Commonwealth Ex Rel. Livingston Graded School v. First State Bank

64 S.W.2d 485, 251 Ky. 95, 1933 Ky. LEXIS 826
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedNovember 3, 1933
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 64 S.W.2d 485 (Commonwealth Ex Rel. Livingston Graded School v. First State Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Commonwealth Ex Rel. Livingston Graded School v. First State Bank, 64 S.W.2d 485, 251 Ky. 95, 1933 Ky. LEXIS 826 (Ky. 1933).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Perry

Reversing.

On September 12, 1931, the board of education of' the Livingston Graded School arranged with the First: State Bank of Livingston to act as depository for its. school funds and, pursuant to such- arrangement and to-secure indemnity for the latter’s proper accounting and. payment of the school funds so deposited with it, took: from the bank, in the name of the commonwealth of Kentucky for the use and benefit of the Livingston Graded School, a depository bond, signed by. its presi *96 dent and vice president as sureties, and which in its terms and provisions is as follows:

“Department of Education
Commonwealth of Kentucky
Public School Funds
Bond of Depository
“Of the Livingston Graded School Board of Education:
“We, A. B. Humble, principal, and L. H. Davis, and R. G. Webb, sureties, do hereby acknowledge ourselves jointly and severally indebted to the Commonwealth of Kentucky in the penal sum of Two Thousand Dollars ($2,000.00), that A. B. Humble, Cashier, First State Bank of Livingston, Kentucky, as Depository of Livingston Graded School Board of Education shall well and truly discharge the duties of said office according to law, receive and deposit all funds offered it for such purpose by the Livingston Graded School Board of Education or its treasurer, or the legally authorized agent or either, account for and pay over all moneys- to parties legally entitled thereto on the properly drawn warrant of the Livingston Graded School Board of Education and/or on the properly drawn check of the treasurer of said Board of Education, for a one year term beginning July 1, 1931 and/or until its successor is duly appointed and qualified.
“Witness our hands this 12th day of September, 1931
“First State Bank, Livingston, Ky. Depository
“By A. B. Humble, Cashier
“L. H. Davis, Surety
“R. G. Webb, Surety
“Approved September 22, 1931, by the Livingston School Board of Education.
“Lee Mullins, Chairman.
“M. H. Owens, Secretary.
“Received by the Superintendent of Public Instruction September 23, 1931.
“Approved by the State Board of Education, October 21, 1931.
“W. C. Bell, Chairman.”

On the back of said bond was indorsed the affidavits of the sureties as follows:

*97 “Commonwealth of Kentucky, County of Rock-castle, SS.
“I, L. H. Davis, surety on the bond of A. B. Humble, Depository of the Livingston School Board of Education, assert that my unencumbered assets exceed my liabilities in the sum of Five Thousand Dollars ($5,000.00).
“L. H. Davis
“Commonwealth of Kentucky, County of Rock-castle, SS.
“I, R. G-. Webb, surety on the bond of A. B. Humble, Depository of the Livingston School Board Board of Education, assert that my unencumbered assets exceed my liabilities in the sum of Five Thousand Dollars ($5,000.00).
“R. G. Webb
“Subscribed and sworn to before me this 21st day' of September, 1931, by L. H. Davis and R. G. Webb, sureties on the bond of A. B. Humble, Depository.
“John W. Reese, Notary Public
Rockcastle County, Kentucky.”

The said bond was by its terms to remain in full force and effect for one year next after its execution and delivery.

The board of education did further, in order to secure its school funds and as so required by law, take and receive from its treasurer, the coappellant George W. Murphy, a treasurer’s bond, secured by the Maryland Casualty Company, in the penal sum of $2,000, effective for the period of two years from date of its execution on September 26, 1930.

In February, 1932, o.r some five months after the execution by the bank and its officers of the- depository bond, the said bank became insolvent and closed its. doors and the liquidation of its affairs was turned over’ to the state banking commissioner, J. R. Dorman, and. special banking commissioner, A. B. Humble.

When the bank ceased to do business, the appellant commonwealth of Kentucky, for the use and benefit, of the Livingston Graded School (hereinafter for convenience called the plaintiff school), was unable to procure funds with which to meet the school’s current expenses and repeatedly demanded of the appellee bank *98 and its officers, L. H. Davis and R. G. Webb, sureties upon its depository bond, payment of the amount of its deposits to the extent of the penal sum of $2,000 therein provided, but which they refused to pay or any part of same.

It is admitted that at the time of the bank’s failure in February, 1932, the plaintiff school had on deposit to its credit with the bank over $2,000.

In July, 1932, the said First State Bank of Livingston and L. H. Davis and R. Gr. Webb, its officers and sureties upon its depository bond, having defaulted in the performance of their indemnity contract therein recited and having broken the promise of the bond, through its failure and refusal to pay over to the appellant commonwealth of Kentucky, for the use of the said plaintiff, graded school, the sum of their penal liability of $2,000, named in the bond, or any sum, the plaintiff school in the name of the commonwealth of Kentucky instituted its suit in the Rockcastle circuit court against the said First State Bank, L. II. Davis, and R. Gr. Webb, sureties on the said depository bond.

To this petition, the said defendant bank and the sureties on the bond filed their demurrer, when plaintiff filed amended petition, in which it alleged that the said depository bond was “intended and accepted by the plaintiff and defendants as the bond of the First State Bank as depository; that all the parties in interest intended and accepted the bond as such and that the said bond was not intended by any of the parties thereto to be the bond of A. B. Humble, personally.”

Upon submission of the cause upon defendants’ demurrer to the petition and the petition as amended, the demurrer was sustained and, plaintiff declining to plead further, the petition was dismissed, to which ruling of the court the plaintiff school objected and excepted and in part prosecutes this appeal.

It is further disclosed by the record that upon the filing of plaintiff’s petition on its depository bond against the defendant bank and the sureties thereon, and before any defense was made thereto, D. W.

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Bluebook (online)
64 S.W.2d 485, 251 Ky. 95, 1933 Ky. LEXIS 826, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-ex-rel-livingston-graded-school-v-first-state-bank-kyctapphigh-1933.