National Surety Co. v. State Savings Bank

156 F. 21, 14 L.R.A.N.S. 155, 1907 U.S. App. LEXIS 4686
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedJune 18, 1907
DocketNo. 2,478
StatusPublished
Cited by34 cases

This text of 156 F. 21 (National Surety Co. v. State Savings Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
National Surety Co. v. State Savings Bank, 156 F. 21, 14 L.R.A.N.S. 155, 1907 U.S. App. LEXIS 4686 (8th Cir. 1907).

Opinions

ADAMS, Circuit Judge

(after stating the facts as above). The bank purchased nonnegotiable orders or drafts upon the county treasurer, payable to fictitious persons, and by them apparently assigned to it. The orders being nonnegotiable, the bank acquired no greater right to them than its assignors had. The assignors being fictitious persons, and the orders themselves without consideration, fraudulent, and void, the assignee acquired no right against the county. When it presented the orders to the treasurer for payment, and secured payment thereof, it received moneys of the county without consideration, and unquestionably thereby became liable to the county for money had and received to its use. The surety company, as surety for the auditor, whose official misconduct, through the act of his deputy, subjected it to liability (Board of Co. Com’rs v. Sullivan, 89 Minn. 68, 93 N. W. 1056), having restored to the county the amount of its loss, now claims to be sub-rogated to the county’s right of action against the bank to recover from the latter the amount paid by it to the county. Can this be done ? The bank places some reliance, in denying the claim of the surety company, upon section 5953, Gen. St. Minn. 1894, which reads as follows:

“The official bond or other security of a public officer to the state or any municipal body or corporation, whether with or without sureties, is to he construed as security to all persons severally for the official delinquencies against which it is intended to provide as well as to the state, body or corporation designated therein.”

This section is in pari materia with section 710 of the same Statutes. The latter reads as follows:

“An action may be brought against the county auditor and his sureties in the name of the state of Minnesota and for its use or for the use of any county or person injured by the misconduct in office of the auditor or by the omission of any duty required of him by law.”

These sections of the statute must be read into and treated as a part of every official bond contemplated by them. Accordingly, if the bank had been injured by reason of its purchase of the orders from Bourne, and that injury had been occasioned by Bourne’s official delinquency or [24]*24misconduct in office, it might have recovered its loss from the surety company.- If, by virtue of these statutes, the bank could have recovered from the surety company, as a matter of course the surety company cannot now recover from the bank.

We are therefore to inquire whether, if the bank had failed to secure payment of its refunding orders from the county treasurer, its loss or injury would have been so produced by the misconduct in .office of Deputy Auditor Bourne as to subject the surety of the auditor to liability for it. It is true the bank could not have lost any money, or could not have been injured, if Bourne had not in his official capacity signed the spurious refunding orders. That act, being performed in the line of his official duty, was a misconduct in office, within the meaning of the statutes referred to; but the question still remains whether it or some other cause produced the bank’s assumed injury.

The misconduct of Bourne in much of what he actually did and in what was necessarily involved, namely, in falsely representing to the bank that the orders were genuine, that the payees had paid money to the county treasurer for taxes, and were entitled under the law to an order refunding the amount so paid, that they were actual persons, instead of myths, and his further misconduct in fraudulently signing the mythical names to the assignments, in negotiating with the bank, and wrongfully securing its money, were altogether personal in their character. They were in no sense representative or official. No duty arising out of his official relation required him to make any of the representations or commit any of the crimes just alluded to. On the contrary, the nonnegotiability of the orders, and possibly the intervention and activity of Bourne, as shown by the bill, should have attracted the attention of the bank, and warned it against purchasing the orders without making diligent inquiry concerning their validity. Bourne’s personal representations and acts were well adapted to be the effective cause of the bank’s injury, and, giving to the original official misconduct its natural force and effect only, were, in our opinion, the direct moving cause of the injury, without which it could not have occurred. They did not in a mere incidental and subordinate way work out the natural and probable consequences of the original official misconduct, but were, as between the deputy and the bank, the proximate arid all-sufficient cause of the latter’s injury. An act is the proximate cause of those results only which are its natural and' probable consequences, and which ought to have been foreseen in the light of the attending circumstances. Milwaukee, etc., Railway Co. v. Kellogg, 94 U. S. 469, 474, 24 L. Ed. 256; Travelers’ Ins. Co. v. Melick, 12 C. C. A. 544, 65 Fed. 178, 184, 185, 27 L. R. A. 629; Citizens’ Gas & Electric Co. v. Nicholson (C. C. A.) 152 Fed. 389, and cases cited. Within the fair and reasonable meaning of the bond and statutes in question, Bourne’s personal, as distinguished from official, acts caused the assumed injury which the bank sustained.

But it is urged that the Supreme Court of Minnesota in Board of Com’rs v. Sullivan, supra, sustained a recovery by the county against the surety company for its loss made in paying the forged orders on the ground that Bourne’s wrongful acts constituted “misconduct in of[25]*25fice,” within the meaning of the Statutes of Minnesota, and that the same rule of law would have been applicable if the bank had sued the surety company for its assumed loss. We cannot agree to this. The orders in question were apparently lawfully drawn, lawful^ countersigned,'and genuine. The natural and probable consequence of their issue was their presentation to the treasurer, to whom they were addressed, and payment of them by him. The statutes of the state made it his duty to pay authorized orders of that kind. The surety company was liable to the county, because the presentation to the treasurer and the payment of the orders by him were the natural and probable consequence of their issue, and might have been reasonably anticipated by any prudent person. Right here is the radical and decisive difference between the position of the county and that of the bank. While the payment by the county was, in the ordinary course of business, reasonable and probable, the purchase of the orders by the bank on the assignments made in the name of myths by Bourne was not the natural or probable consequence of their issue. No one could have reasonably anticipated that a bank or any rational person would disregard the law which makes a nonnegotiable chose in action in the hands of an assignee subject to every defense existing in favor of the maker against the assignor, purchase a nonnegotiable order of the kind in question, and pay the purchase price thereof to one who was not the payee named therein, without inquiring into the genuineness of the assignment and the genuineness of its execution. Such a purchase would be out of the ordinary course of business, unnatural, improbable, incapable of anticipation, and in no legal sense the natural and probable consequence of the issue of the orders.

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Bluebook (online)
156 F. 21, 14 L.R.A.N.S. 155, 1907 U.S. App. LEXIS 4686, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/national-surety-co-v-state-savings-bank-ca8-1907.