Territory of Arizona v. Cook

BARNES, J.

This was a suit by plaintiff upon the official bond of defendant Cook as treasurer of the county of Yavapai. It appears that he has been such treasurer for five successive terms of two years each. That at the expiration of the term ending December 31, 1884, he, as such treasurer, as required by law, (chapter 6, and amendment of October 4, 1867, Comp. Laws,) had and filed with the board of supervisors of Yavapai county, his regular quarterly and annual settlements. That in- such settlements he charged himself with the sum of $46,026.23, as being the balance in his hands as such treasurer. That such settlements were duly examined and approved by the said board of supervisors. That thereafter, during his last term of office, and at his first quarterly settlement as such treasurer, he charged himself with said balance as having actually come to his hands from himself as his predecessor, and continued afterwards from time to time, at each annual and quarterly settlement, to report the same in his hands, or using said balance in his first quarterly set*387tlement, and then the balance from each settlement as made and shown therein. That each settlement commenced with the statement of the balance in treasury or on hand at last settlement, and ended with a statement of balance in treasury. That each and every part of said settlements were duly approved by the said board of supervisors, except the last statement of account, which was also approved after some corrections, and changes were made in' the same by said Cook and said board of supervisors. That the books of said E. J. Cook as such treasurer show the same balances and amounts as the settlements made by him. It was made to appear that at the time of his final settlement the amount of money which his last approved statement showed to be in his hands as such treasurer was not there; in fact that the treasury was short the amount of money sued for. The bond sued on is the official bond for the term 1885 and 1886, and the suit is for money which his statements and settlements represented as being in the treasury at the end of that term. Defendants asked to be allowed to introduce evidence as to what had occurred before the board of supervisors at the times of the successive settlements of his accounts; to ask whether the money in the treasury was actually counted; to ask whether, at the time of the settlement in December, 1884, and before this bond was given, he actually had in the treasury the money his statements showed, and so as to the succeeding statements; to ask whether he did not produce certificates of deposits upon various banks as cash in the treasury. This evidence the court refused to allow. These rulings present the question.asked by the appellants: “Are the sureties permitted to go behind the settlements made by the board of supervisors with the treasurer, and show that the default charged occurred before the commencement of their liabilities?” They urge with great force and ability that they should be allowed to show that the statements by the treasurer of the amount of money on hand were false, and that the defalcation occurred before this bond was executed, and that the shortage in the cash was continued down to the end of this last term.

*388The obligation, of this bond, among other things, was that the treasurer should faithfully discharge the duties of his office. One of his duties was to correctly report to the board of supervisors the amount of money in the treasury. To falsely report was a breach of his duty, for which his sureties were liable on this bond. It is conceded that the sureties on this bond are not liable for breaches of duty during the former term of office. The cases cited upon this point will not be questioned. The question here is this: May he and his sureties dispute that he had in the treasury the money that he reported from time to time that he had, and on the faith of which reports his settlements were made and approved? It is admitted by appellants that the treasurer is estopped, but they insist that the sureties are not, and that they may show that the statement of money on hand December, 1884, just before the term covered by their bond began, was false, and that the treasurer did not then have the money. They permitted him, from time to time thereafter, to report the amount of money on hand. They could, before they executed the bond, and at any time thereafter, have ascertained the amount of cash in the treasury, and so verify his reports. His sureties had notice, or are charged with notice, of the amount of money he reported as in his hands at the beginning of his last term. They obligated themselves that he should “pay over all money then in his hands.” They, as well as he, are estopped to deny that that money was in his hands. The same point was urged in Morley v. Town of Metamora, 78 Ill. 394, 20 Amer. Rep. 266, -and the sureties were held liable. “The supervisor was his own successor in office. He had made his annual report, in which he charged himself with having a certain amount of money in his hands. . That report was approved, and we must presume it was true.” “Conceding that fact, (that default occurred in former term,) we do not think it relieves the sureties on the bond upon which this action is brought from liability.” To the same effect is Pinkstaff v. People, 59 Ill. 148. In Roper v. Trustees of Sangamon Lodge, 91 Ill. 518, 33 Am. Rep. 60, it was urged “that the court should have *389admitted evidence that the defalcation occurred the term before appellants became sureties on this bond.” Upon the authority of the foregoing cases, judgment was affirmed. In Chicago v. Gage, 95 Ill. 593, 35 Amer. Rep. 182, the court say: “Gage was his own successor in office. It was his duty, as incoming treasurer, to receive the treasury balance from his predecessor. If he entered it in his treasury books after the beginning of his second term as having actually come to his hands from his predecessor, and continued afterwards, from time to time, to return and report the same as in his hands, both he and his sureties, we think, should now be concluded from denying that this balance did actually come into Gage’s hands as treasurer.” It was his duty to keep such accounts, and make such reports; and to “falsify them, and show that these balances, etc., were not at the time actually in the treasury, would be inadmissible, as we conceive, upon sound legal principle.” “And we are of opinion that the sureties should be equally concluded here with Gage himself.” The court cites Commissioners v. Mayrant, 2 Brev. 228; McCabe v. Raney, 32 Ind. 309; Stovall v. Banks, 10 Wall. 583; Baker v. Preston, 1 Gilmer (Va.), 235; U. S. v. Girault, 11 How. 27; Evans v. Keeland, 9 Ala. 42. In Insurance Co. v. Simmons, 131 Mass. 85, 41 Am. Rep. 196, the court held the sureties were not discharged by laches of creditor in not compelling payment after knowledge of default. “It is the business of the surety'to see that his principal performs the duty which he has guarantied, and not that of the creditor.” Wright v. Simpson, 6 Ves. 714; President etc. Adams Bank v. Anthony, 18 Pick. 238;. Atlantic & Pac. Tel. Co. v. Barnes, 64 N. Y. 385, 21 Am. Rep. 621; McKecknie v. Ward, 58 N. Y. 541, 17 Am. Rep. 281. In Boone v. Jones, 54 Iowa, 699, 37 Am. Rep. 229, 2 N. W. Rep. 987, 7 N. W. Rep. 155, it was held that, “in an action on a county treasurer’s bond, the principal’s accountings and settlements made in pursuance of law are conclusive against him and his sureties.” The court cites, with approval, McCabe v. Raney, Baker v. Preston, Morley v. Metamora, and Chicago v. Gage, supra. On a rehearing the decision was adhered *390to. The authority of Baker v. Preston has been questioned and the decision criticised. State v. Rhoades, 6 Nev. 352, and State v. Newton, 33 Ark. 276; and see note to Boone Co. v. Jones, 37 Am. Rep. 234. In State v. Grammer, 29 Ind. 530, the court, of Baker v. Preston, say: “We regard the reasoning in that case as entirely satisfactory, and we know of no case holding a contrary doctrine.” We are satisfied that the weight of authority and the better reason sustains that case and Chicago v. Cage, and that the law is that both the principal and sureties are concluded by the report of the principal, made according to law, as to the amount of money in his hands. We therefore see no error in the record.

The judgment is affirmed.