Broome v. United States

56 U.S. 143, 14 L. Ed. 636, 15 How. 143, 1853 U.S. LEXIS 275
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedJanuary 18, 1854
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 56 U.S. 143 (Broome v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Broome v. United States, 56 U.S. 143, 14 L. Ed. 636, 15 How. 143, 1853 U.S. LEXIS 275 (1854).

Opinions

Mr. Justice WAYNE

delivered the opinion of the court.

Ambrose Crane was appointed collector of customs for St. Mark’s, in Florida, and signed, with his sureties, Swain and Macon, what was meant by them to be an official bond.. The form of the b.ond is given in the statute. This conforms to it in every particular. ■ 1 Stat. at Large, 705. Crane, the collector, became. a defaulter. This suit was brought to recover' the amount of the defalcation from the administrator of Macon, one of the sureties of Crane. The bond is dated'on the 2d June, 1837. Two indorsements are upon it. One of them was made by the District Attorney of the United States for Florida.

Office of the United States Attorney, Middle District of Florida, July 4th, 1837. I hereby certify, that Peter H. Swain and Arthur Macon, Esqrs., who appear to have executed the within bond as securities, are generally esteemed to be, and in my opinion undoubtedly are* good for the amount of this bond. They reside in Leon county, and I would take either of them, without hesitation, as security for a private debt of that amount. The signatures appear to be genuine.

Charles S. Sibley, District Attorney.

The other indorsement is as follows:

Comptroller’s Office, July 31,1837. Approved in the above certificate. George Wolfe, Comptroller.

Macon died on the 24th July, seven days before the date of the comptroller’s approval, and twenty-four days .after the date of the district attorney’s indorsement. The evidence in the case shows that, in the year 1837, the mail time between Tallahassee and Washington was from eight to ten days. The distance might have been travelled by an individual in less time, but not in less than seven or eight days. This testimony was introduced by the plaintiff to prove that the bond, if it had not been delivered before the 24th of July, the day of Macon’s death, that it must have been in the course of transmission from the obligors before that day, as the comptroller’s approval is [154]*154dated the 31st of the month. The act directing bond to be taken from collectors, with sureties, to be approved by the Comptroller of the Treasury of the United States, will be found in 1 Stat. at Large, 705. It is, that every collector, naval officer, and surveyor, employed in the collection of the duties upon imports and tonnage shall, within three months after he enters upon the duties of his office, give bond, with one or more sureties, to be approved by the Comptroller of the Treasury of the United States, and payable to the United States, with condition for the true and faithful performance of the duties of his office, according to law. The condition of the bond is, that whereas the President of the United States hath, pursuant to law, appointed the said' to the office of , in the State of . Now, therefore, if the said has truly and faithfully executed and discharged, and shall continue truly and faithfully to execute and discharge all the duties of said office, according to law, then the above obligation is to be void and of none effect, otherwise it shall abide, and remain in full force and virtue.

In this state of the case, a recovery upon this bond is resisted by an objection that it never had a legal existence as to Macon, the intestate of the appellant, because he died before it was approved by the comptroller. It is not denied — or, if it be, the evidence makes it altogether probable — that the bond had been delivered before Macon died. We cannot admit that the date 1 of the approval can be taken absolutely as the time when the bond was accepted, without any relation to the time when it was delivered. A bond may not be a complete contract until it has been accepted by the obligee; but if it be delivered to him to be accepted if he should choose to do so, that is not a conditional delivery, which will postpone the obligor’s undertaking to the time of its acceptance, but an admission that the bond is then binding upon him, and will be so from that time, if it shall be accepted. When accepted, it is not only binding from that time forward, but it becomes so upon both from the time of the delivery. That is the offer which the obligor makes, when he hands the bond to the obligee, and in that sense the obligee received it. Such is just the case before us. The act requires .the collector to give a bond, “ with sureties to be approved by the comptroller; ” it must be done in three months after he has entered upon the duties of his office; it must be retrospective to that time, and be for the future also. The comptroller may accept the sureties or reject them. He may call at any future time for other sureties, if circumstances shall occur, or information shall be received, which make it necessary that the United States, should have a more responsible security. [155]*155Or he may call, under the direction of the Secretary of the Treasury, for a new bond. He may decide upon the sufficiency of the sureties before they have made themselves so, of after they have signed the collector’s bond. The first course is not the usual.practice. The bond is commonly sent to the. collector with such sureties as he can get. The comptroller receives it under the law, to be afterwards approved, upon such information as he has or may procure, concerning the responsibility of the sureties. The time is not limited for the use of his discretion for that purpose. He knows, and the collector knows, that the bond ought to be given in three months after the collector has begun to discharge the duties of his office. It is his duty to give the bond. It is the comptroller’s to see that it is done. It is not necessary that it should be handed to the comptroller. It may be handed to an agent appointed by the comptroller to receive it, or it may be put into the possession of any person to deliver it, or it may be transmitted by mail. If done in any one of these ways, it is a delivery from the moment that the collector and his sureties part with it. It is from that moment in the course of transmission, with the intention that the law may act upon it through the comptroller’s agency, and his subsequent approval is an acceptance with relation to the time beginning the transmission. The statute does not require the approval to be in writing. It may be so, and may be done verbally; or it may not be done in either way. Receiving the bond, and retaining it for a considerable time without objection, will be sufficient evidence of acceptance to complete the delivery, especially when the exception is taken by the party who had done, all he could to complete it. Postmaster-General v. Norvell, 1 Gilpin Rep. 106-121. And we add, that the retention of such a bond by the comptroller without objection, for a longer time than the statute requires it to be given, would' be presumptive evidence of its approval and acceptance.. This presumption of acceptance has been ruled by this court, in the case of the United States Bank v. Dandridge and others, 12 Wheat. 64. In that case, an objection was taken in the Circuit Court to the admissibility of evidence to show a presumptive acceptance of a cashier’s bond, because the charter of the bank required a bond to be given satisfactory to the directors. The Circuit Court sustained the objection, and ruled that the approval must be in writing to bind the cashier’s sureties. This court ruled otherwise.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
56 U.S. 143, 14 L. Ed. 636, 15 How. 143, 1853 U.S. LEXIS 275, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/broome-v-united-states-scotus-1854.