Cook v. State ex rel. Patterson

13 Ind. 154
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 15, 1859
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 13 Ind. 154 (Cook v. State ex rel. Patterson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cook v. State ex rel. Patterson, 13 Ind. 154 (Ind. 1859).

Opinion

Davison, J.

This was an action against Cook, late treasurer of Knox county, and his sureties, on his official bond. The bond is dated November 18,1852, is in the penalty of 50,000 dollars, and is conditioned as follows:

“ If the said John M. Cook, who has been elected treasurer, &c., will pay over, according to law, all moneys which shall come into his hands for state, county, or other purposes, and faithfully discharge the duties of his office, during the term for which he has been elected, and [during his] continuance in office, and at the expiration of such term, deliver to his successor in office all public moneys, books, accounts, &c., belonging to the office, and which may be in his possession by virtue thereof, then the obligation was to be void,” &c.

This bond, having been duly signed and sealed by Cook, and each of his sureties, was approved in this form:

“ We, the undersigned, county commissioners of Knox county, and state of Indiana, do hereby approve of the above bond and security.
“Andrew Gordon,
“ William Junkin.”

The complaint avers that Cook has not paid over, according to law, all moneys which came into his hands as treasurer, &c., for state, county, and other purposes, and that there is now in his hands, 4,000 dollars, which he received as treasurer, while acting as such under said bond, which is due, and which he has wholly failed and refused to pay over, &c. And, further, it is averred that Cook did not, at the expiration of his term of office for which he had been elected, deliver up to his successor in office, all public moneys, books, &c., belonging to said office, and which were in his possession by virtue thereof, although his successor duly demanded the same, &c.

Cook answered by a general denial. The other defend[156]*156ants, the sureties, in their answer, set up, 1. That the bond in suit was not received and approved by the board of commissioners, as required by the statute. 2. That Cook was duly elected treasurer, &c., his term of.office commencing November 15, 1852, and ending on the 15th of November, 1854, or as soon thereafter as his successor in office should’be elected and qualified; that the instrument sued on is his' official bond, executed by them, as his securities for said term, which term expired November 15, 1854, and his, Cook’s, successor having been duly elected, was, on said day, duly qualified, &c. And defendants aver that said Cook has fully paid over to his successor in office all the money which came to his hands, as treasurer, during his said term of office, &c.

Demurrer to the first special defense sustained; and to the second, the plaintiff replied, “that Cook did not pay over, &c., but on the contrary, has failed and refused so to pay, &c., and still has in his hands 4,000 dollars, as alleged in the complaint.

Verdict, in favor of the plaintiff for 2,180 dollars. New trial refused, and judgment.

The first inquiry relates to the approval of the bond. The demurrer admits that it was not received and approved by the board of commissioners, as required by law. Hence, it is insisted that the sureties are not liable. We think otherwise. The statutes of 1843, under which the bond, in this case, was executed, provide that whenever any official bond shall not contain the substantial matter, Sec., required by law, or there shall be any defect in the approval or filing thereof, such bond shall not be void, so as to discharge the officer and his sureties, but they shall be bound to the state or party interested; and the state, or such party, may, by action at law, suggest the defect of such bond, or of such approval or filing, and recover his proper demand or damages from such officer, and the persons who intended to become, and were included as, sureties in such bond. R. S. 1843, p. 110, § 98. See, also, 1 R. S. p. 167, § 12.

In this instance, the defect is, that the bond was not ap[157]*157proved by the board of commissioners while in session, but simply by two persons who style themselves commissioners of Knox comity.” Now, if this defect is properly suggested, the statutory provisions to which we have referred apply to the case at bar. The defect, it is true, is not affirmatively averred in the complaint; but the bond, and its defective approval, are set forth in the record. Both were filed with the complaint, and, therefore, constitute a part of that pleading. 2 R. S. p. 44, § 78.—12 Ind. R. 187.

Thus, the defect in the approval seems to be sufficiently shown by the complaint, and the result is, the defense to which the demurrer applies, is not available.

The record contains a bill of exceptions, which shows, that prior to November 15,1852, the date of the bond, Cook had been treasurer of Knox county, and having been, reelected his own successor, was on that day duly qualified for a second term of two years, then commencing, and ending November 15,1854, or as soon thereafter as his successor in office should be elected and qualified; that one Williamson, who was elected Cook’s successor, was qualified on the 20th of November, 1854, and obtained possession of the office on the 10th of January, 1855, and that Cook, by writ of replevin, on the 18th of that month, recovered possession of the same office, and held it for some time; that on the 1st of June, 1852, Cook, then being treasurer for his first term, made his annual report to the commissioners, admitting that there was then in his hands, 3,262 dollars, 89 cents, and on the first of June, 1853, after the commencement of his second term, he reported thus: “ There was on hand at the last settlement, 3,262 dollars, 89 cents. Receipts since that time, 21,297 dollars, 18 cents. Credit payments, 17,898 dollars, 61 cents. Balance in treasury, June 1, 1853, 6,661 dollars, 41 cents;” that on the first of June, 1854, he made a statement commencing with the balance on hand at the last settlement, and showing receipts since the first of June, 1853, of 15,113 dollars, 38 cents, and payments to the amount of 15,274 dollars, 13 cents, leaving a balance on hand, June 1, .1854, of 2,816 dollars, 64 cents; that there was also another report made [158]*158by Cook, June 1, 1855, showing a balance against himself of 3,024 dollars, 40 cents, and a statement of his entire account, as treasurer, produced on the trial, and proved to be correct, up to the commencement of this suit, showed him to be in default, 2,180 dollars.

Thus far, the evidence shows that the balance, 3,262 dollars, 80 cents, reported June 1, 1852, while Cook was in office during his first term, was earned forward, and contributed in the production of the amount embraced in the verdict. This result, in the absence of other evidence, would have been unobjectionable; because Cook, having in June, 1852, charged himself with the then reported balance, the jury would have had a right to infer that that balance was in his hands when the bond in suit was executed, and he had entered upon his second term of office. But one Me

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Bluebook (online)
13 Ind. 154, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cook-v-state-ex-rel-patterson-ind-1859.