Town of Gloster v. Harrell

77 Miss. 793
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 15, 1900
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 77 Miss. 793 (Town of Gloster v. Harrell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Town of Gloster v. Harrell, 77 Miss. 793 (Mich. 1900).

Opinions

Terral, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court (on the first appeal).

The town of Gloster sued the defendant as sureties of N. Ratcliff, treasurer of said town, on their bond executed in the [795]*795penalty of $3,000 for a sum of money, which it was alleged was received by Ratcliff, as such treasurer, and which he refused to pay over or account for to plaintiff. The declaration alleges that the board of mayor and aldermen of said town fixed the amount of said bond, and approved and accepted the same when executed. Ratcliff did not sign the bond, nor is it averred that he desired the defendants to sign the same as his sureties, or that he knew of its execution by them. Harrell and his co-defendants demurred to the declaration for many causes, and among them: (1) Because said bond is not required by any statute of the state, or any. ordinance of said town; (2) because the legislature alone, and not the municipal corporation, could fix the penalty of official bonds; (3) because said bond was not signed or adopted by Ratcliff as his official bond; (4) because no cause of action is stated in the declaration. The court sustained the demurrer, and dismissed the case from court.,

If it is necessary for the validity of any official bond, under § 82 of the state constitution, that the' legislature fix the penalty of it. we think it is not so in the present case. We think that section of the constitution does not apply to the bonds of officers whose offices are created by the legislature. Sec. 3055, annotated code, provides that “all official bonds shall be valid and binding, if delivered as the official bond of the officer and serving as such, and shall be obligatory on all who subscribed it for the purpose of making the official bond of such officer; and it sufficiently appears from the declaration that the defendants executed the instrument sued on as the official bond of Ratcliff, and that they delivered the same as such, and that it was so accepted. The allegations of the declaration bring the defendant within the very letter of § 3055, code, and the defendants must be taken as bound by said bond.

The judgment of the circuit court is reversed} and the case is remanded for a new trial.

Theodore McKnigM, for appellant, on second appeal. The receipt warrants provided for by code 1892, § 3027, should cut no figure in the case. Surely these warrants were never intended to enable a town treasurer to pocket public funds and escape liability because the officer received the money without them. A peremptory instruction ought to have been given in appellants’ favor. Cassedy & Gassedy, for appellees, on second appeal. The treasurer was prohibited, by code 1892, § 3027, from receiving money from any source until the same had been reported to the clerk and audited and. a receipt warrant issued therefor. These warrants are therefore necessarily the exclusive evidence to charge the treasurer. The tax collector, if sued (and be should have been, rather than appellees, in this case) could not escape liability by showing payments to the treasurer without showing the receipt Avarrants.

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Related

Adams v. Williams
52 So. 865 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1910)

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Bluebook (online)
77 Miss. 793, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/town-of-gloster-v-harrell-miss-1900.