Floyd County v. Ramsay

230 N.W. 404, 210 Iowa 1161
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedApril 14, 1930
DocketNo. 40260.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 230 N.W. 404 (Floyd County v. Ramsay) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Floyd County v. Ramsay, 230 N.W. 404, 210 Iowa 1161 (iowa 1930).

Opinion

Stevens, J.

I. Prior to January 23, 1923, the Farmers Trust & Savings Bank of Marble Rock, Iowa, was designated by the defendant Robert Ramsay, county treasurer, as a depositary of public funds, with the approval of the board of supervisors of Floyd County. On the above date, a bond was executed, in the penal sum of $30,000, to the said Floyd County and Ramsay, as county treasurer, and was signed by the defendants W. C. Smith, L. W. Inman, and R. E. Lynn. Sums were, from time to time, deposited in the said bank by the county treasurer.

On or about May 7, 1924, W. C. Smith notified the county treasurer that he desired to withdraw from the bond and to be relieved from all further liability as surety thereon. Thereupon, the county treasurer demanded of the bank a new bond, and notified its officers that no further deposits would be made until such new bond, in the penal sum of $20,000, was furnished,' with suitable sureties. The occasion for the desired withdrawal of Smith as surety from the .bond was that he had retired from-the bank, both as a stockholder and an officer, and had been succeeded by the appellants H. A. and J. F. Lynn, brother and father, respectively, of R. E. Lynn. It is claimed by Smith that it was part of the arrangement and agreement made with R. E. Lynn, at the time he retired from the bank, that Smith was to be released from all further liability on the bond. On September 20, 1924, a new bond in the penal sum of $20,000, signed by L. W. Inman, H. A. Lynn, J. F. Lynn, and R. E. Lynn, was filed in the office of the county auditor. This bond was promptly accepted and approved by the county treasurer. It was not, however, affirmatively approved by the board of supervisors. We will refer again a little later to the status of this bond.

The bank becoming insolvent, its affairs were taken in charge by the superintendent of banking, as receiver. At the time the bank closed, it was indebted for public revenues to the *1163 county treasurer and Floyd County in the sum of $14,637.29. As originally commenced, the county, in this action, sought recovery only against the sureties on the old, or $30,000, bond. Indeed, no recovery was sought on the $20,000 bond until after the cause had been fully tried and submitted to the court and was being held under advisement, pending final decision. W. C. Smith, in due time, filed answer and cross-petition to the petition, alleging the sale of his stock in the bank and his retirement therefrom as an officer; that, at the time of his retirement, on or about April 19, 1924, it was specifically understood and agreed with R. E. Lynn that he should be released from liability on the bond signed by him; and that a new bond, in the penal sum of $20,000, had already been filed as a substitute bond. He denied liability to the county in any amount. A copy of the new $20,000 bond was attached to the cross-petition.

The Lynns answered the cross-petition, in substance denying all of the allegations thereof upon which cross-petitioner claimed to have been released from liability on the bond. After the cause had been fully submitted, and was being held by the court, pending final decision, Floyd County, without specific leave of court, filed a petition in intervention, setting up a cause of action against the sureties on the new, or $20,000, bond. This was the first demand made by the county upon this instrument. The petition alleged the execution and acceptance of the bond; that the total amount, $12,656.45, was deposited in reliance thereon; and that, but for the execution of such bond, no funds would have been so deposited. Intervener further alleged that the sureties on this bond, who had already been made parties to the action by the cross-petitioner, were, by reason of the facts stated above, fully estopped from denying liability thereon. The court found that "W. C. Smith had legally withdrawn as surety on the bond, but that he was liable for the balance due from the bank at the time of his withdrawal, in the sum of $1,246.16, for which judgment was entered against him. It was stated by counsel in oral argument that this part of the judgment has been paid. Judgment was rendered against R. E. Lynn and L. W. Inman, who were sureties on both bonds, and H. A. and J. F. Lynn, sureties only on the new, or $20,000, bond, in the sum of $11,845.36, the balance due on deposit when the bank closed.

*1164 The main contention of appellants is, as already stated, that the $20,000 bond was never accepted or approved by the board of supervisors. This presents the only troublesome question in the case. As stated, the county treasurer approved the bond, and sent it to the board of supervisors for final approval. When the board met, the bond was discussed, but was neither affirmatively approved nor rejected. The chairman of the board started to write his signature thereon, approving the instrument, but, after some further discussion and consideration, erased it. Two questions appear to have come up during the consideration of the'bond by the board. H. A. and J. F. Lynn were nonresidents of Floyd County, and the board was not advised as to their financial responsibility. The board was also uncertain as to what effect the approval of the new bond might have upon the old or original bond. From this point the matter was permitted to drag along without further action of any kind by the board. So far as any question of fact was involved in the case, the finding of the trial court is conclusive thereon. The court, it may be assumed, declined to find that the new bond was, in fact, rejected by the board, as claimed by appellants. A fair interpretation of the evidence at this point shows substantially as we. have stated. It will be remembered that the appellee bank was, prior to and at the time of the execution of the new bond, a duly accepted and authorized depositary of the county’s funds. It seems to us that the question at this point is: Was the bond a nullity because not technically approved by the board of supervisors ?

The record shows without controversy that the county treasurer informed the bank that no further taxes could be received by it, and that no further deposits would be made until the new bond was executed. It is equally conclusive that the larger amount, for which judgment was entered, which represented the balance of the county’s deposits in the bank made by the treasurer after the new bond was executed, was deposited in sole reliance thereon. This fact was as well known to the officers of the bank as to the treasurer, who had consistently refused to deposit in the bank or permit it to receive the payment of taxes from taxpayers until the new bond was given.. Both Inman and R. E. Lynn were liable on the old bond, to the same extent at least as Smith. It was not necessary for the trial *1165 court, nor is it necessary for this court, in the decision of the question under discussion, to hold that the new" bond was a substitute for the old one. The legal liability, in our judgment, is the same, under the facts stated. If it were intended by the parties that the new bond was not to be treated as a substitute, the liability of the old sureties would be the same. We shall, therefore, dispose of the ease without reference to the question as to whether the bond is a substitute or an additional bond.

It is urgently contended by appellants that the bond is a nullity because not accepted and approved by the board of supervisors.

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230 N.W. 404, 210 Iowa 1161, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/floyd-county-v-ramsay-iowa-1930.