Paxton v. State

81 N.W. 383, 59 Neb. 460, 1899 Neb. LEXIS 404
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 19, 1899
DocketNo. 10,977
StatusPublished
Cited by35 cases

This text of 81 N.W. 383 (Paxton v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Paxton v. State, 81 N.W. 383, 59 Neb. 460, 1899 Neb. LEXIS 404 (Neb. 1899).

Opinions

Sullivan, J.

At the general election in 1894 Joseph S. Bartley was elected to the office of state treasurer, as his own successor. On January 3, 1895, he took the oath required by .1 aw, and tendered his official bond to the governor for approval. The sureties whose names then appeared upon the obligation were: Nathan S. Harwood, F. M. Cook, A. B. Clark, John H. Ames, Charles A. Hanna, Mary Fitzgerald, O. C. McNish and E. E. Brown. The governor did not approve the bond on the day it was presented, but returned it to Bartley, who promised to strengthen it by procuring additional sureties. • On January 9, 1895, the bond was again presented for approval with the names of Thomas Swobe, Cadet Taylor and W. A. Paxton added to the names of the original obligors. It was thereupon approved, and on the same day filed for record and recorded in.the office of the secretary of state. Bartley, at the end of his second term, was found to be a defaulter, and this action was instituted in behalf of the state to recover of the defendants, as his sureties, the amount of the defalcation. The cause was tried to a jury in the district court of Douglas county, and resulted in a verdict and judgment against all the defendants except Mary Fitzgerald, who succeeded in establishing the defense of incapacity to contract at the time [468]*468her signature was obtained. The verdict against the sureties, who are here complaining, was rendered in obedience to a peremptory instruction from the trial court; and it becomes, therefore, our duty, in examining the questions presented for decision, to assume the existence of every material fact which the evidence for the defendants establishes or tends to prove.

The original sureties contend that .they are not bound, because the bond was not accepted and approved on or before January 3, which was the first Thursday after the first Tuesday in that month. Brown further insists that the additional sureties signed without his consent, and that he thereby became released from his obligation. Paxton, Swobe and Taylor claim that the bond was already effective when their signatures were obtained, and that their undertaking is void for want of a consideration to support it. We will consider these defenses together. The petition alleges that the bond was delivered to the governor on January 3, and on that day filed for record in the office of the secretary of state. It is also alleged that the bond was afterwards returned to Bartley to obtain the signatures of additional sureties, and that on January 9 it was again handed to the governor, who then approved it and filed it with the secretary of state. These averments of the petition are traversed, and, after a careful examination of the record, we quite agree with the statements of counsel for the defendants, that the evidence conclusively shows that the bond was not filed in the office of the secretary of state until January 9. Prior to that date no contract relations existed between the state and any of the defendants herein growing out of the signing of the bond in suit. A bond, like a deed, is without validity until it has been delivered. Without delivery it is void. See United States Wind Engine & Pump Co. v. Drexel, 53 Nebr., 771; Duer v. James, 42 Md., 492; Donnelly v. Rafferty, 172 Pa. St., 587; Fay v. Richardson, 7 Pick. [Mass.], 91. As we understand the law, the governor was not the agent of the state to [469]*469accept tlie treasurer’s bond. His duty was to approve it merely. He was not authorized to accept it on behalf of the state, and thereby give it vitality as a contract. By section 5 of chapter 10, Compiled Statutes, 1899, it is provided that all official bonds of officers chosen at a general election shall be filed in the proper office on or befox*e the first Thursday after the first Tuesday in January next succeeding the election. Section 6 of the same act declares that the official bonds of all state and dis- ’ trict officers, except the governor, shall be approved by the governor, and be filed and recorded in the office of the secretary of state. The governor’s bond must be approved by the chief justice of the supx’eme court. Section 15 declares the consequence of a non-compliance with the requirements of the act. It is as follows: “If any person elected or appointed to any office shall neglect to have his official bond executed and approved as provided by law, axxd filed for record within the time limited by this act, his office shall thereupoxx ipso facto become vacant, and such vacancy shall thereupon ixnmediately be filled by election or appointment as the law may direct in other cases of vacancy in the saxne office.” It seems entirely clear from the statutory provisioxxs quoted and referred, to that the official bond of the state treasurer does xxot become a binding obligation before it has been filed with the secretary of state. Section 15, in plain terms, declares that a public office shall become vacant if the person chosen to fill it neglects to have his official bond filed in the proper office within the proper time. This certainly implies that the bond shall be returned, after its approval, to the person px*esenting it, so that he may do the further act which is, under the law, indispensable to the completion of his title to the office. His right to the possession of the bond after its approval necessarily includes the right to file it or not, as he may think best, and precludes, of course, the idea of a prior delivery. An instrument is not delivered until it has passed beyond the dominion of the maker, and is [470]*470no longer capable of being recalled. If it be still under his control, and subject to his authority, it is not a binding contract. See Duer v. James, supra; Fisher v. Hall, 41 N. Y., 416; Younge v. Guilbeau, 3 Wall. [U. S.], 636. It was competent for the executive, under the provisions of chapter 10, supra, to approve the treasurer’s bond, but it was not within his power to vitalize it by acceptance; that function belonged exclusively to the secretary of state. “The law,” as was said in Holt County v. Scott, 53 Nebr., 176, “contemplates that the officer will have the bond approved, afterward filed and recorded. If he secured its approval, and did not file or deliver it, it would be no more binding because of the approval than it would without it. The approval does not work the acceptance of the bond.”

Having reached the conclusion that Mr. Bartley’s bond was still in his hands and subject to his control on January 9, we will inquire whether he had, on that day, authority to deal with it so as to make it a binding contract between the sureties and the state. It is, we believe, a doctrine of universal recognition that the principal in an official bond has an implied agency to deliver it as the contract of his sureties. They intrust it to him for that purpose. See Pequawkett Bridge v. Mathes, 8 N. H., 139; Stephens v. Crawford, 1 Ga., 574; King County v. Ferry, 19 L. R. A. [Wash.], 500. The obligation in suit was given by all the sureties to Bartley, to be by him presented for approval and filed in the office of the secretary of state. There is nothing in the record to indicate that any of the sureties signed conditionally, or that there was any actual limitation upon Bartley’s implied authority to use the bond in furtherance of the purpose for which it was signed. Possession of the bond on January 9 carried with it, prima facie, the right to have it approved and delivered. See Sampson v. Barnard, 98 Mass., 359; State v. Rhoades, 6 Nev., 352.

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Bluebook (online)
81 N.W. 383, 59 Neb. 460, 1899 Neb. LEXIS 404, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/paxton-v-state-neb-1899.