Brown v. Sneed

14 S.W. 248, 77 Tex. 471, 1890 Tex. LEXIS 1148
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedMay 20, 1890
DocketNo. 6561
StatusPublished
Cited by38 cases

This text of 14 S.W. 248 (Brown v. Sneed) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brown v. Sneed, 14 S.W. 248, 77 Tex. 471, 1890 Tex. LEXIS 1148 (Tex. 1890).

Opinion

HOBBY, Judge.—

The questions most material in this case are: First. Does the statute of limitation of four years run against the State, under our laws, in a suit on the official bond of the chief clerk of the Comptroller’s Office? Second. Can additional duties be assumed by or devolved on said clerk other than those named in the statute or not incidental thereto, so as to extend the liabilities of the sureties? And this involves the question whether the pleadings in this case show that such additional duties were assumed by or imposed on him. Third. If said sureties are [474]*474released from liability under the bond, is said clerk liable ? If so to whom, the State or the Comptroller in this suit?

There is nothing in our statutes of limitation, nor is there anything in the cases of The State v. Purcell, 16 Texas, and The Governor v. Al-bright, 21 Texas, and The State v. Burnett, 27 Texas, which in our opinion conclusively authorizes the inference that a change was intended to be effected in the well established and long recognized rule that unless the statute so expressly provides it can not be set up as a bar to any right or claim of the State. Wood on Lim., sec. 52.

At all events we do not think the authorities referred to justify holding in this action that the State is barred in four years. In the cases of The State v. Purcell and The State v. Burnett ten years had elapsed from the accrual of the cause of action. In the latter case ten years had elapsed before the filing of the amended petition. Reviewing the former case in The Governor v. Albright, 21 Texas, where the question now under consideration was directly before it, this court held that the statute of four years limitation would not run against the State in a suit on a tax collector's bond, and took occasion there to declare the general rule to be that the State is not bound by statutes of limitation unless provision be made in the statutes to that effect.

In the cases cited where the State was held to be barred, it was upon the ground of the lapse of time-—ten years. It is not clear, however, why, if the statute of four years did not apply to the State in the cases of The State v. Purcell and The State v. Burnett for the reasons therein given, the lapse of ten years time should apply and preclude a recovery. The doctrine that laches is not imputable to the government was a controlling reason for the rule that limitation did not apply to. the State unless it was included. The considerations of wise public policy which were supposed to uphold this doctrine rest upon the theory that the head of the government was engrossed with the cares and duties of State, and that the public should not therefore suffer by reason of the negligence of its servants.

Discussing this question the Supreme Court of the United States use this language: “ In a representative government, where the people do not and can not act in a body, where their power is delegated to others and must of necessity be exercised by them if exercised at all, the reasons for applying these principles are equally cogent.'' United States v. Thompson, 8 Otto, 489. The principles referred to were embodied in the maxim to the effect that no time runs against the government.

It is upon this principle, “applicable alike to all governments necessarily acting through numerous agents and essential to the preservation of the interests and property of the public, that the statute of a State prescribing periods of time within which rights must be asserted are held [475]*475not to embrace the State itself unless expressly designated.” Gibson v. Choteau, 13 Wall., 99.

It is argued that as the statute in express terms makes an exception in favor of the State in suits for land, the presumption is that this exception was not intended to apply to other suits.

In the. case of The State v. Purcell the same reason was urged in the opinion in support of the doctrine that the statute did apply to the State in suits other than for land; and it is now contended that the absence of any exception in the statute in favor of the State in personal actions is tantamount to a legislative acquiescence in the doctrine announced in the case last cited..

This argument we think applies with equal vigor and reason to the doctrine in the case of The Governor v. Albright, because in that case the question involved and directly under consideration was, as in this case, whether the four years statute applied to the State; and the rule declared in reviewing the case of The State v. Purcell was that unless it is so expressly provided the statute does not apply to the State; and in that case the necessity for the adherence to this rule was rather deprecated, and the advantage of a statute applicable to the State in actions other than for land was, as well as its necessity, urged upon grounds of “sound public policy.” But there has been.no material change in the statute in this respect, although our present law was enacted since that decision, and presumably with the knowledge of the construction therein contained.

We would not therefore feel authorized to interpret the statutory silence upon this point in the chapter-regulating limitation in personal actions as an indication that the State was included in that chapter. We conclude then that the statute of limitation of four years does not in this case apply to the State and is not well pleaded.

The duties which the chief clerk of the Comptroller’s Office was required to perform by article 2759 of the Be vised Statutes were “ to keep the books of said office, and discharge the duties of the Comptroller whenever said office may become vacant by death, resignation, or otherwise, or whenever the Comptroller may be unavoidably absent or incapable from sickness to discharge said duties.” Such only were specifically devolved on Sneed by the statute at the time of the execution of the bond by him, and his sureties.

That it was not the purpose to include the duties pertaining to the “ tax department ” of the Comptroller’s Office among those required of the chief clerk by article 2759, but rather the legislative intention to devolve them upon another and separate the duties of the tax department from those of the chief clerk, is indicated by the Act of April 2, 1881, passed a few months after the execution,of the bond, making appropriations for the support of the State government covering the term of the Comptroller. This act provided and appropriated for “ one tax clerk, [476]*476one tax sale clerk, one back tax clerk ” in the Comptroller’s Office in addition to the “chief clerk.” Laws of 1881, p. 86.

Article 2759 required the chief clerk’s bond to be conditioned “for the faithful performance of his duties.” The condition of the bond sued on is that “.the said Sebron 0. Sneed shall faithfully discharge the duties of his office.”

It is alleged that among other duties required by law of Brown, he was required “to receive as Comptroller certain■ taxes and issue tax receipts therefor, and to cover the same so receipted into the Treasury. That for the conduct of this branch of the business of the office a ctax department ’ had been established for many years.

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Bluebook (online)
14 S.W. 248, 77 Tex. 471, 1890 Tex. LEXIS 1148, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brown-v-sneed-tex-1890.