City of Hartford v. Franey

47 Conn. 76
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedMay 15, 1879
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 47 Conn. 76 (City of Hartford v. Franey) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
City of Hartford v. Franey, 47 Conn. 76 (Colo. 1879).

Opinion

Granger, J.

The defendant Franey was legally elected collector of taxes for the city of Hartford for the term of two years from April 6th, 1874, and on April 5th, 1876, was re-elected for a term of like duration. He accepted, and continued in the exercise of the duties of that office from the date of his first election until July 12th, 1877, when he resigned. During his tenure of office he received a part of the tax laid by the city upon the assessment list of 1873 payable in 1874, a part of the tax laid upon the list of 1874 payable in 1875, and a part of the tax laid upon the list of 1875 payable in 1876; ho continued to receive payments upon each tax, during each year after it became payable, up to the date of his resignation.

The charter of the city of Hartford provides that the collector of its taxes shall give a bond with sureties “for the faithful discharge of the duties of his office, * * * which bond shall bo executed to the satisfaction of the mayor of said city.” The first bond which Franey gave was approved upon Juno 16th, 1876, was signed and sealed by himself, and the defendants H. P. Keane and William Toohy, as well as by M. 0. Needham, now deceased, and was upon the condition following: —

“ The condition of this bond is such that, whereas the said John Franey has heretofore, to wit, on the sixth day of April, 1874, been elected collector of said city of Hartford for the term of two years, and until his successor shall bo appointed, was re-elected in April, 1876, and may also, from time to time hereafter, be re-elected to said office:—Now, therefore, if the said John Franey shall faithfully perform all his official duties duo to the said city of Hartford by virtue of his said election, and shall save the said city from all loss, cost or damage by reason of his misfeasance in said office, and shall render a true account of all his money-dealings for, in behalf of, and with said city, and shall make just and true payment to the city treasury of all moneys in his hands at any time as an officer or agent of said city, for and during the entire period for which he shall remain in his said office by said election, re-election, or holding over, then this bond shall be [79]*79void, otherwise to be and remain in full force and effect. In witness whereof we have hereunto set our hands and seals this 15th day of June, A. D. 1876.”

Upon March 26th, 1877, an additional bond was approved, which was signed by himself, H. P. Keane, 0. & Wm. J. Sieen and James Ahern, and was upon the condition following:—

“The condition of this bond is such that, whereas the said John Franey has heretofore, to wit, on the 5th day of April, 1876, been appointed collector of said city of Hartford for the term of two years, and until his successor shall be appointed, and may also, from time to time hereafter, be re-elected to said office:—Now, therefore, if the said John Franey shall faithfully perform all his official duties due to the said city of Hartford by virtue of his said appointment, and shall save the said city from all loss, cost or damage by reason of his misfeasance in said office, and shall render a true account of all his money dealings for, in behalf of, and with said city, and shall make just and true payment to the city treasury of all moneys in his hands at any time as an officer or agent of said city, for and during the entire period for which he shall remain in his said office by appointment or holding over or re-election, then this bond shall be void, otherwise to be and remain in full force and effect. In witness wliercof we have hereunto set our hands and seals this 26th day of March, A. D. 1877.”

On September 19th, 1877, the city of Hartford instituted a suit upon each bond; both writs were duly returned to and entered upon the docket of the Superior Court, and there remain; both suits were referred to the same committee for findings of facts; and in each that committee has reported that the collections made by Franey exceeded his payments by about the sum of $12,000. The advice of this court is asked as to the judgment which shall be rendered.

The defendant sureties insist that the existence of each suit is fatal to the other.

Y.’e cannot assent to this; it is not certain that both are for the same matter, cause and thing. Each bond is an independent undertaking; the second is by way of additional [80]*80security. When the suits were instituted it was not known that the entire penalty of the first would equal the collector’s default; possibly, if not presumably, judgments upon both would be required for the full indemnification of the plaintiff. Again, under a possible limitation of the obligation imposed by each bond, such an application of payments might have been made by the collector as to bring his default between their respective dates, and there might have been a judgment for the plaintiff upon the first and for the defendants upon the second, neither judgment affecting the other suit.

Nor can we assent to the claim that the sureties are discharged from all obligation by reason of the finding that on the day on which Franey entered upon his second term, as well as upon the respective days of approval of his bonds, he had not paid to the treasurer an amount equal to collections previously made. For, as the finding .is not to the contrary, it is to be presumed that he so far performed his duty as to have on each of those days the unpaid balance ready for payment to the treasurer; and his failure either to pay or to have it in keeping at the end of his official life is a breach of duty for which the sureties promised to answer. The day of his resignation is the first day upon which the finding makes it certain that his payments and his cash in hand are not together equal to his receipts. This imposed upon the defendants the burden of moving back by proof the time when he converted to his individual use and ceased to hold a portion of his receipts, to a point anterior to the date of approval of his first bond; and this they have failed to do.

In United States v. Boyd et al., 15 Peters, 187, Boyd had been appointed receiver for four years from December 27th, 1836, and gave bond with sureties on June 15th, 1837; it was held that “ it matters not at what time the moneys had been received by the officer, if received after his appointment. They were held in trust for the United States, and so continued to be held after the date of the bond; and the sureties are liable to the United States.” In Bruce et al. v. United States, 17 Howard, 437, the court said: “When Bruce received his second commission, if any money or property which he [81]*81received in his former term of office still remained in his hands he was bound to apply and account for it under the appointment he then received. * * Undoubtedly the sureties in the second term of office are not responsible for a default committed in his first. But if any part of the balance now claimed from him was misapplied during that period, it was incumbent upon the plaintiffs in error to prove it. No officer without proof will be presumed to have violated his duty, and if Bruce had done so, Steele had a l’iglit, under the opinion of the Circuit Court, to show it, and exonerate himself to that amount; but it could not be presumed merely because there appears by the accomits to have been a balance in his hands at the expiration of his first term.”

In Vivian v. Otis et al.,

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
47 Conn. 76, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-hartford-v-franey-conn-1879.