Looney v. Hughes

30 Barb. 605, 1858 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 176
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 8, 1858
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 30 Barb. 605 (Looney v. Hughes) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Looney v. Hughes, 30 Barb. 605, 1858 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 176 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1858).

Opinion

Davis, J.

The bond executed by the collector Jewell and the defendants, is in conformity to the requirements of the statute. (1 R. S. 346, § 19.) Its condition is, that Jewell shall well and faithfully execute his duties as such collector. These “ duties ” relate solely to the public, and not to the manner of executing his office in those respects in which it relates to or affects the rights or property of individuals. They are defined and declared by statute with great care and exactitude. “Every collector shall within one week after the time mentioned in his warrant for paying the moneys directed to be [608]*608paid to the town officers of his town and to the county treasurer, pay to such town officers and county treasurer the sums required in such warrant to be paid to them respectively, first retaining the compensation to which he may be legally entitled.” (lid. 398, § 6.)

The statute directs, that the warrant “shall require all payments therein specified to be made by such collector on or before the first day of February then next ensuing;” (1 id. 396, § 37;) and such was the requirement of the warrant in this case. The duty to pay to the several officers named in his warrant the sums required to be paid to them respectively, within one week after the first day of February, is therefore the duty which the collector and his sureties by their bond undertake shall be performed. So' far as relates to taxes, which “ the collector shall not be able to collect,” the statute provides a mode and the terms, upon compliance with which he may be “ credited by the county treasurer with the amount thereof.” (1 id. 399, § 10.) But failing to secure this credit, the liability of the collector and his sureties upon their bond is at once fixed and certain by his default.

This is the view of the statute and of the liabilities imposed on the collector and his sureties, taken by the court in Muzzy v. Shattuck, (1 Denio, 233.) “I cannot assent,” says Mr. Justice Jewett in that case, “to the proposition, that the liability of the collector is limited by the common law rule applicable to the ordinary case of misfeasance or neglect in the discharge of the duties of office by a public officer.

The provisions of the statute seem to me to recognize the collector of taxes in the light of a debtor for the amount of the taxes directed to be collected, and to provide the manner in which that obligation is to be discharged.” And again: “ The statute imposes a definite liability on the collector and his sureties for the omission to collect and pay, and whether that omission is the result of misfeasance or neglect, unavoidable accident or felony committed by another, I do not think it furnishes any defense to the action.” Onerous as this obli[609]*609gation on the part of the collector and his sureties may he, the legislature have thought that the exigencies of the case required it. The statute has rendered the duty thus simple and severe, and the defendants have obligated themselves by their bond that Jewell should execute that duty. On his failure to do so the condition of the bond was broken, and the liability of the obligors at once attached.

For the purpose of enforcing that liability as speedily as practicable, the legislature has provided, as I think, for the public benefit, a summary mode of proceeding against the collector. By section 13 of the statute above cited, (1 R. S. 400, § 13,) it is enacted that where the collector neglects or refuses to pay or account for the taxes as unpaid, as required by the preceding provisions,- “the county treasurer shall, within twenty days after the time when such payments ought to have been made, issue a warrant under his hand and seal, directed to the sheriff of the county, commanding him to levy such sum as shall remain unpaid and unaccounted for by such collector, of the goods, chattels, lands and tenements of such collector, and to pay the same to the county treasurer, and return such warrant within forty days after the date thereof, which warrant the county treasurer shall immediately deliver to the sheriff of the county, but no such warrant shall be issued by- the county treasurer for the collection of moneys payable to the town officers without proof, by the oath of such town officers, of the refusal or neglect of the collector to pay the same or account therefor as above provided.”

The 14th section prescribes the duties of the sheriff and county treasurer upon the collection of the moneys, or some part thereof, under the warrant. The 15th section prescribes the duty of the sheriff as respects the return to be made to the warrant where the whole, or but part, and where nothing is collected; and enacts also that where none or but part is collected, “the county treasurer shall forthwith give notice to the supervisor of the town or ward of the amount due from such collector.” And the 16th section provides, that “the [610]*610supervisor shall forwith cause the bond of such collector to be put in suit, and shall be entitled to recover thereon the sum due from such collector with costs of suit, and the moneys recovered shall be applied and paid by the supervisor in the saíne manner in which it was the duty of the collector to have applied and paid the same.”

In the case before us the warrant was issued by the county treasurer, but not till after the expiration of more than twenty days after the time when the payment ought to have been made by the collector. It was returned by the sheriff within forty days from its date, wholly uncollected.

The first and principal point on the part of the defendants is, that the issuing of the warrant and its return in strict accordance with the provisions of the statute, were conditions precedent to the right to maintain the action against the sureties on the bond ; or in other words, that the sureties’ obligation, in connection with the provisions of the statute, is a guaranty of collection in case a particular course is pursued.

The language of the bond, it is to be remembered, is, that Jewell “shall well and faithfully execute his duties as such collector.” We have already seen what are the duties of the collector, upon the failure to perform which the breach occurs. Now it is only upon this breach, and after it has occurred, that the treasurer can issue any warrant at all: So the argument of the defendants must go the length of establishing the gross anomaly that the obligations of the principal and his sureties on this bond are distinct and different; that of the former, that he will collect and pay over or account for the taxes within one week after the first day of February; of the latter, that the sum he fails so to pay or account for shall be collectible of him, provided a warrant is issued against him within twenty days after his default, in the form prescribed by the statute, and is executed or returned by the sheriff within forty days from its date, in the manner also prescribed. It is impossible to interpolate the provisions of the statute in regard to the issuing of the warrant and its return, into the [611]*611bond, as conditions precedent, without wholly changing its scope and character.

It is now, by its terms, an obligation for the performance of specific duties by the collector:

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
30 Barb. 605, 1858 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 176, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/looney-v-hughes-nysupct-1858.