National Surety Corp. v. Cherokee County Bank

57 F. Supp. 370, 1944 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1951
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Alabama
DecidedSeptember 18, 1944
DocketCiv. A. No. 467
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 57 F. Supp. 370 (National Surety Corp. v. Cherokee County Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
National Surety Corp. v. Cherokee County Bank, 57 F. Supp. 370, 1944 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1951 (N.D. Ala. 1944).

Opinion

MULLINS, District Judge.

This matter is submitted upon the defendant’s motion for a summary judgment.

The facts which plaintiff alleges to support its right to maintain this action are set out in the complaint and may be summarized as follows:

Plaintiff .was surety on the official bond of Joe S. Daniel as Tax Collector of Cherokee County, Alabama, for the term beginning October 1, 1939, and ending September 30, 1943; the penalty of such bond being $15,000. In May, 1943, the Attorney General of Alabama, acting for the State, Cherokee County, the Board of Education of such county and the Town of Centre, demanded of plaintiff and plaintiff paid to the Attorney General the full penalty of the bond, “in full and complete-payment and settlement of all its liability under said bond.” A condition of such payment, expressed in a so-called “agreement and receipt” executed by the Attorney General, was that the funds here-sued for (which it is-alleged the Tax Collector at one time or another during his term of office had had on deposit with defendant) “were paid through and by said payment, and that plaintiff was entitled to all subrogation rights on account of and -in any way respecting” such funds. Each of the alleged public bodies had received its legal share of the $15,000 paid by plaintiff.

Two specific claims or transactions are set out in the complaint. As to the first claim of $5485.28, it is averred that the tax collector, Joe S. Daniel, withdrew $5950 from his official account in defendant bank and deposited it in his official account in his other official depository, Farmers & Merchants Bank, Centre, Alabama. It is then averred, in effect, that the said' tax collector, with the knowledge of the defendant, used a portion of these official' funds to pay the defendant the sum of $5485.28 which was due it on the personal indebtedness of the said Joe S. Daniel, and certain of his friends.

As the basis of the second claim, it is, averred that the said Joe S. Daniel deposited the sum of $2075.43 in the defendant bank to the credit of his mother, Mrs. N. C. Daniel; that said deposit was comprised of a large number of checks which the said Joe S. Daniel had received in his capacity of tax collector of said county, and all of said checks represented taxes collected by him in such capacity.. The plaintiff further avers that the defendant bank knew that all of the funds represented by such deposit were in the-custody of the said Daniel in his capacity as tax collector, but nevertheless received and credited said deposit to the account of his mother.

The complaint is silent as to the total, amount of the defalcation of the tax collector, but the certified report of the Examiner of Accounts of the State of Ala[372]*372bama filed in support of this motion for summary judgment, discloses that the total amount of such defalcation was $19,026.79, or $4,026.79 in excess of the penalty of the bond. The answer filed by plaintiff in the interpleader suit filed by defendant in' the Circuit Court of Cherokee County, in Equity, against plaintiff and others, a duly certified copy of which is attached to the motion, admits that the total amount of such tax collector’s defalcation was $19,-026.79 and that after the payment of $15,000 made by plaintiff there remained unpaid $4,026.79. The certified copy of the complaint filed in the Circuit Court of Cherokee County, in Equity, in the case of State of Alabama for the use of itself and its agencies against Joe S. Daniel, discloses also that the State seeks judgment for such unpaid balance of $4,026.79.

Plaintiff avers that it has made demand' upon the defendant for payment of the amounts, sued for, but that payment has been refused.

The plaintiff relies for recovery on the doctrine of equitable subrogation. In oral argument the plaintiff stated that it did not rely on conventional subrogation by virtue of the agreement and receipt executed by the Attorney General of the State of Alabama at the time the plaintiff paid the amount of its bond to the State. The substance of this agreement and receipt is set out in the complaint. It appears that there was no consideration for the same, as the plaintiff only paid the face amount of its bond — the amount that it was obligated to pay under its" contract as surety. Furthermore, an attempted assignment of part of the securities of the State and its agencies, their claim not having been fully satisfied, would constitute an unauthorized remission of an obligation or liability due the State and its subdivisions. Constitution of Alabama 1901, Section 100.

It is well settled in Alabama that the right of equitable subrogation does not arise until the debt due the creditor has been satisfied in full. Atherton v. Tesch, 202 Ala. 448, 80 So. 832; Pickens County v. Johnson, 227 Ala. 190, 149 So. 252; Cross v. Bank of Ensley et al., 205 Ala. 274, 87 So. 843; Corinth State Bank v. First National Bank of Florence, 217 Ala. 632, 117 So. 216; Bradley v. Bentley, 231 Ala. 28, 163 So. 351. “* * * Subrogation cannot be decreed, in any case, unless the debt — the whole debt — has been paid.” Pickens County v. Johnson, supra [227 Ala. 190, 149 So. 256],

“The reason for the rule is that, so long-as the party, whose rights are claimed for use in protecting the party who would invoke the doctrine, remains unsatisfied, though in part only, there will be no interference with his rights or securities which might, even by bare possibility, prejudice, or embarrass him in the collection of his claim.” Corinth State Bank v. First National Bank of Florence, supra [217 Ala. 632, 117 So. 218], (Emphasis supplied.)

This doctrine does not differ from the rule enunciated by the federal courts.

“A surety who has undertaken to pay the creditors of the principal, though not beyond a stated limit, may not share in the assets of the principal by reason of such payment until the debts thus partially protected have been satisfied in full. This is the rule where the right to a dividend has its basis in the principle of equitable subrogation. ‘A surety liable only for part of the debt does not become subrogated to collateral or to remedies available to the creditor unless he pays the whole debt or it is otherwise satisfied.’ United States v. National Surety Co., 254 U.S. 73, 76, 41 S.Ct. 29, 30, 65 L.Ed. 143.” (Emphasis supplied.) American Surety Co. v. Westinghouse Electric Mfg. Co., 296 U.S. 133, 137, 56 S.Ct. 9, 11, 80 L.Ed. 105.

Of course it is not necessary for the party seeking subrogation to pay the entire debt. The rule is satisfied if the obligation due the creditor is paid in full, although part of the debt may have been paid by the principal debtor, or some other person. Shaddix v. National Surety Co., 221 Ala. 268, 128 So. 220; Bradley v. Bentley, supra.

It affirmatively appears from the State audit and the other exhibits submitted that Daniel, the tax collector, was due the State of Alabama and its governmental subdivisions, a total of $19,026.79. The plaintiff paid $15,000, the full amount of its bond, thus leaving a balance due to the State of Alabama and its subdivisions of' $4,026.79. Under the rule stated to the effect that the creditor must be satisfied in full, it is my opinion that the plaintiff cannot maintain this action. The cause of action sued upon is still held by the State and its subdivisions.

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57 F. Supp. 370, 1944 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1951, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/national-surety-corp-v-cherokee-county-bank-alnd-1944.