Tinkler v. Powell

151 P. 1097, 23 Wyo. 352, 1915 Wyo. LEXIS 34
CourtWyoming Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 5, 1915
DocketNo. 801
StatusPublished

This text of 151 P. 1097 (Tinkler v. Powell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wyoming Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tinkler v. Powell, 151 P. 1097, 23 Wyo. 352, 1915 Wyo. LEXIS 34 (Wyo. 1915).

Opinion

Potter, Chief Justice.

This action was brought by Robert Tinkler, as the presiding officer, officially known as president of Local Union N]o. 2616, The United Mine Workers of America, and for the benefit of the said local union, an unincorporated association of mine workers, located in the Town of Superior, in Sweetwater County, in this state, to recover from the defendant, Williairi H. Powell, as a former treasurer of said local union, the sum of $5,654.25, with interest, alleged to be due for money received by him as such treasurer and which, it is alleged, he had failed and refused to pay over to his successor in office or to the said local union. There was a jury trial in the district court resulting in a verdict and judgment in favor of the defendant, and the plaintiff brings error.

The only question to be considered is whether the evidence is sufficient to sustain the verdict, for no other error is properly alleged or assigned in the motion for new trial [356]*356or petition in error. By plaintiff’s admissions on the trial as to the amount received by the defendant as treasurer and the amount turned over to his successor in office, the sum claimed was reduced to $3,388.50. It is admitted by the pleadings that the defendant held the office aforesaid from January 1, 1911, until July 2, 1912, and that he received from his predecessor in office the sum of $5,408.28, but the answer alleges as to the sum so received that $3,408.28 was subject to the payment of outstanding checks issued by his predecessor in office, and that there were turned over to him, time certificates of deposit in different banks in the sum and of the value of $2,000. And it was established by the evidence that he received from his predecessor in office two time certificates of deposit for $1,000 each, and that the said sum of $3,408.28 was on deposit in open account in a bank at Superior subject to check under the rules of the union and its instructions to the bank, which account we understand from the testimony was kept in the name of the said local union. It is alleged in the petition that the other receipts of money by the defendant as treasurer amounted to $21,381.21, but the answer alleges that such additional receipts amounted only to the sum of $20,381.21, and on the trial that averment of the answer was admitted by the plaintiff. Hence upon the trial the total amount of money received by the defendant was admitted to be $25,789.49, including $2,000 represented by time certificates of deposit. It is alleged in the petition that when the defendant retired from the office he turned over' to his successor moneys of the local union amounting to $5,306.70, but the answer alleges that defendant delivered to his successor the sum of $7,049.95, consisting of certificates of deposit in the amount and of the value of $5,000 and cash in banks in open account and subject to check amounting to $2,049.95, and on the trial that part of the answer was admitted, and the fact was also established by the evidence. These admissions left as the only matter in dispute the amount of the defendant’s disbursements for which he was entitled to credit.

[357]*357The petition alleges that it was defendant’s duty as treasurer aforesaid to receive and safely keep all moneys belonging to the local union, and to pay out and disburse the same upon written order of the local union executed by the financial secretary, and to turn over to the union or his successor in office all of said moneys not so paid out; and that he paid out and disbursed, upon written orders aforesaid, only the sum of $15,828.54. The answer alleges that the defendant faithfully and honestly performed all of his duties, that he safely kept and accounted for all moneys received by him belonging to the local union, and only disbursed the same upon written order of the proper officers, and paid over to his successor all moneys received by him and not so disbursed, and, specifically, that he disbursed and caused to be paid out upon proper written orders the sum of $21-,739.54, three thousand dollars of which sum was expended for three time certificates of deposit in various banks for the sum of $1,000 each, which said certificates of deposit, together with $2,000 in time certificates of deposit received from his predecessor in office, were turned over by him to his successor in office on July 2, 19Í2. The legal effect of this averment of the answer is that the defendant actually disbui-sed or caused to be paid out upon proper written orders the sum of $18,739.54. The mere changing of the form of the deposit of $3,000 of tbjfe amount received would not constitute a disbursement, and could not be regarded as-such, without the treasurer again being chargeable with the amount as so much money received, for he retained the same, although in the form of certificates of deposit, until the certificates were delivered to his successor in office, when he became entitled to credit for the amount. And he was allowed such credit upon the trial bv the plaintiff’s admission that the defendant had delivered the certificates to his successor in office and that they were worth their face value.

The difference between the amount of actual disbursements as alleged in the petition and answer respectively is $2,911. This amount the plaintiff claims to be due from [358]*358the defendairt, together with $477.50, the aggregate amount of certain checks issued by him as treasurer and paid after he had retired from the office out of the money of the union in banks on general deposit. This amount was included in the sum of $15,824.54 alleged in the petition as the total amount of defendant’s proper disbursements; The plaintiff’s claim that the defendant is only entitled to be credited with that amount for disbursements is based upon the fact that that is the total amount of orders and disbursements entered in the treasurer’s cash book in use during the time the defendant held the office, and kept by him, and in which he was supposed to enter in a space provided therefor the money received from the financial secretary, and in other spaces, upon paying out money, the date, number of order, and to whom paid, together with the amount. But it was shown by the testimony of the cashiers respectively of the two banks in which the moneys of the union were kept on general deposit that all the money, excepting the sum remaining on hand at the end of defendant’s term and turned over to his successor, had been paid out upon checks signed by the treasurer and otherwise authenticated as required by the rules and instructions of the union. Thus the bank accounts referred to by this testimony disclosed that the sum of $21,739.54 had been paid out on check. But this amount was shown to include $3,000 drawn out to he placed in time certificates of deposit, leaving as the amount of actual disbursements the sum of $18,739.54, as alleged in the answer.

While unable to explain the disbursements not entered in his cash book, or the failure to enter them, the defendant testified positively that he did not sign any check or pay out any money except upon an order signed by the financial secretary and the president, as provided and required by the by-laws. He was unable to produce his cancelled checks or the orders upon which they had been issued for the reason, as he testified, that they had been delivered by him from time to time to the committee appointed to audit his accounts, none of which had been returned to him, and [359]*359he did not know what had become of them ; and he denied having destroyed any of them.

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Bluebook (online)
151 P. 1097, 23 Wyo. 352, 1915 Wyo. LEXIS 34, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tinkler-v-powell-wyo-1915.