City of Casper v. Joyce

88 P.2d 467, 54 Wyo. 198, 1939 Wyo. LEXIS 6
CourtWyoming Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 21, 1939
Docket2086, 2087
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 88 P.2d 467 (City of Casper v. Joyce) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wyoming Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
City of Casper v. Joyce, 88 P.2d 467, 54 Wyo. 198, 1939 Wyo. LEXIS 6 (Wyo. 1939).

Opinion

Riner, Chief Justice.

These two cases are proceedings by direct appeal from a judgment of the district court of Laramie County. As they are based upon the same record and were briefed and argued together one opinion will suffice to dispose of both. For convenience the parties will *206 be referred to, the plaintiff and respondent, City of Casper, as the “City” or the “plaintiff,” and the defendants below and appellants here, LeRoy Joyce, as the “Treasurer” or by his surname, and the Central Surety and Insurance Corporation of Kansas City, Missouri, a corporation, as the “surety.” The facts material to be considered at this time would appear to be these:

Joyce was Treasurer of the City during the years 1930 and 1931. He was reappointed January 7, 1932, and served until August, 1933, when he resigned the office to accept other employment. During the two years first mentioned the surety on his official bond was the corporation above named, duly organized under the laws of the State of Missouri and properly qualified and authorized to do business in the State of Wyoming. This official bond of the Treasurer was conditioned that “if the said LeRoy Joyce shall well, truly and faithfully perform all official duties now required of him by law, and also all such additional duties as may be imposed on him by any law of the State subsequently enacted, and if he shall account for and pay over and deliver to the person or officer entitled to receive the same, all moneys or other property that may come into his hands as such City Treasurer then this obligation to be null and void; otherwise to remain in full force and effect.”

Prior to the appointment of Joyce as Treasurer the City had, through formal compliance with the necessary legal requirements, issued and sold certain of its negotiable bonds, with attached interest coupons, these issues being put out for a number of municipal purposes and on different dates. These bonds, both the principal obligations and the interest coupons attached, were made payable either at the office of the Treasurer or at the “Banking House of Kountze Brothers in the City of New York, State of New York.” At least one *207 of the bond issues of the City was made payable as to principal and interest at the office of Kountze Brothers only. The concern last mentioned was a co-partnership organized and doing business in the City of New York, State of New York, and could not be, and was never, qualified to act as a depository of city funds under the provisions of Chapter 92, W. R. S., 1931. No bond or security was ever at any time obtained by the Mayor and City Council of the City or the Treasurer from said partnership for moneys coming into the hands of the latter through the remittances presently to be mentioned.

Neither the Treasurer nor the City had in their possession a list of the names and addresses of the holders of these bonds and coupons put out under these various issues, and Joyce did not know what bonds or coupons, if any, would be presented at his office in the city for payment there. As a matter of fact, while he paid a few of-them, practically all were presented to Kountze Brothers in New York City for collection and payment and were paid by the partnership from funds sent it by Joyce from time to time as it became necessary. When coupons were presented to the Treasurer for payment, and were paid by him, he would deduct the amount of such payments from his next remittance to Kountze Brothers. .In paying these obligations of the City, Joyce, after consultation with its Mayor, City Council and attorney, followed the same course of procedure pursued by his predecessors in office.

As Treasurer of the City Joyce received moneys collected from different sources, such as taxes from the County Treasurer’s office, fines, water rents, etc. These funds, upon receipt by him, were deposited in one or the other of the three banks located in the City of Casper which had been under the provisions of Chapter 92, W. R. S., 1931, formally designated by the Mayor. *208 and City Council as depositories for the moneys belonging to the City.

Kountze Brothers customarily sent the treasurer a printed and typewritten form of notice shortly before any bonds or interest coupons fell due, directing his attention to the necessity of having moneys in their hands to meet the obligations. The last notice of this character sent by Kountze Brothers prior to their insolvency was transmitted to the Treasurer under date of September 8, 1931, calling his attention to the fact “that coupons from the following bonds: Waterworks, Sewer, Public Building” would be due and payable at the office of the said partnership on ‘October 30.’ ” The notice pursuant to which the last remittance was made to Kountze Brothers, and presently to be mentioned, was not produced by the City at the trial of the case below, though demand therefor had been made by the defendants. Indeed, no other notices of this character were forthcoming though Joyce testified that they were placed in the files of the office of the Treasurer of the City as he received them.

For his own convenience Joyce had prepared a schedule listing the various bond issues of the City, the amount of interest due and payable thereon, and the dates when payment thereof should be made. Upon receiving the reminder notice aforesaid from Kountze Brothers, he would reconcile it with the schedule thus prepared and remit to them the required sums by New York drafts, sent so as to reach the partnership a short time before the bonds or coupons became due. These sums of money he withdrew by check or checks upon one or more of the three depository banks of the City, already mentioned, and purchased the New York exchange paper with them. The drafts were by Kountze Brothers duly endorsed to the order of a New York bank. Occasionally, instead of the Treasurer’s check alone, city warrants signed by the Mayor, City Clerk *209 and Treasurer were used to obtain the New York drafts for these remittances.

Joyce, as a witness for the plaintiff in the action brought by it and upon which the present record is based, testified on cross-examination that the several sums of money in the hands of Kountze Brothers were only placed there for the purpose of paying outstanding bonds and interest coupons of the City due shortly thereafter, and that if all these bonds and coupons thus due and payable prior to October 13, 1931, the date on which Kountze Brothers failed, had been presented to the partnership for payment and paid, then there would have been no balance or sum of money in their possession at the time their insolvency occurred. However, there were always quite a number of these bonds and interest coupons which were not by their owners and holders promptly presented to Kountze Brothers for liquidation. As a result there was usually a balance of the City’s funds, remitted as aforesaid, in the hands of Kountze Brothers to take care of overdue bonds and coupons.

In making the several remittances to New York City, as aforesaid, Joyce generally stated in his letters transmitting the drafts particularly how the remittances were to be used.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
88 P.2d 467, 54 Wyo. 198, 1939 Wyo. LEXIS 6, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-casper-v-joyce-wyo-1939.