Boaz v. Ferrell

152 S.W. 200, 1912 Tex. App. LEXIS 1200
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 2, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 152 S.W. 200 (Boaz v. Ferrell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Boaz v. Ferrell, 152 S.W. 200, 1912 Tex. App. LEXIS 1200 (Tex. Ct. App. 1912).

Opinion

CONNER, C. J.

In November, 1908, N. G. Ferrell qualified as the. duly elected sheriff and ex officio tax collector of Jones county, and appellants became the sureties on his bond, payable to the Governor, conditioned that Ferrell should faithfully perform his duties as collector of state taxes. At about the same time the appellees, other than Jones county, became the sureties on Ferrell’s bond, payable to the.county judge, conditioned for the faithful performance of his duties as collector of the county taxes. This suit was instituted by appellants, the sureties upon said state bond, against Ferrell, Jones county, and said sureties on said county bond to recover certain alleged state taxes that it was charged Ferrell had paid to Jones county in violation of his duty as collector of state taxes. The substance of appellants’ petition, so far as necessary to state, is that during the term of office to which Ferrell had been so elected, and during the operation of the several bonds referred to, he had collected of both state and county taxes the aggregate sum of $15,111.14, of which the sum of $6,465.65 was justly payable to the state of Texas, and the sum of $8,645.49 was justly payable to Jones county; that said state and county taxes so collected had been by said Ferrell wrongfully commingled and confused to such an extent and in such a way as to entirely destroy the identity of the several funds, rendering distinction between them impossible; that while ssaid state and county taxes were in the commingled and confused condition stated the said Ferrell wrongfully embezzled thereof and appropriated to his own use the amount he should have returned and paid to the state of Texas, to wit, the sum of $6,465.65, and which appellants were later required to make good agreeably to the terms of the said bond to the state; that the remainder of said commingled funds, viz., $8,645.49, was by said Ferrell paid to Jones county, and which Jones county received and appropriated to its own use and benefit. Appellants alleged that of the commingled fund of $8,645.49 not embezzled by Ferrell and so received and appropriated by Jones county, the state, and through it appellants, was entitled to its proportionate part, and this appellants sought to recover of Ferrell (alleged to be insolvent) and Jones county, and, in the alternative, of said sureties on Ferrell’s bond to the county. It was further alleged that said claim had been duly presented to the county commissioners’ court of Jones county for allowance, but that the same had been by said court rejected.

Judgment by default was rendered against Ferrell; but the court sustained general demurrers to appellants’ petition in favor of the remaining defendants, and, plaintiffs having declined to amend, judgment was entered that Jones county and the other appel-lees be discharged.

It is not alleged that the appellees, who are sureties on the bond given by Ferrell to secure the payment of county taxes, received any part of the fund in controversy, or that they advised or induced its payment to-Jones county, or, indeed, had any notice thereof; and it is clear that there is no privity of contract between them and appellants. We therefore strongly incline to-the opinion that the general demurrer as to the surety appellees was properly sustained. We think, however, that we need not- now discuss or formally determine this question, inasmuch as we have concluded that appellants exhibit a cause of action against Jones county; and it is only in event of a failure in this respect that any reeovéry against the-surety appellees is sought.

[1] Appellee Jones county insists that the demurrer was properly sustained as to it, for the reason that the act complained of was a wrong or tort of Ferrell’s for which it is-not liable, and that, in the absence of any contractual obligation on its part or statutory authority, none being alleged, the county cannot be sued, citing, among others', Heigel v. Wichita County, 84 Tex. 392, 19 S. W. 562, 31 Am. St. Rep. 63, and Nussbaum v. Bell County, 97 Tex. 86, 76 S. W. 430. The cases referred to discuss the question of the county’s liability under similar circumstances, rather than the abstract capacity of the county to be sued, and we think a distinction is to be made between the questions. In other words, if, under the circumstances alleged, Jones county is liable to appellants for any amount conformably to general principles of law, then we think no *202 doubt is to be entertained but that tbe county may be sued. Revised Statutes, art. 789, declares counties to be bodies corporate and politic; and tbe next article (790) provides that no county shall be sued, unless tbe claim upon wbicb sueb suit is founded shall have first been presénted to tbe county commissioners’ court for allowance, and such court shall have neglected or refused to audit and allow tbe same, or any part thereof. Thus implying, as we think, that where a liability exists, and the claim has been so presented and rejected, that the county may be sued; and we have been cited to no Texas case in which a liability on the part of the county has been admitted and the action denied for want of statutory authority to sue.

[2] We think, therefore, as indicated, that the material question before us is really one of liability vel non, and in determining this we do not construe appellants’ petition as predicating a right of action upon the wrong or tort of Ferrell’s in embezzling taxes as alleged; for the authorities cited by appel-1 lees, for reasons' well stated therein, and which need not be here repeated, are undoubtedly to the effect that counties are not liable for the mere neglect or wrong of its officers, unless made so by statute; and it cannot be contended that we have a statute making Jones county liable for Ferrell’s embezzlement as such. The wrong of Ferrell, however, we think, was rather the occasion that gave rise to the cause of action than the cause of action itself.

[3, 4] If the allegations of appellants’ petition are true, and they must be so accepted for the purposes of the demurrer, the confused mass of the collected tax moneys belonged, not to Ferrell, but to the state and county; and, whether the fund be treated as a trust fund or as merely one jointly •owned by the state and county, both would undoubtedly have had the right to sue for and recover the same in proportion to their •several interests, . as against any persons willfully detaining the moneys. In other words, in the hands of any depository the taxes constituted joint or trust funds, which, having become confused without fault of the cestuis que trust or real owners would be duly apportioned between such owners by courts of equity. See the following decisions where the principle has been recognized or applied in cases of the confusion of cattle, grain, and other species of personal property, including moneys: Hill v. Fleming, 128 Ky. 201, 107 S. W. 764, 16 Ann. Cas. 810; Fidelity & Deposit Co. v. Jordan, 134, N. C. 236, 46 S. E. 496; Belcher v. Cassidy Bros. Live Stock Commission Co., 26 Tex. Civ. App. 60, 62 S. W. 924; First Nat. Bank v. Scott, 36 Neb. 607, 54 N. W. 987; Kaufmann v. Schilling, 58 Mo. 218; Gates v. Rifle Boom Co., 70 Mich. 309, 38 N. W. 245; Martin v. Mason, 78 Me. 452, 7 Atl. 11; Stone v. Quaal, 36 Minn. 46, 29 N. W. 326.

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Bluebook (online)
152 S.W. 200, 1912 Tex. App. LEXIS 1200, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/boaz-v-ferrell-texapp-1912.