State Ex Rel. Cook v. Doss

134 S.E. 749, 102 W. Va. 162, 1926 W. Va. LEXIS 259
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 21, 1926
DocketNo. C. C. 382.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 134 S.E. 749 (State Ex Rel. Cook v. Doss) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Ex Rel. Cook v. Doss, 134 S.E. 749, 102 W. Va. 162, 1926 W. Va. LEXIS 259 (W. Va. 1926).

Opinion

Miller, Judge :

In this action on the official bond of S. E. May, now deceased, against the sureties on his bond, the trial court sustained defendants’ demurrer to the declaration and,-upon its own motion, certified to this court the questions arising on said demurrer.

The declaration, in substance, alleges that the said S. E. May was regularly appointed a constable for Crook District *163 in Boone County by the county court of said county, to fill a vacancy in said office, and thereupon appeared before said court, took the oath of office, and entered into a bond in the penalty of $3,500.00, conditioned that he would truly and faithfully perform all the duties required by law as such constable, and account for and pay over as required by law, all .moneys which might come into his hands; that after taking such oath and executing said bond, the said May entered upon the duties of his office and continued to act as such constable until the date of his death; and that while acting as such officer, said May carried about his person a revolver or pistol, by the unlawful and careless use of which he shot and killed plaintiff’s intestate; by reason of which the plaintiff is entitled to recover from the defendants the amount named in the bond sued on.

The statute, section 7 of chapter 148, Barnes’ Code 1923, in force at the time the act complained of in the declaration was committed, made it a misdemeanor for the first offense, and a felony for the second offense, for any person, without a state license therefor, to carry about his person any revolver or other pistol, and provided that any person licensed to carry any of the weapons mentioned in the section, should file with the clerk of the circuit court a bond in the penalty of $3,500.00, with good security, conditioned that he would not carry such weapons except in accordance with his application and as authorized by the circuit court, and that he would pay all costs and damages accruing to any one by the accidental discharge or improper, negligent or illegal discharge or use thereof. That statute further provided, “that nothing herein contained shall be so construed as to* prohibit regularly elected sheriffs, their regularly appointed deputies, who collect taxes in each county, and all regularly elected constables in their respective counties and districts, .and all regularly appointed police officers of their respective cities, towns and villages, from carrying such weapons as they are now authorized by law to carry, who shall have given bond in the penalty of not less than thirty-five hundred dollars, conditioned for the faithful performance of their respective duties, which *164 said officers shall be liable upon their said official bond, for the damages done by the unlawful or careless use of any such weapon, whether such bond is so conditioned or not. ’ ’

The order of the trial court certifying the question on which a ruling is desired, recites that the demurrer was sustained on the ground that the declaration on its face shows that Constable S. E. May was not a “regularly elected” constable, but an “appointed” constable, and was, therefore, not authorized by section 7 of chapter 148 to carry a pistol by giving such a bond as was executed by him.

The office of constable is an elective one; but section 9 of chapter 4 of the Code, provides that vacancies in the office of constable shall be filled by the county court of the county until the next general election. The bond in question here was evidently worded in conformity with section 6 of chapter 10 of the Code, which provides: “When a person undertaking any office is required by law to give an official bond, the condition, unless otherwise provided, shall be for a faithful discharge by him of the duties of his office, and for accounting for and paying over, as required by law, all moneys that may come to his hands by virtue of said office.” Section 14 of chapter 10 of the Code requires every constable to give bond in the penalty of not less than two thousand nor more than ten thousand dollars.

No defect in the declaration other than that given by the trial court for 'sustaining the demurrer is assigned on the hearing here, and we perceive none. So that, the question presented is whether the legislature, by the term “regularly elected” in the statute, meant to except from the proviso above quoted all constables not elected by popular vote at a general election held for that purpose, as provided by law.

There can be no question that May was regularly and lawfully inducted into the office of constable in the manner provided by the statute, and that his powers and duties were the same as those of constables elected at a regular election by vote of the qualified voters of the magisterial district in which he was selected to serve. His bond was given in the same manner and conditioned as are the bonds of all other officers *165 required to give bond, tbe bond mentioned in the proviso of section 7 of chapter 148, and made thereby to cover damages done by the unlawful and careless use of pistols when carried by the officers therein excepted from the general provision prohibiting the carrying of weap'ons without a state license. In what different relation, then, does a constable appointed by the county court stand to the State and its citizens for whose protection his bond is given and to the sureties on the bond ? There can be none in so far as the bond is conditioned on the faithful performance of the duties pertaining to his office.

The defendants contend that by the use of the term “regularly elected constables, ’ ’ the legislature did not authorize the carrying of weapons by constables “appointed” by the county court to fill vacancies; that the possession of the pistol by May at the time of the injury complained of in the declaration was unlawful; and that, therefore, they are not as sureties liable in damages to plaintiff’s intestate. May, as we have seen, was a regularly constituted constable, and had given bond as prescribed by law; and unless the word “elected” used in the statute is to be so construed as not to include constables selected by the county court to fill vacancies among the other officers thereby authorized to carry weapons, his bond would render his sureties liable for his unlawful use of such weapon.

Then, can we assume that the legislature by the use of the word “elected” in the proviso of séction 7, did not intend the latter clause of that proviso to include constables selected to fill vacancies in the manner provided by law, who have given bond as required by sections 6 and 14 of chapter 10? We cannot perceiA'e why any distinction should be made, or that the legislature in this case intended any. The evident intent of the statute was to prohibit the carrying of pistols by any person not having a good reason to do so, and to protect the public, by the bond or bonds mentioned, from the unlawful use of such weapons by those who are authorized to carry them. The proviso in question was enacted for the benefit of the public, as well as the statute of which it is a part. The legislature recognized the necessity of the proper use of defen *166

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
134 S.E. 749, 102 W. Va. 162, 1926 W. Va. LEXIS 259, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-cook-v-doss-wva-1926.