People v. Hart

117 N.E. 390, 280 Ill. 345
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 23, 1917
DocketNo. 11010
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 117 N.E. 390 (People v. Hart) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People v. Hart, 117 N.E. 390, 280 Ill. 345 (Ill. 1917).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Duncan

delivered the opinion of the court:

Appellee sued Patrick H. Hart as principal, and appellant, the Chicago Bonding and Surety Company, as surety, in an action of debt upon an official bond given to appellee by Hart as secretary of the bureau of labor statistics. The declaration charges that in said bond it was provided that if said Patrick H. Hart should faithfully perform his duties as such secretary and should faithfully account for and pay over to the parties entitled thereto all moneys that should come into his hands by virtue of said office, and should account and turn over to his successor in office all properties, moneys, books and papers that should come into his hands by virtue of said office, then the said writing obligatory was to be void, otherwise to remain in full force and effect. The breach of the bond assigned is that after the appointment of Hart, and during the time he was such secretary, prior to the said 20th day of April, 1914, to-wit, between said date and December 31, 1913, divers sums of money due appellee as fees and taxes for licenses issued to divers persons, firms and companies for the privilege of conducting and carrying on in this State the business of private employment agencies, to-wit, $4375 in money, came to the hands of said Hart as such secretary, all of which sums it was his duty, as such secretary, to collect and account for and pay over to the State Treasurer as the money of appellee; that he failed to regard and perform that duty, as such secretary, during or since that time and converted and disposed of said sums to his own use, and has neglected and refused on request, and still refuses, to pay over said sum, or any part thereof, to appellee or its treasurer. A copy of the bond and a bill of particulars were attached to and filed with the declaration, and Hart was defaulted.

Appellant filed its plea of non est factum without verification, and therewith gave notice of five special defenses, three of which, upon motion of appellee, were stricken from the case. The other two, upon which the cause proceeded to trial, are, in substance, (x) appellant denies that appellee has suffered damage and loss in any amount, as alleged by it, and insists on strict proof of the various amounts it is alleged that Hart, as such secretary, received and failed to account for and pay over to appellee’s treasurer; (3) that the duties of Hart, as such secretary, are fixed by the statute, and nowhere in the said statute is it provided that Hart, as such secretary, shall receive or collect any of said sums alleged to have come into his hands, and that there was no breach of any official duty of Hart for which appellant is liable as his surety.

A jury was waived, and on the trial of the cause the bond was produced and introduced in evidence and the evidence was heard on the special matters in issue. The court found against appellant, and found the debt to be $10,000 and the damages of appellee $4375. Judgment was rendered accordingly, and this appeal followed.

The plea of non est factum was apparently filed to permit the giving of notice of the special defenses aforesaid, and no question arises under that plea.

The evidence establishes the fact that Patrick H. Hart was appointed secretary of the bureau of labor statistics in 1913 and gave said bond, with appellant as surety, in the sum of $10,000, which was duly approved by the Governor. He kept at the Sangamon Loan and Trust Company’s bank, in Springfield, an official account up to the close of December, 1913, when he closed up said official account and made no more deposits at said bank or at any other bank in his name, as such official. That account was closed by a check signed by Hart, payable to William Ryan, Jr., State Treasurer, for $3716.34, the same being moneys paid to him for licenses of private employment agencies and interest thereon. Thereafter Hart continued in said office and collected from Richard J. Knight, chief inspector of private agencies, at various times up to March 28 or 29, 1914, fees for licenses of private employment agencies amounting in all to the sum of $4375. Those moneys were received by Hart in his official capacity and were sent to1 him by Knight, to be retained in his official capacity, as shown by the positive testimony of Knight, by the letters of Knight to Hart in which he made the remittances, and by the letters of Hart in which he acknowledged the receipt of the remittances. All these last sums received from Knight by Hart were deposited by him in the Ridgley National Bank, at Springfield, in a private account in his name, and were never paid over to the State Treasurer by Hart or to anyone authorized to receive' them, as shown by the testimony of Luke D. McCoy, who was appointed as successor to Hart as secretary of the bureau of labor statistics in 1914, and who was acting secretary from about April 1, 1914, to September 1, 1914, after Hart had abandoned and left the office, about March 30, 1914. McCoy’s evidence was corroborated by several other witnesses and exhibits in evidence.

It is argued by appellant’s counsel that the evidence fails to show that Hart received the first five items or sums named in the bill of particulars, amounting to $250, from Knight after December 31, 1913, the day he made settlement with State Treasurer Ryan, as Knight remitted said sum to Hart at Springfield in a letter written by Knight at Chicago on December 30, 1913, and that therefore the evidence is not clear that Hart had not paid this sum to the State Treasurer in said settlement. The evidence as to these items clearly shows that the money was deposited in the Ridgley National Bank in Hart’s individual account and that no money in that account was paid to or turned over to said treasurer. The appellant admitted that all the items composing the" $4375 of license moneys received by Hart were deposited by him in the Ridgley National Bank. There still remains a balance due Hart on that account by the Ridgley National Bank of $391.01, the bank having paid all of said moneys to Hart’s credit, except said balance, to various parties on private checks of Hart. The testimony of McCoy, Hart’s successor, is, in substance, that he checked the account of Hart after his disappearance from the office and found him short to the amount of $4375,— i. e., that he had collected that amount for license fees, as aforesaid, which had not been paid over or accounted for by him. His evidence, with the other evidence in the case, was sufficient to warrant the judgment.of the court, as appellant’s evidence in no way rebutted the case made by appellee.

Appellant’s contention that as surety it is not liable to appelleé because the license moneys paid to Hart by Knight constituted no fund receivable by Hart by virtue of his office is not tenable. The law relating to the bureau of labor statistics was revised by the act- approved June 10, 1909. (Laws of 1909, p. 199.) That act made it the duty of the Governor of this State, with the advice of the senate, to appoint a board of commissioners of labor, consisting of five members, who shall hold their office for two years or until their successors are appointed, and who shall organize by electing a secretary and a president, the secretary not to be a member of their body or to have a voice in the deliberations of the board, and shall hold his office for two years'.

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Bluebook (online)
117 N.E. 390, 280 Ill. 345, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-hart-ill-1917.