Town of Weston v. Sprague

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Powers J.

The declaration alleges that the bond in question was executed by Smith and his sureties as Smith’s official bond as constable.

The statute, No. 35 Acts of 1870, under which it is claimed that the bond is invalid, reads as follows, viz.:

Sec. 1. Section twenty-six of chapter fifteen of the General Statutes is so amended as to read as follows :

“ It is hereby made the duty of the selectmen of the several towns in this State to require of the constables in their respective towns, before they enter upon the duties of their office, to give bonds to their towns for the faithful performance of their duties, in a sufficient sum with good and sufficient sureties ; and if any person chosen to the office of constable in any town in this State shall neglect for ten days next succeeding his election to give such bond his office shall be vacant; and the towns may require similar bonds of their treasurers and clerks.”

Sec. 26 of chap. 15, which is thus amended, reads as follows:

“The several constables of towns, before they enter upon the' duties of their respective offices, shall give bonds to their towns for the faithful performance of such duties, in such sums and with such sureties as the selectmen may require; and the towns- may also require similar bonds of their treasurers and clerks.”

Sec. 27 of the same chapter provides that if any of the .officers *398named in sec. 26 shall refuse to give bonds as therein provided, his office shall be vacant.

It is argued that the failure of Smith to execute his official bond within the ten days limited in the Acts of 1870, ipso facto worked a vacancy in his office ; and that whatever he did thereafterwards under pretence of being constable was void ; and the sureties on his bond afterwards given are not answerable for his acts.

The old act (sec. 26) declares that constables shall give bonds before entering upon the duties of their office. This requirement, so far as the constable’s duty is involved, is altogether more imperative than the same requirement is expressed in the corresponding text of the Act of 1870.

In sec. 26 the time within which the constable shall give bonds is declared to be “ before he enters upon the duties of his office.” But this peremptory requirement to give bonds is coupled with the qualifying language that the bonds are to be given “ in such sums and with such sureties as the selectmen may require.”

Giving effect, then, to the whole section, as we are bound to do, it is evident that the selectmen are to act before the constable is called upon to move. The selectmen must require the bond; they must fix the penal sum and the qualifications of the sureties, otherwise it is impossible for the constable to discharge the duty enjoined upon him.

And so it was held in Bowman v. Barnard, 24 Vt. 362, that the constable is not “ required to give bonds until certain preliminary steps are first taken by the selectmen of the town; they are to specify the amount for which the bond is to be given, name the securities required and request its due execution.” This case was approved in Bank v. R. R. Co., 30 Vt. 167.

The subjéct-matter of the old and new acts is the same. The Legislature sought in the Act of 1870 to remedy some mischief existing under the old act.

Looking at the letter of the text in the old act, the selectmen are required to move only by implication, whereas under the new act their duty to move is enforced by peremptory language. Under the old act constables were required to move by peremptory language, while under the new act this duty is less peremptorily en*399joined. Tried by this test it is manifest that the Legislature aimed to infuse increased vigor and diligence into the action of the selectmen rather than that demanded of thé constable. The point «to be gained was to secure the execution of the bond, and to fix a limit to the time within which this should be done.

Plainly it was not the purpose of the Act-of 1870 that the constable should move in advance of action by the selectmen, or in defiance or disregard of their action. The purpose to be served was to secure indemnity to the town. In the transaction the interests of the town and the interests of the constable are adverse. It is not to be said that the Legislature intended to make the constable a judge in his own case, to determine how much and what kind of security he should give for the faithful discharge of his duties, and the faithful accounting for the public funds. It is more probable that, as the purpose of the bond is to make security, the party to be secured is to be the judge of its quality and amount. Thus the spirit and letter of the text are in accord.

Now, then, to make the Act of 1870 operative to effectuate its purpose, it is obvious that the selectmen must first fix the amount of the bond and determine the kind of security. Until this is done it is impossible for the constable to execute the bond.

This result is apparent from another view of the act. The statute says the selectmen shall require a bond in a sufficient sum and with sufficient sureties ; and if the constable shall neglect to give such bond, his office shall be vacant. It does not declare that unless the constable give a bond his office shall be vacant; but requires him to give such bond. The word “ such ” has no meaning in its context, unless it be referred, as it plainly must, to the bond which the selectmen are to “ require of the constables in their respective towns.” And if referred to that bond.it is evident that the constable is powerless to comply with his duty until such bond is required of him. Therefore he can be guilty of no neglect, for ten days nor any other time, until he is in a position where he can act. It follows that the vacancy is created, if created at all, by the failure of the selectmen to comply with the precedent duty enjoined upon them by the act.

