City of St. Marys v. Rowe

2 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 645
CourtAuglaize County Court of Common Pleas
DecidedJanuary 23, 1905
StatusPublished

This text of 2 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 645 (City of St. Marys v. Rowe) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Auglaize County Court of Common Pleas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
City of St. Marys v. Rowe, 2 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 645 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1905).

Opinion

In these two actions a recovery is sought against the sureties on the official bonds; of J. H. Rowe, Jr., as municipal clerk of St. Marys, Ohio. There are three causes of action in the first above mentioned case, and seven in the other, the breach of the bond in each instance consisting in the embezzlement by Rowe of moneys which he had collected from property owners in payment of street assessments, which moneys he was authorized and directed to collect by various ordinances of the council of St. Marys. In case No. 7233 these ordinances were passed and took effect after the bond was given and accepted. In case No. 7234 they were passed and took effect before the bond was given and accepted.

A general demurrer was interposed to the petitions in both cases and the questions made thereon were, first, that the petitions failed to show that any demand for payment was made upon the sureties before the actions were commenced; and, second, that the alleged defaults of the defendant, Rowe, were not made in relation to his duties as clerk of the municipality, and consequently, as the bonds sued upon were given to secure the faithful performance of his duties as such clerk, no breach of the conditions thereof has been alleged, and therefore the petitions do not state a cause of action.

As to the first ground of demurrer in each cause the demurrer is overruled. The law in this particular is that the petition need not allege a demand on the principal for payment, nor a notice to the surety of the default of the principal, unless by the terms of the bond demand and notice are necessary to fix the liability of the surety (Bush v. Critchfield, 4 O., 103).

[647]*647On the second ground the demurrer is sustained in both cases. It is apparent from the petitions that in both cases the bonds were given to secure the faithful performance by Rowe of his duties as clerk, and as the sureties are entitled to stand upon the strict letter of the contract, they can not be held for Rowe’s malfeasance in any other particular than while he was acting as clerk of the municipality and in the discharge of the duties which pertain to the office of clerk. In 4 Am. & Eng. Ene. of Law, 2d Ed., 681, it is said that a bond conditioned for the performance of the duties of a public office generally, is construed so as to embrace all of the duties which by law are required of the office and such other duties as are reasonably incidental or necessary to be performed in order to give proper effect to the duties prescribed. And again, at page 684, it is said that separate duties, that is to say, duties pertaining to an office other than the office with reference to which a bond is specifically given, are not, of course, included in the condition of such bond unless the terms of the condition are sufficiently broad and general to admit of a different construction.

It is apparent from the statutes in force at the time Rowe was elected and his bond given, in both these causes, that the duties of the clerk were what the title imports — clerical; and that they did not include his acting as a fiscal agent any more than any other person. Indeed, it is not contended that the statutes imposed the duties upon Rowe in relation to which his default occurred, but that these duties were imposed by the various ordinances referred to in the petitions, and that the council not only had the authority to impose such duties upon Rowe (State v. Carter, 67 O. S., 422), but that by the express provision of Section 1738 (Bates Revised Statutes, Éd. 1900) the fact that new duties have been imposed upon a municipal officer are not available as a defense in a suit upon his official bond.

The question of subsequently imposed duties arises only in action No. 7233 — the bond in that case having been given and accepted prior to the passage of the ordinances imposing the duties in question upon Rowe. In the other action the bond [648]*648was given and accepted after the passage and taking effect of the ordinances. There is a long line of authorities which hold that unless the bond contains an express provision to the contrary, a surety, at the time of executing an official bond, is presumed to contemplate subsequent changes and additions in the duties of the office to which the bond relates which do not essentially change the nature and character of the office, and to contract with reference to such changes and additions (King et al v. Nichols, 16 O. S., 80; Dawson v. State, 38 O. S., 1). One of the leading cases in support of this proposition is People v. Vilas, 93 Am. Decns., 520; s. c., 36 N. Y., 459, cited by counsel for plaintiff. In this last mentioned case the court, in concluding its opinion, says that “a legislative alteration of the duties of an officer does not discharge his sureties so long as the duties remain appropriate to the office.” If the subsequently imposed duties are appropriate to the office it might be said that the surety contemplated such change when he signed the bond, and that consequently it is within the provision of his contract. But if the duties are not fairly appropriate to the office, then it can not be said that the surety contracted with reference to them, especially if they increased the risk which he has assumed, unless, of course, the words of the bond are broad enough to include them, or the law in force at the time of the contract plainly provides that such subsequently imposed duties shall be deemed within the terms of the undertaking.

It is true that Section 1738, ante, provides, in effect, that the imposition of new duties upon a municipal officer shall not operate to discharge the surety on his bond. But the duties there meant must be held to be duties that are pertinent and appropriate to the office in question, and not any or all duties which by law or ordinance a municipal officer may be called upon to perform. To hold otherwise would allow the statute to operate in many eases a fraudulent- trick upon the surety, and when a man became surety on the official bond of a municipal officer he would have no assurance, from the nature of the office and the conditions existing at the time, that he would not find himself liable for all sorts and conditions of debts and defaults, and, instead of knowing the character and extent of his lia[649]*649bility and thus being able to guard against a default (which is one of the objects aimed at in requiring bondsmen), would find himself, in order to be safe, practically the guardian of the officer whose surety he had become. It might be argued that this effect would be a consummation “devoutly to be wished,” in view of the temptations that are thrown around some officers and to which they occasionally yield, but that this is what the parties to the contract had in mind when it was made no one will contend. When the nature of the contract of surety-ship is considered, and it is remembered that a surety is entitled to stand strictly on the letter of his undertaking, the impossibility of changing such an undertaking into one of guardianship becomes obvious.

It needs no argument to show that the duties imposed by these ordinances upon the clerk were not any more appropriate to the office of clerk than to that of treasurer — indeed, not as much so. They might have been imposed upon any officer, or a private person delegated with the authority to make the collections.

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Related

The People v. . Vilas
36 N.Y. 459 (New York Court of Appeals, 1867)
Moore v. Floyd
4 Or. 101 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1871)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 645, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-st-marys-v-rowe-ohctcomplauglai-1905.