Brite v. Atascosa County

247 S.W. 878
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 3, 1923
DocketNo. 6844.
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 247 S.W. 878 (Brite v. Atascosa County) 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
Brite v. Atascosa County, 247 S.W. 878 (Tex. Ct. App. 1923).

Opinion

FLY, C. J.

This is a suit instituted, by appellee to recover against Tom Brite, as principal and W. H. Ash, Wright Williams, W. T. Brite, George M. Martin, G. L. Carver, M. L. Anderson, and J. N. Dixon, as sureties, on a certain official bond given by Brite, as tax collector of Atascosa county, for an alleged shortage in taxes collected by him during the years 1914 and 1915. Pending the suit George M. .Martin died, and his wife, Mrs. Cornelia Martin, individually and as independent executrix of the estate of her husband, was made a party. W. H. Ash also died, and D. A. N. Duncan, administrator of his estate was also made a party. The court instructed a verdict for appellee in the sum of $10,552.

Tom Brite was the collector of taxes for Atascosa county in 1914 and 1915, and on November 17, 1914, gave a bond in the sum of $88,955.71 for the faithful performance of his duties as tax collector, with W. H. Ash, Wright Williams, George M. Martin, G. L. Carver, M. L. Anderson, J. N. Dixon, and W. T. Brite as sureties. The bond was made payable to the Governor of Texas and his successors in office. Tom Brite misappropriated certain of the taxes and defaulted in payment in a sum in excess of $8,000 out of the taxes collected by him in 1915. Brite admitted the shortage which had been ascertained by the commissioners’ court of Atascosa county. The audit of Brite’s books showed the shortage. He failed to pay the shortage to the county, and still owes it.

The suit was brought in the name of appellee, under authority given by the statutes of the state, and no other authority was required to empower the county to prosecute' the suit. In article 1371, Vernon’s Sayles’ Civil Statutes, it is provided that any instrument of whatever form evidencing a debt to a county, no matter who may be named as payee, shall vest in the county all rights, interests, and actions which would be vested in any individual if such cohtract had been made directly to him, and by article 1372 the county is clothed with the authority to sue on such instruments in its own name or in that of the person to whom they were made. When prosecuting a suit in its own name by attorneys, the county comes into court as any other litigant, and the presumption will prevail that the attorneys signing the pleadings are authorized to represent the county, and no attack can be made on such authority, unless a motion in writing under oath is made by the defendant “stating that such defendant believes that such suit or proceeding was instituted against him * * * without authority on the part of the plaintiff’s attorney.” Article 335. The statute (article 1365) expressly makes each county a body corporate and politic, and as such it undoubtedly had the power and authority to institute suits and defend against those brought against ⅛. The Constitution of Texas recognizes counties as municipal corporations along with cities and towns. In the absence of any attack in the statutory manner of the proper authorization of the suit, the presumption will prevail that the commissioners’ court authorized the institution of the suit through the attorneys whose names are subscribed to the pleadings. The cases cited by appellants have no bearing upon the case presented by the record. The first assignment of error is overruled.

Articles 7608 and 7610, Vernon’s Sayles’ Civ. Stats., require bonds to be given by collectors of taxes for state taxes to the Governor and for county taxes to county judges, but the bond which forms the basis of his suit was given to the Governor of the state. However, it was shown to have been intended to cover the county taxes alone. It is provided in article 1371:

“All notes, bonds, bills, contracts, covenants, agreements or writings, made, or to be made, whereby any person is, or shall be, bound to any county, or to the court or commissioners of any county, or to any other person or persons, in whatever form, for the payment of any debt or duty or the performance of any matter or thing to the use of any county, shall be valid and effectual, to all intents and pur *881 poses, to vest in said county all rights, interests and actions ■which would be vested in any individual, if any such contract had been made directly to him.”

That -law, 'we think, was passed to protect the county and make its ignorance proof against the acts of those to whom the people have intrusted the management of county affairs. The bond sued on was shown to have been given to protect the county against the malfeasance or misfeasance of its tax collector, and it undoubtedly bound the collector and his sureties “for the payment of any debts or duty or the performance of any matter or thing to the use of the county,” and, while not following the terms of the statute as to bonds, it is “valid and effectual to all intents and purposes to vest in said county all rights, interests, and actions” which the statutory bond would have vested in the county judge or Governor. The. bond would also be good at common law.

Tom Brite admitted to the county judge and'others that there was a shortage in his accounts of more than $8,000, and that admission was properly allowed by the court. The rule seems to prevail that the admission of a principal will not be admitted as against the sureties in a suit in which 'the sureties are being sued alone but it has been held that, when there is a suit against-principal and sureties on a joint obligation, the admissions of the principal, being competent evidence against him, are also competent against his sureties. Brandt, Suretyship, §§ 795-797; Amherst Bank v. Root, 2 Metc. (Mass.) 522; Singer Co. v. Reynolds, 168 Mass. 588, 47 N. E. 438, 60 Am. St. Rep. 417; Swift v. Trustees, 189 Ill. 584, 60 N. E. 44. It is also the rule that, when declarations or admissions of a principal are made in the course of the performance of the business for which the surety is bound, so as to become a part of the res gestae, such admissions are evidence against the surety. Brandt, Suretyship, § 798; Keowne v. Love, 65 Tex. 152; Barry v. Association, 67 Tex. 250, 3 S. W. 261.

The admissions of Brite were undoubtedly competent as against him, and, if the sureties'thought the testimony was inadmissible as to them, they should have requested that the evidence be confined to the principal. Keowne v. Love, 65 Tex. 152; Sullivan v. Fant (Tex. Civ. App.) 160 S. W. 612; Johnson v. Frost (Tex. Civ. App.) 229 S. W. 558.

When the bond was shown to the county clerk, it had the name of A. A. Ash, one of the sureties, erased, and the notary public who delivered the bond to the clerk called his attention to the erasure. The evidence showed that the name had been erased wherf it was acknowledged by the sureties, and that it was erased when it was presented to the commissioners’ court for approval. AH of the sureties admitted signing the bond, but claim that they were released from liability because the name of A. A. Ash was erased. They do not claim that they were ignorant of the erasure when they acknowledged the bond, and no effort was made to show that the erasure was made after the bond had passed into the custody of the commissioners’ court. On the other hand, the evidence showed affirmatively that the erasure took place before the bond was delivered to the clerk and accepted by the commissioners’ court. Appellants alleged that the erasure had been made before the bond was apin-oved. The facts of this ease sharply differentiate it from those of the cases cited by appellants, in which the alteration took place after the delivery of the papers. Appellants'knew that A. A.

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Bluebook (online)
247 S.W. 878, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brite-v-atascosa-county-texapp-1923.