Spivey, Sheriff v. Fidelity Deposit Co.

160 S.E. 275, 162 S.C. 143, 1931 S.C. LEXIS 173
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedSeptember 16, 1931
Docket13243
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 160 S.E. 275 (Spivey, Sheriff v. Fidelity Deposit Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Spivey, Sheriff v. Fidelity Deposit Co., 160 S.E. 275, 162 S.C. 143, 1931 S.C. LEXIS 173 (S.C. 1931).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Mr. Chief Justice Blease.

In the general election of 1928, Ben F. Spivey was elected-to the office of sheriff of Jasper County for the usual term of four years. Before entering upon the duties of his office, he executed the required official bond for the full term, upon which the Fidelity & Deposit Company of Maryland became the surety; the said bond being approved by the proper authorities, the County Commissioners of the county. As provided in Section 749, Volume 3, Code of 1922, the cost of the premium on the bond was paid by the County Commissioners out of the ordinary county funds for the years 1929 and 1930. The premium for the year 1931 has not been paid, but payment would have been made if the surety company had filed, according to its usual custom, its claim therefor with the Board of County Commissioners.

On June 12, 1931, the surety, the Fidelity & Deposit Company of Maryland, addressed and caused to be delivered, to the chairman of the Board of County Commissioners, a communication in which it said: “In accordance with the provisions of Chapter 18, Article 1, § IS of Volume 3, Code of Daws of South Carolina, 1922, this company notifies the Board of County Commissioners of its desire to be immediately relieved from its suretyship on said bond of Ben F. Spivey, Sheriff of Jasper County, South Carolina.”

*145 On June 16, 1931, the Board of County Commissioners addressed and had delivered to Mr. Spivey a notice, wherein was recited the fact that the surety on his official bond desired to be immediately relieved from its suretyship, and notified him “to file with us within thirty days from the date of this letter a bond as required by law for the Sheriff of Jasper County.”

In neither the communication from the surety to the commissioners nor in the notice from the commissioners to Spivey was given any reason for the desire of the surety to be relieved from its suretyship.

Spivey took no steps to file a new bond, as required by the notice of the county commissioners, resting, it appears, upon the legal position taken by him that the surety could not be relieved from the suretyship, and that it was not necessary for him to file the bond demanded, which legal position is hereinafter adverted to.

Within a few days thereafter, the exact date not being before us, in an action instituted by Spivey against the surety company and the Board of County Commissioners, his Honor, Circuit Judge J. Henry Johnson, of the Fourteenth Judicial Circuit, in which the County of Jasper is embraced, issued his order, which appears in the record without date, requiring the surety company and the county commissioners to show cause before him, on a date not appearing in the record, why they should not be enjoined and restrained from further proceeding to relieve the surety company of its suretyship on the official bond of Spivey, as sheriff, and from further proceeding to require Spivey to execute and file with the county commissioners a new official bond.

In the complaint of Spivey, upon which the rule to show cause was based, he alleged that on or about January 1, 1929, the defendant surety company agreed and contracted with the county commissioners to become surety on his official bond as sheriff of the county in consideration of the sum of $200.00, payable in annual premiums of $50.00 per *146 annum, the contract of suretyship, to continue for the whole period of the term of office to which Spivey had been elected; that the contract, and the bond executed in pursuance thereto, were for the specific use and benefit of Spivey; that the surety could not be relieved from its bond during the contracted time, and the county commissioners could not legally relieve the surety from its suretyship.

In its return, the surety company alleged that Spivey had breached the conditions of his bond in two respects: First, in that Spivey, the principal, had failed to pay a judgment in the sum of $200.00, recovered against him and his surety on his official bond, in May, 1931, in an action brought by one T. S. Smith in the Court of Common Pleas for Jasper County, which judgment the surety had been forced to pay; and, second, that Spivey had not made the proper settlement with the county treasurer, prior to June 12, 1931, for taxes collected by him for the year Í929, although many demands for settlement therefor had been made by the county treasurer, and the time allowed to Spivey by law for making such settlement had expired many months prior to June 12, 1931, the date the surety filed its requests with the commissioners to be relieved from the bond.

In their return to the rule to show cause, the county commissioners alleged that Spivey had breached the conditions of his bond in many particulars, asserting that he had collected on delinquent tax executions placed with him by the county treasurer several hundred dollars, which he had not turned in to the treasury, and that in numerous instances, although collecting in full the amounts due on executions, he had falsely returned the same as nulla bona; that is, that they had not been, and could not be, collected. A detailed statement of the alleged irregularities and defalcations charged against Spivey was set forth in the return. Affidavits in substantiation of the breaches of the conditions of the bond, alleged on the part of Spivey to have been committed, made by twenty-one persons, were submitted with the re *147 turn. One of the affidavits was by Mr. W. A. Berg, County Treasurer, declaring that Spivey had not made a settlement with his office for the 1929 delinquent taxes, although the treasurer had been trying for months to get such settlement. The commissioners further averred that in the very near future there would be placed with the sheriff, under the law, other tax executions for collection, amounting to the sum of approximately $30,000.00; that the bond of the sheriff was not of sufficient amount to protect the county and State because of the shortages already existing; and that a new bond should be executed for their protection.

Spivey did not in any way traverse the returns of the surety company and the commissioners, standing entirely upon the legal position that the surety could not be released from the bond for any cause whatsoever.

After a proper hearing, Judge Johnson, on July 14th, passed an order dismissing the rule to show cause and refusing the motion for a restraining order. Fie held: “The return of the Board of County Commissioners shows various irregularities by the said Sheriff in the collection of tax executions and in the disposition of the money collected on said executions. The action taken by the said Board of Commissioners to relieve the surety is well supported and warranted by the facts as submitted to me in the return and affidavits and receipts attached.”

Spivey gave notice of intention to appeal from the order of Judge Johnson, but made no application to this Court, or any of the justices, for a supersedeas order.

The matters to which we have referred in the cause before Judge Johnson are involved in the action entitled, “Ben F. Spivey, as Sheriff of Jasper County, South Carolina, Plaintiff, against Fidelity and Deposit Company, of Maryland; and John M. Langford, P. P. Johnson, J. H. Mock, G. C. Smith and C. G.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
160 S.E. 275, 162 S.C. 143, 1931 S.C. LEXIS 173, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/spivey-sheriff-v-fidelity-deposit-co-sc-1931.