Holt v. Rea

52 S.W.2d 877, 330 Mo. 1237, 1932 Mo. LEXIS 511
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedSeptember 3, 1932
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 52 S.W.2d 877 (Holt v. Rea) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Holt v. Rea, 52 S.W.2d 877, 330 Mo. 1237, 1932 Mo. LEXIS 511 (Mo. 1932).

Opinion

*1239 FRANK, J.

'Respondent Harry Rea was the collector of revenue for Dallas County from March, 1923, to March, 1927. He gave bond as such collector, conditioned as required by law, in the sum of one hundred one thousand three hundred ninety dollars, with appellants *1240 and respondent "W. C. Hawkins as surety thereon. By statute the bond of a collector when approved and recorded is a lien against the real estate of such collector until he complies with the conditions thereof. Rea made regular settlements with the county court during his term of office. These settlements, including the final settlement, were approved by orders entered of record. His final settlement w'as made and he went out of office on March 1, 1927. Thereafter on May 14, 1927, respondent Banking Company loaned Rea $4,500 secured by a deed of trust on real estate which he then owned and had owned during his term of office as collector. Thereafter it was discovered that Rea’s settlements were false and fraudulent in that he had not reported the collection of and paid to the county treasurer the sum of $25,089.80 which he had collected during the years 1925, 1926 and 1927. On June 13, 1928, the deed of trust which Rea had given respondent O’Bannon Banking Company was foreclosed and said Banking Company purchased the land at the foreclosure sale and received a trustee’s deed therefor. On the same day the sureties on Rea’s bond, having theretofore settled his shortage with the county court, brought this suit asking judgment against him for the amount they Were compelled to pay the county on his shortage, and that they be subrogated to the lien given by statute on the real estate of Rea as such collector, and for all proper and equitable relief. Rea was served by publication but did not appear. The O’Bannon Banking" Company answered claiming title to the land by virtue of the foreclosure of and sale under the deed of trust. No relief was asked against W. C. Hawkins. He was one of the sureties on Rea’s bond but refused to join as a plaintiff in the case and for that reason was made a defendant. The decree below discharged defendants Rea and Hawkins without day and vested the title to the land in defendant, O’Bannon Banking Company. Plaintiffs appealed to the Springfield Court of Appeals and that court transferred the case here on two grounds, (1) that title to real estate was involved, and (2) that the reasonable market value of the land was $8,000.

Appellants contend that they, as sureties on the bond, having settled the collector’s shortage with the county, are entitled to be subrogated to the right of the county to the statutory lien on the collector’s real estate.

The statute provides that the collector of revenue in the various counties of this State, before entering upon the duties of his office, shall give bond and security to the State, to the satisfaction of the county court, conditioned that he will faithfully and punctually collect and pay over all State, county and other revenue during his term of office. [Sec. 9885, R. S. 1929.] The statute also provides that, “Said bond, when approved and recorded, shall be a lien against *1241 tbe real estate of snob collector -until be shall have complied with the conditions thereof.” [Sec. 9889, R. S. 1929.] The bond in question was conditioned as required by law and was approved and recorded in compliance with the statute.

It is settled law that settlements made between a county collector and the county court do not have the force and effect of a judgment and are not res adjudicata. In making such settlements the county court acts as a public accountant or financial agent of the county, and settlements so made amount to no more than an accounting between principal and agent or a settlement between individuals, and may be inquired into and corrected or set aside on the ground of fraud or mistake of fact. [State ex rel. Scotland County v. Ewing, 116 Mo. 129, 136, 22 S. W. 476; State ex rel. Lawrence County v. Shipman, 125 Mo. 436, 28 S. W. 842.] The settlements not being conclusive, the collector and the sureties on his bond are liable for any shortage in his accounts resulting from fraud or mistake of fact, whether discovered before or after he makes his final settlement and goes out of office, and as between the parties, the bond remains a lien on the collector’s real estate until he complies with the conditions of the bond by paying ov'er all revenue collected by him. However, the question in this case is — what are the rights of a third party who without knowledge of any fraud or mistake of fact in the collector’s settlements, acquires real estate from him relying upon the fact that he has made his final settlement, received his full discharge and gone out of office ? Is such third party an innocent purchaser for value or does he take the land burdened with the lien of the collector’s bond?

Section 9932, Revised Statutes 192'9', makes the following provision: “Every collector of the revenue having made settlement, according to law, of county revenue by him collected or received, shall pay the amount found due into the county treasury, and the treasurer shall give him duplicate receipts therefor, one of which shall be filed in the office of the clerk of the county court, who shall grant him full quietus under the seal of the court.”

Prior to 1865 the statute provided that when a county collector made settlement with the county court and paid to the treasurer the amount found due from him, the county clerk should give him a receipt for the amount paid. Section 4, Article IV, page 1350, Revised Statutes 1855. In 1865 this statute was amended so as to give the collector full quietus instead of a receipt for the amount paid into the county treasury, as provided in the former statute. Such is the present statute. [Sec. 9932, R. S. 1929.]

In construing this.statute we must proceed upon the theory that the Legislature intended something by the amendment. It is clean *1242 that the full quietus does not operate as a discharge of the liability of the collector and the sureties on his bond. Numerous decisions of this court so hold. In State to use of Bates County v. Smith, 65 Mo. 464, we held that a settlement by a collector of the revenue with the county court, and the clerk’s quietus to him, were prima-facie evidence that he had accounted for and paid over all funds coming to his hands by virtue of his office, but did not bar an action against him and the sureties on his bond to recover funds not accounted for.

It is equally clear that under the former statute the receipt which a collector received on making- his settlement with the county court did not operate as a final discharge of him and his sureties. If the liability of the collector and his sureties would be the same under either statute, what was the purpose in amending the statute so as to provide that upon the making of his settlement, the collector should be granted full quietus under the seal of the court, instead of a receipt for the money paid over, as provided in the former statute? The words “full quietus” mean final discharge. We must presume that the Legislature used these words advisedly, and by their use intended that the “full quietus”

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Bluebook (online)
52 S.W.2d 877, 330 Mo. 1237, 1932 Mo. LEXIS 511, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/holt-v-rea-mo-1932.