Thomas v. Hinkle

35 Ark. 450
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedMay 15, 1880
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 35 Ark. 450 (Thomas v. Hinkle) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Thomas v. Hinkle, 35 Ark. 450 (Ark. 1880).

Opinion

Eakin, J.

This case was brought here with a supersedeas, and having been reached upon the call of the docket, the appellant failed to prosecute his appeal. It has been submitted on appellee’s motion, and we have looked through the transcript to see if there be any error of which the court should take notice.

It appears from the record, that in 1872 appellant, D. II. Thomas, was county clerk of Conway county, and the other appellants were sureties on his official hond for the faithful ■discharge of his duties. At the general election, which took place in November of that year, the poll-books from all the township precincts, thirteen in number, were brought into the clerk’s office. They all contained what seemed to be abstracts of the votes cast, at the particular precinct, for the different candidates for office; but only one of them was certified by the judges of election to be correct, or had attached to them any certificate whatever of the judges or clerks, save the oaths of office. The clerk, acting through his deputies, made a canvass of the returns, rejecting all except the one which was certified, and sent an abstract to the secretary'of state, by which it appeared that one William Kearney had been elected county clerk. He received his commission thereon and held the office until some time in November, 1874. Eour days after the first abstract was forwarded, the clerk, by deputy, and to satisfy “ outside parties,” made another, including all the poll-books and supposed returns from all the precincts. Whether this actually reached the secretary of state or not,- does not appear ; nor is it important to inquire. The first had done its office. The last was unauthorized and nugatory.

The last showed, however, and it seems on all parts conceded, that the appellee, Hinkle, had been really elected county clerk by a large' majority of the electors of the county. He brought suit for the office against Kearney, and obtained judgment for that and the mesne fees and emoluments. Execution isued and was returned nulla Iona. He then brought this suit, against Thomas and his sureties, to obtain damages for breach of the official bond by the false return to the secretary of state, alleging the loss of fees and emoluments, and, as special damage, his expenses in recovering the office. As his recovery in this case, however:, did not include any such special loss, this branch of the subject need not be fux’ther noticed.

3. Bill 03? ÍXOÍP-TIONS: When sufficient.

Upon the trial, the plaintiff was pexunitted, agairxst the objection of defendants, to introduce the complaint, summons and judgment against Kearney in the former suit. There was other evidence, as above stated, together with sufficient evidence of the value of the fees and emoluments during the time that Hinkle was deprived of their enjoyment. The bill of exceptions does not show, upon its face, that it embodies the whole of the evidence upon either side, but there are expressions from which it may be inferred that it was intended to do so. This is sufficient where no objection to the bill of exceptions on that account is made'here.

The coux’t instructed the jury for the plaintiff, in effect:

1. That if it appeared, from the returns made by the judges to the clerk’s office, that the plaintiff received a plurality of the votes of the electors of the county, and the clerk made a different return, whereby the plaintiff lost the office, defendaxxts were liable.

2. That, for the purpose of recovering actual damage, the intent with which such return was made was immaterial.

3-4. That defendants are bound by the acts of a deputy or oxxe who had access to the office and was allowed.to act as a deputy.

5. That the x'ecord of the suit and judgment agaixxst Kearney was conclusive evidence against defendants, that plaintiff was elected to the office, and also prima facie evidence that the said return to the secretary of state was false.

2Damages: faith 0?de-defence tuai, 2.Evidence ■f'1'1®01611*-

For the defendant the court refused to instruct conversely to any of the above propositions. It did instruct the jury that, by the law then-in force, the judges of election were required to certify, under thejr hands, the number of votes given to each person,-and the office for which such votes were given, which should be attested by the clerks; but added, of its own qnotipn, and against defendant’s objection, “that after the county clerk received and acted upon the returns that were not so certified, said returns, after being so acted upon, are to be treated as legal returns.”

Other instructions relate to good faith, and to damages, and need not be noticed in the decision of this case. It may be said of them, in passing, th'at they correctly state the law to be, that for the purpose of actual, and not vindictive damage, the good faith" of Tronest intentions of the clerk, afi'orcl no protection to him or his sureties for breaches of official duty. ■

There was a verdict for plaintiff'for nearly $1,000, being amount of actual fees and emoluments lost, after deducting the liire of a deputy and with 6 per cent, interest added. A motion for a new trial was overruled, which reserves the points we shall noticeTwith others which may be passed over as involved in what has been said. The defendants appealed.

It is difficult to perceive any .sound principle upon which the complaint and judgment" in^the former suit against Kearney could be admitted as evidence in a suit against these defendants for any other purpose than to show the fact that such a judgment had been obtained, and that the plaintiff was, by virtue of such judgment, or had been, in fact, the clerk. That suit was between different parties, and involved different issues from this. These defendants had no day in court in that suit. The issue there was, who- was in fact elected? and, in determining that, the court could, and perhaps did, go behind the returns made to the clerk’s office.. The issue here is, did the clerk return to the secretary of state a false abstract of the returns made to his office? The judgment, based upon the actual votes cast throughout the county, which the court had the means of ascertaining, may well consist with the truth of the abstract, made by the clerk, of the returns made to him by the judges of the townships. Suppose, for instance, there-had been false returns from the judges, or none, to the clerk’s office, the plaintiff might, nevertheless, on proper proof, have recovered the office; but such recovery would not be even prima facie proof that the clerk had not truly abstracted and forwarded to the secretary of state the returns sent to him. The court certainly erred in instructing the jury that it would be evidence to that effect.

It becomes necessary to look deeper and see if there was any other proof that the clerk made a false return to the secretary of state; for if there be such clear proof of that as to have justified the verdict, the error in the instruction would be harmless, and the judgment would be permitted to stand.

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Bluebook (online)
35 Ark. 450, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thomas-v-hinkle-ark-1880.