Screwmen's Benevolent Ass'n v. Smith

7 S.W. 793, 70 Tex. 168, 1888 Tex. LEXIS 969
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 6, 1888
DocketNo. 2479
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 7 S.W. 793 (Screwmen's Benevolent Ass'n v. Smith) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Screwmen's Benevolent Ass'n v. Smith, 7 S.W. 793, 70 Tex. 168, 1888 Tex. LEXIS 969 (Tex. 1888).

Opinion

Stayton, Chief Justice.

E. A. Smith was the treasurer of the appellant association for one term, from December 28, 1883,, to January, 1885, and he executed a bond with sureties conditioned for the faithful performance of his duties during that! term. He was elected for a second term, and executed a bond: with sureties, there being only one person who was surety on; both bonds. He was removed from office July 24, 1885, and.' two suits were brought against him and his sureties, to recover moneys which came into his hands and were never paid over.

This action is on the bond executed for the last term, and the petition alleges that he converted the moneys sued for after the last bond was executed. The other action was brought on the bond first executed, and the petition in that case, which was offered in evidence by the defendants, alleges that the treasurer misappropriated a larger sum of money than is sued for in this case, and that this misappropriation occurred prior to the ■ time the bond sued on in this case was executed. A motion i was made by the plaintiff to consolidate the two actions, but it gave no reasons why this should be done, and it was overruled.

The statute provides that “whenever several suits may be pending in the same court, by the same plaintiff against the same defendant, for causes of action which may be joined, or; where several suits are pending in the same court by the same plaintiff against several defendants, which may be joined, the j court in which the same are pending may, in its discretion, order such suits to be consolidated.” (Rev. Stats., art. 1450.)

To authorize a consolidation in any case, under the statute, the causes of action must be such as, under the general rules- j applicable to the subject, may be joined. Heither the petition nor motion in this case show that the causes of action asserted in the two causes were such as might be properly joined, and, if the court was not vested with a discretion in such cases, it could not be held that it erred in overruling the motion to consolidate.

If, however, we look to the petition in the other case, it is apparent that a cause of action was therein stated which could not legally have been joined with the cause of action asserted in this. It would seem, when actions have to be brought against two sets of sureties on official or like bonds, given by a principal and different sureties, to secure the faithful performance of duty by the principal, for different terms, the one sue[172]*172ceeding the other, that one action against the principal and all the sureties ought to be permitted when the plaintiff is unable to state and prove clearly where a misappropriation of funds occurred, and it may be that legislation upon this subject ought to be had. However this may be, we are not authorized to depart from well settled rules of law to meet what may seem to be hard cases. Whether the appellant could truly allege a state of facts which would entitle it to have the two actions consolidated, we need not inquire.

It is alleged in the answer of the defendants that “the said Smith was the custodian of plaintiff’s moneys, as its treasurer, long before they signed the said bond, and that about the amount sued for was entrusted to him more than a year before these defendants executed the bond sued on, and was by him indiscriminately mingled with other moneys in bank, and lodged therein and drawn against in his (Smith’s) individual name and capacity, and used and employed by him for other uses than those of said association, and that such method of dealing with said funds and the intention of the said Smith so to deal with the same was known to plaintiff and its officers, but was unknown to these defendants, and they say that it was the duty of the plaintiff, at and before the making and delivery of the bond sued on, to communicate said facts to them, but that the plaintiff wholly failed to do so; wherefore they say that they never became bound by the obligation sued on.” In a subsequent paragraph in the answer it is alleged, in effect, that the plaintiff negligently failed to ascertain that its treasurer was misappropriating its funds before the bond sued on was executed, that this ■could have been ascertained, and that the failure to do so and to inform the defendants of that fact before they became sureties, releases them from obligation on the bond. Demurrers to these parts of the answer were overruled.

That the demurrer to the last paragraph of the answer referred to should have been sustained, is settled by the case of Bennett v. Association, 57 Texas, 73.

There is some conflict of authority as to the extent of the ■obligation of one who takes security for the faithful discharge -of duty by one who enters his employment to inform the surety of any facts within his knowledge illustrative of the unfitness of the employee, resulting from habits or delinquencies, ¿and as to the effect of the failure to give such information. The fact that security is required, of itself would seem to be a [173]*173sufficient notification to one proposing to become surety, that-the obligee is not willing to trust solely to the skill, diligence or honesty of the person of whom security is required; and it seems to us that to avoid .a bond on the ground that the surety was not informed of facts known to the obligee, it should be shown that there was a fraudulent concealment or withholding of facts material for the surety to know.

Whether a failure by an obligee to disclose facts known te him may be deemed fraudulent, will depend largely upon the character of the fact concealed; and, cases may arise in which it would be the duty of an obligee to disclose to a surety facts known to him, notwithstanding the surety may make no inquiry. If, in the course of the employment of the obligee, the person of whom security is asked has been guilty of acts showing moral delinquency and utter unfitness for trust, some of the cases held, and it seems to us properly, that in such case information should be given to the surety whether asked for or not. If, however, the facts not disclosed be not of this character, but such as consist with honesty, and may only tend to-show that the person is negligent, dilatory, or unskillful, it may not be the duty of the person taking bond unasked to give information to the surety of such known facts. Such facts are ordinarily easily ascertained, for there is not that effort to conceal them which ordinarily exists when the unfitness results from a moral delinquency which all men, not entirely destitute of shame, endeavor to conceal.

The person of whom security is required would ordinarily, if asked, give information in the one case, while in the other he would most studiously conceal it, and his employer, demanding security, and himself might be the only persons to whom his real character was known. The presumption is, that a man is honest, and upon this, in the absence of something to put him on inquiry, sureties will ordinarily rely. The reputation of the person may be fair, but if his employer, who demands of him security, before confiding to him a trust, the faithful discharge of which requires strict integrity, knows that he is dishonest, he ought to disclose that fact to the surety before he takes his .obligation.

These rules we understand to be sanctioned by well considered cases. (Bank v. Brownell, 9 Rhode Island, 169; Ins. Co. v. Holman, 55 Iowa, 571; Railroad Co. v. Gow, 59 Georgia, 694; [174]*174Bostwick v. Voorhis, 91 New York, 357; Roper v. Trustees, 91 Illinois, 519; Ins. Co. v. Mabbett, 18 Wisconsin, 698.)

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Bluebook (online)
7 S.W. 793, 70 Tex. 168, 1888 Tex. LEXIS 969, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/screwmens-benevolent-assn-v-smith-tex-1888.