Mayor of Baltimore v. Thomas

3 Balt. C. Rep. 50
CourtBaltimore City Superior Court
DecidedOctober 27, 1909
StatusPublished

This text of 3 Balt. C. Rep. 50 (Mayor of Baltimore v. Thomas) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Baltimore City Superior Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mayor of Baltimore v. Thomas, 3 Balt. C. Rep. 50 (Md. Super. Ct. 1909).

Opinion

NILES, J.—

The demurrer in this case must be overruled.

The declaration sets forth in terms the official bond of J. Sewell Thomas as City Register for the City of Baltimore, the condition of which is “that if the above bound J. Sewell Thomas shall well and faithfully execute the duties of said office in all things ap[51]*51pertaining' thereto, and shall well and truly account for, and pay over, all moneys belonging to said Mayor and City Council which may in any manner come to his hands, while holding said office, or which may be received by him by virtue of said office, as directed by the Laws of the State of Maryland and the Ordinances of the Mayor and City Council of Baltimore, then this obligation to be void; otherwise to remain in full force and virtue in law.”

It then sets out as breach “that the said J. Sewell Thomas, by virtue of his office as such City Register, in accordance with law, from time to time received and collected and had in his possession for, and on account of, the plaintiff, large sums of money, so that the said J. Sewell Thomas during all said time that he continues (continued) in office as aforesaid * * * collected and received in his hands, amongst other sums the sum of $52,794.46, which said sum of $52,794.46 it was then and there the duty of said J. Sewell Thomas, City Register (as required of him by law), to pay over and account for to the plaintiff. But the plaintiff says that the said J. Sewell Thomas, as such City Register, did not so pay over, or account for, to the plaintiff, said sum of $52,794.-46, or any part thereof, but, on the contrary, from time to time, between the said 11th day of June, 1907, and the 1st day of June, 1909, failed to account for the same, and has not since paid over, or accounted for, the same, or any part thereof, to the plaintiff, by reason of which the plaintiff says that the said J. Sewell Thomas, as such City Register, did not well and faithfully execute the duties of said office, and did not well and truly account for and pay over all moneys belonging to the Mayor and City Council, which came into his hands in any manner while holding said office, or which lie received, by virtue of said office, as directed by law, and as by such writing obligatory he had undertaken to do,” &c.

I.

It is contended by the defendant that the charge in the declaration must bo, on a fair construction thereof, limited to a charge of “failing to account and pay over money received by him in virtue of said office, as directed by law, that whether moneys were so received by him is necessarily a question of law, and that the declaration does not, therefore, charge facts, but legal conclusions; and is bad on demurrer for this reason.

This Court does not so understand the declaration.

The fact therein charged is the receipt by Thomas of the sum of money named “by virtue of his office as such City Register,” and his failure to “pay over or account for the same to the plaintiff.” The declaration then charges that this fact constituted a breach of the conditions of the bond.

This latter allegation is, of course, a conclusion of law, and is not admitted by the demurrer, but its insertion is customary, and certainly could be no more than surplusage, and could not invalidate the declaration.

The declaration was stated to be drawn upon the model of the declaration in the ease of Vansant vs. State, 96 Md., 110.

There is one very important difference between two declarations that may possibly have a bearing upon other aspects of this ease.

In the Vansant case the narr. stated that Vansant had “converted the money to his own use,” while in this narr. there is no such allegation, but in regard to the point now made by defendant and before the Court, there ax>pears to this Court to be no substantial difference.

The declaration in that case was demurred to, and demurrers were twice filed to pleas. This brought the sufficiency of the narr. in that case before Hie Court at three separate times. The lower Court sustained the narr., and its rulings were upheld by tile Court of Appeals.

On the authority of that case, therefore, this Court thinks itself bound to hold against the defendants upon this point, and even were there an absence of authority there is in this Court’s ox>inion no reason to strike down this declaration on the ground that it charges matters of law and not of fact.

II.

The real difference between the parties is that the plaintiff insists that under the bond the liability of Thomas to account for and i>ay over moneys [52]*52received by him as City Register is absolute, that for such accounting and payment he is “an insurer,” and that no excuse for failure to so account and pay can be set up by him.

The defendant on the other hand insists that, under the bond construed with reference to the statutes and the ordinances which are by agreement to be considered as set forth in the narr., the liability of Thomas for money so received is not that of an “Insurer,” but of a “Bailee,” and that, while he is bound to a high degree of diligence in order to properly account for and pay over such money, he would not be liable if a failure to account or pay over occurred without fault on his part.

The defendant further says that, if his position be correct, the declaration must allege a failure by Thomas to account and pay over such moneys, either by reason of his negligence, his conversion of the moneys, or some other fault of his; otherwise a good cause of action will not be stated.

But to this court it seems that the obligation of the bond is to “account for” and “pay over,” and if the obligor fails to “account for” and “pay over,” he is liable in the absence of a valid excuse.

This court assents to the proposition laid down in Mechen on Public Officers, Section 297 (an authority cited by counsel for defendants).

“The undertaking- of the principal and of his sureties for him, that he will faithfully perform the duties of his office, includes either expressly or impliedly, that he will pay over the public funds which come into his hands. The question therefore arises what loss of the public funds can excuse him and his sureties from this undertaking. And as, obviously, no loss can excuse them which is based upon the officers own negligence or default, the question becomes narrowed to this, “What loss occurring without his negligence or default will excuse them?”

The conclusion that the obligation of the City Register’s bond is to account for and pay over the moneys received by him by virtue of said office, seems also to be confirmed by the language of the Court of Appeals in State vs. Wilson, 107 Md. 129, in regard to a tax-c-olloctor’s bond.

If then such is the City Register's obligation, it seems to the court, both on the authorities cited and on reason, that a breach of this obligation is alleged in the narr. and — assuming this obligation to be valid — any state of facts which will excuse its breach, must be s.et up by the defendants, like any other excuse, by plea, in the nature of a plea in confession and avoidance.

If the court is correct in this view it follows that whatever construction be given to the bond, and whether the view of the plaintiff or the defendant be taken as to the character of “excuse” permitted, this demurrer must be overruled, provided the bond be not altogether void.

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Related

Vansant v. State
53 A. 711 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1902)
State Ex Rel. Kelley v. Wilson
68 A. 609 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1908)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
3 Balt. C. Rep. 50, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mayor-of-baltimore-v-thomas-mdsuperctbalt-1909.