The only question submitted for our consideration is, whether the defendant has broken the condition of his official bond by neglecting and refusing to pay over to the County Treasurer any portion of the moneys by him received by virtue of his office, from the first Wednesday of January to the twenty-third of October, 1832.
The condition of his bond is, to pay over all moneys required to be paid over by statute, chap. 90. By the 2d section of that statute, it is provided, “ That the several Clerks shall keep a true and exact account of all moneys they shall receive, by virtue of their office, and shall on the first Wednesday of January annually, render to the Treasurers of tbeir respective counties, under oath, a true account of the whole sum thus by them received, *366and after deducting one thousand dollars, if they shall have received so much, which shall be held and retained for their own use, they shall pay over the one half of all the residue to their respective County Treasurers for the use of the County.”
McLellan, County Attorney. Allen, for the defendant.It is not charged upon the defendant that he neglected to keep the account required by law, or that he omitted to render such account to the Treasurer of the county on the first Wednesday of January, 1833. This was all done in compliance with the law, and the condition of his bond. But he paid over nothing; and for this reason; that by the terms of the statute he was not required to pay over any thing, unless he had received more than one thousand dollars. That sum the law permitted him to retain for his own use, and inasmuch as he had not received even to that amount, there could be no breach of his bond by his retaining what he did receive.
The condition of the bond was literally fulfilled; and we find nothing in the statute from which we can infer that it was not fulfilled according to the spirit of the law, and the intention of those who made it. Even if we had no doubt what provisions the Legislature would have made if the existence of such a case as this had occurred to their minds, still as they have not provided for such a case, it is not for us to supply the deficiency.
If this statute, plain and perspicuous in its phraseology, as we think it is, were to be so extended by construction as to embrace the case at bar, we might well be charged with making, instead of expounding the law. It is by no means certain that the Legislature did not intentionally omit to require Clerks to pay over for fractions of a year. There might be such difficulties in ascertaining the amount justly payable by each incumbent ; there might be such difference of opinion as to the true principle upon which each ought to account, as to prevent any legislation upon the subject. However that may have been, we do not feel authorized to extend the statute beyond tire obvious meaning of its language; especially, when we find nothing in its provisions to lead us to suppose that the Legislature intended that it should be so extended.