Eccles v. Walker

106 N.W. 977, 75 Neb. 722, 1906 Neb. LEXIS 440
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 8, 1906
DocketNo. 14,388
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 106 N.W. 977 (Eccles v. Walker) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Eccles v. Walker, 106 N.W. 977, 75 Neb. 722, 1906 Neb. LEXIS 440 (Neb. 1906).

Opinion

Duffie, C.

Eccles sued Walker upon his official bond as justice of tbe peace to recover $1.25 illegal fees exacted from bim, and also tbe penalty of $50 provided in section 34, chapter 28 of tbe Compiled Statutes 1905 (Ann. St. 9060). Tbe trial resulted in a judgment against Walker for tbe amount claimed, but tbe district court dismissed the action as against tbe surety, the United States Fidelity & Guaranty Company. From this order Eccles appealed, and tbe court reversed the order and remanded the case for a new trial. (72 Neb. 734.)

Tbe opinion is direct and specific that the surety on tbe official bond of an officer is liable for tbe penalty of $50 denounced against tbe exaction of fees in excess of those provided and limited by the statutes of this state, and on the retrial of tbe case tbe court so charged tbe jury, and refused an instruction, tendered 'by the defendant surety, that the penalty provided by statute could be recovered only from the officer guilty of exacting tbe excessive fee. The beadnote to tbe former opinion is in tbe following language: “Sureties upon an official bond are liable for a statutory penalty incurred by their principal by taking illegal fees.” The opinion cites Kane v. Union P. R. Co., 5 Neb. 105, and Phœnix Ins. Co. v. McEvony, 52 Neb. 566, as cases involving tbe question and bolding tbe surety liable. A reexamination of these cases convinces us that in neither was tbe question directly raised or decided. In Kane v. Union P. R. Co. tbe treasurer of Cheyenne county seized and levied' upon four locomotives of tbe railroad company for tbe payment of delinquent taxes due tbe county. Tbe company, after tbe seizure of its locomotives, tendered to tbe treasurer tbe full amount [724]*724of taxes due, but be refused to receive tbe same and release the .locomotives unless it paid a further amount which he claimed he was entitled to demand and receive in the nature of fees and penalties, and which the company claimed was illegal and unauthorized by law. Finally the company paid the taxes, and also the fees and penalties demanded, the latter under a Avritten protest, and then brought an action on the treasurer’s bond to recover the fees and penalties so paid. From this statement it will be seen that there was no attempt to recover from the treasurer and the sureties on his bond any statutory penalty denounced against an officer for taking illegal fees; the plaintiff in that action sought no relief except the recovery of money paid to the treasurer as feés and penalties which he demanded as a condition of the release of the property levied on, and this court held that the exaction of fees and penalties not imposed by laAV Avas a breach of the treasurer’s bond, for which the sureties were liable, but the question of the liability of the sureties for a statutory penalty, in addition to the illegal fees exacted, was not an issue in the case and not passed on by the court.

In Phœnix Ins. Co. v. McEvony, supra, the company brought ten separate actions against McEvony, the sheriff of Holt county, and the sureties on his official bond to recover certain fees which, it alleged, the sheriff had charged and taken from it for services performed by him as sheriff, and which it claimed were in excess of those permitted by statute. The penalty denounced by statute for taking illegal fees was also asked in each case. After the plaintiff had introduced its evidence and rested, the district court, on motion of the defendant, compelled the insurance company to elect on which of the two causes of action stated in its petition it would stand, that is, the court compelled the insurance company to abandon the cause of action against the sheriff for ’the recovery of the illegal fees collected or to abandon the cause of action for the statutory penalty. This court, in discussing the question, said: “This action of the court was erroneous. The learned [725]*725district court seems to have been of opinion that the two causes of action could not be united in the same petition; but the two causes of action in each of the petitions of the insurance company grew out of the same transaction and are connected with the same subject of the action. The two causes of action affected all the parties to the. suit and did not require different place's of trial (code', secs. 87, 88); and the plaintiff had the right to join those two causes of action in one petition. It is true that the two causes óf action were not separately stated and numbered as the code requires, but that could not be taken advantage of by a motion to compel the plaintiff to elect on which cause it would stand.”

The grounds upon which the defendant’s motion to compel the plaintiff to elect Avas made does not appear Avitli certainty, but from the foregoing quotation it is quite plain that the motion Avas based upon the Avell-understood rule that tAvo causes of action, one upon contract and one for a tort committed, cannot ordinarily be joined in the same petition. So far as we are able to judge from the opinion, the question of the liability of the sheriff’s sureties for the statutory penalty Avas not raised in the district court and was not a question presented to this court for its decision. The only question decided Avas that the two causes of action, conceding the liability of the sureties for the statutory penalty, might be joined in the same action.

Passing now to the liability of a surety for the statutory penalty provided by section 34 of chapter 28, supra, against the principal for exacting illegal fees, the wording of the statute is to our minds conclusive that ’the officer alone is subject to the penalty. The section is as folloAvs: “If any officer, AAdiatever, Avhose fees are hereinbefore expressed and limited, shall take greater fees than are so hereinbefore limited and expressed, for any service to be done by him in his office, or if any such officer shall charge or demand, and take any of the fees hereinbefore ascertained and limited, where the business for Avliich such fees are chargeable shall not be actually done and performed, such officer [726]*726shall forfeit and pay to the party injured fifty dollars, to be recovered as debts of the same amount are'recoverable by law.” The several cases heretofore brought to recover the penalty for talcing or exacting illegal fees have apparently proceeded against the officer alone. Graham v. Kibble, 9 Neb. 182; Cobbey v. Burks, 11 Neb. 157; Lydick v. Palmquist, 81 Neb. 300; Iler & Co. v. Gronin, 34 Neb. 424; Phœnix Ins. Co. v. Bohman, 28 Neb. 251. In the case last cited it is said: “While an officer taking illegal fees is liable to the full penalty of the law, yet the statute, being highly penal in its nature, will not be extended by construction or implication beyond the clear import of its language.” There is nothing in the language of the statute which in express words, or by implication even, gives a right of action to the party injured on the official bond of the offending party. On the contrary, the statute is that “such officer shall forfeit and pay to the party injured fifty dollars, to be recovered as debts of the same amount are recoverable by law.” In our judgment the legislature had in mind in enacting this statute a penalty to be inflicted upon the officer alone for his violation of a duty, and from the fact that in-the past the practice has been to sue the officer alone, this seems to have been the construction heretofore placed upon the statute by the profession.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
106 N.W. 977, 75 Neb. 722, 1906 Neb. LEXIS 440, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/eccles-v-walker-neb-1906.