mortgage security on unincumbered real estate in value at least double the amount of money loaned; that in violation of that duty he did, on the 28tli of November, A. D. 1881, loan of said funds of said district three, to one Silas Smith $3,500, and took no other security, except a note of said Smith, secured by mortgage of said Smith and wife on the undivided one-half of 200 acres of land, which was not then, and has not since been, equal in value to double the amount of money so loaned on it; that said mortgage has been foreclosed and the mortgage property sold thereunder for the sum of $2,500, leaving a large amount of said loan unpaid and which remains unpaid; by means whereof the said district three has been, and is deprived of said money.

To this breach defendants in error filed, among others, this plea.

“ That before making said loan to said Silas Smith as aforesaid, the Board of Education of said district number three made and delivered to the defendant Baker a request in writing to loan said sum of $3,500 to said Silas Smith on said real estate security, which request was in the following words and figures, to wit:

“ ‘ Lebanon, Illinois, November 5, 1881.
“ 1 J. D. Baker, Treasurer of School Fund, Town two North.
Range six, West.

Dear Sir:—Mrs. Hoffman wishes to borrow $2,000. Will give real estate security in Clinton County. Silas Smith also wishes to borrow $3,500 ; will give real estate security in this county. The security in each case we think is-ample, and as our district has a surplus fund on hand we most respectfully” request you to make the above loan at six per cent, per annum for the term of three years.

J. M. Chamberlain,
Luther Brown,
John Lupton,
Members Board of Education, School District No. 3.’

“ That said request was given at the direction of said Board, and after said Board had, through a committee of its members, inspected said Smith’s land; and that said Baker made said loan upon and by virtue of said written request; and that the security referred to in the foregoing request as to the loan of said Smith is the same land described in the plaintiff’s declaration, and on which said mortgage was taken.”

A demurrer to this plea being overruled, and plaintiff below electing to stand by the demurrer, final judgment was rendered against plaintiff, and the suit dismissed. It is here insisted that the court erred in overruling the demurrer to that plea, and that is the only question we are called upon to determine. The duty of township treasurers as to the kind and amount of security to be by them taken upon the loan of money in their hands, is clearly defined by Sec. 57, Chap. 122, R. S.: “ For all sums not exceeding §100, loaned for not more than one year, two responsible securities shall be given; for all sums over §100, and for all loans for more than one year, security shall be given by mortgage on real estate unincumbered, in value double the amount loaned, with a condition that in case additional security shall at any time be required, the same shall be given, to the satisfaction of the Board of Trustees for the time being. * * * Where there is a surplus of funds in the treasurer’s hands belonging to any school district, he may loan the same for the use and benefit of said district, upon the written request of the Directors of said district, and not otherwise; and all such loans shall be on the same conditions as are prescribed in this section for loaning township funds”

The ¡olea admits the allegation in the declaration that the defendant Baker, in violation of this statute, as treasurer, did make the alleged loan, and failed to take a mortgage on real estate equal in value to double the amount of money so loaned, but which was of much less value, and seeks to avoid liability for such neglect of duty by averring that he acted in pursuance of the directions of the Board of Education of the district to which the funds belonged. There is no pretense of authority in law, to this Board of Education or Directors of districts, to determine what security shall be taken upon the loan of the district’s funds. The statute clearly and explicitly imposes upon the treasurer the duty of making loans of such fund, upon request of the Directors, and commands him to take a certain kind, and in cases like the one in question, a certain amount of security. He can not relieve himself of liability for a neglect of that duty by following the directions of a body of officers having no authority to give such directions. In making this loan the statute required real estate security double in value the amount loaned.

If the Directors could bind the district in directing the loan to be made on real estate of less than double such value, why could they not do so 'by directing it to be made on personal security? or if they had regarded Smith personally good, by directing it to be made without security ? There is as much power in the Directors to dictate to the treasurer the kind of security he shall take, as there is to determine the amount in value to be given when a mortgage on real estate is taken.

Brandt, in his work on Suretyship and Guaranty, Sec. 476, says: “The sureties of a government or corporation officer are not affected by the unauthorized acts of other officers of the government or corporation.” Among other cases he cites and quotes from Manley v. City of Atchinson, 9 Kan. 358. The city ordinances of Atchinson prohibited the City Treasurer from using or appropriating to his own use the city funds. The Mayor and City Council, by resolution, authorized him to use certain of such funds, paying interest therefor, and this action of the city officers was set up in defense of a suit on the treasurer’s bond, charging him with such misappropriation. The defense was held unavailing and from the judgment below the treasurer and his sureties prosecuted a writ of error to the Supreme Court. Kingman, C. J., in rendering the opinion of the court, says: “ The whole fallacy of the argument of the plaintiff in error lies in confounding the Mayor and Council of the city with the city itself.”

The $1,000 which this plea admits was lost because sufficient security was not taken was the money of the district, not of the Board of Education. This suit is by the trustees for the use of the district to recover that loss. Therefore, all that is said by the defendant in error as to the bad morals of the Board of Education, and their stupidity in estimating the value of the security, is without force. The doctrine of estoppel has no application here. The case cited in 7 Ill. App. is clearly distinguishable from this, but as by statute it is only authority in that particular case it is unnecessary to comment upon its distinguishing features.

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Related

State v. Conley
190 S.E. 908 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1937)
Board of Trustees of Township 2 N., R. 6 West v. Baker
34 Ill. App. 620 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1889)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
24 Ill. App. 231, 1887 Ill. App. LEXIS 503, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/board-of-trustees-v-baker-illappct-1887.