The limitation of ten days fixed by the act does not impeach *400this construction of its provisions. Under the old act, constables were peremptorily required to execute their bonds “ before they enter upon the duties of their office.” Their term of office dates from their election, and they might be called to official duty at» once. Under the new act the selectmen are enjoined to require the bond before the constable enters upon the duties of his office ; and to exact of the selectmen increased vigilance in the performance of this duty, the limitation of ten days is assigned as a time within which they must a,ct; and further they must therein give the constable a reasonable time to comply with his duty.

This construction of the Act of 1870 leaves the effect of inaction by the selectmen under it precisely as it stood under the old law. The.effect under the old law is stated in Bowman v. Barnard, supra.

“ Until these steps are taken it is impossible for the constable to execute the bond; and as it cannot be given in consequence of the neglect or waiver of the matter by the selectmen, the officer can well execute the duties of the office until these steps are taken, and the request is made, and he stands in the same light he would stand if the bond was not required by the statute, for he is not, until these preliminary steps have been taken, under its operation. To give the act a different ■ construction would put it in the power of the selectmen to deprive him of the benefits of the office, and virtually vacate the appointment.”

It follows then that, inasmuch as the selectmen of their own wrong cannot create a vacancy in the office, Smith was to all intents and purposes a legal constable unless he has himself made a vacancy. The office was duly and legally conferred upon him by his election. In the order of events he has wrongfully omitted no ceremony required by law of him to entitle him to the emoluments of his office. His right to exercise it has never been called in question by the town nor other public authority. By the consent and approval of the town, as well as his sureties, he assumed the office and entered upon the discharge of its duties. Clearly, Smith could not say he was not a legal constable. Nor could he take advantage of his own wrong and say, “ my bond is invalid, because I omitted to file it seasonably.” Smith’s sureties stand no better in this respect than he does.

*401Speaking for myself I see no substantial reason why Smith was not an officer de jure sufficiently equipped to encounter any proceeding instituted to test his title, and that it must be held that the neglect of the selectmen to require of him his bond within ten days was a waiver for the time being by them, in behalf of the town, of the indemnity provided by the act. Bowman v. Barnard, supra.

But passing this claim, we are all agreed that'Smith was a de facto constable, and that, although he might not be able to defend his title to the office, if it were directly assailed, his acts as such are binding upon third persons; and his sureties are estopped to deny their responsibility under his bond.

He did not usurp the office. He was duly elected under the forms of law. He assumed to act under his election. He was in colore officii. The town of the one part, and Smith and his sureties of the other part, treated him as a legal constable ; and the bond was executed and accepted as and for his oficial bond. Smith voluntarily, by permission of the town and his sureties, under color of his office, collected the money now sued for. The taxpayers, unquestionably, were discharged by payment of their taxes to him. The sureties agreed to be responsible to the town for such collections. It is clearly now too late for them to say that he was not a de facto officer, or to deny their liability under their bond.

In State v. Bates, 36 Vt. 897, where the State treasurer had failed to take the oath of office required by the constitution, it was held that the sureties on his bond could not take advantage of this omission of duty. The same position was taken by the court in Lyndon v. Miller, 36 Vt. 329. In Green v. Wardell, 17 Ill. 278, where sureties signed the bond of one who acted as a justice of the peace, and as such collected money, it was held that they were liable on their bond, even though he was not legally elected, nor commissioned, nor sworn. The court, per Catón, J., say: “ By signing his bond they (the sureties) acknowledged his rights to the office and to discharge its duties, and as such recommended him to the public. They, at least, shall not be heard to say that although they signed his bond and thereby induced others to put money in his hands, relying on the bond for its *402safety, still he was not elected, was not commissioned, was not sworn — that he was not in fact a justice.”

In Corbitt v. Carroll, 50 Ala. 315, the same doctrine was laid down in a case where the appointment of a guardian, who acted as such, was void. In Jones v. Scanland, 6 Humph. 195, where a person, ineligible to the office of sheriff, was elected, sworn, gave bond and collected taxes, which he misappropriated, it was held that his sureties were liable for the money so collected.

In Mayor of Homer v. Merritt, 27 La. An. 568, it was held no defence to the sureties of a town collector that the taxes collected were not duly assessed, or that the collector was not legally entitled to the office.

In State v. Rhoades, 6 Nev. 352, when the State treasurer was re-elected, re-commissioned, re-sworn and acted under the new election, but failed to file a new bond in time, which by law worked a forfeiture of his office, it was held that he did not hold over as of the former term of office, but was under his new election an officer de facto, and that having subsequently given a new bond reciting his new election, his sureties thereon were estopped to deny his holding, de jure as of the new term. The general doctrine is laid down in the following cases: United States v.

Maurice, 2 Brock. 96; United States v. Tingey, 5 Pet. 114; United States v. Bradley, 10 Pet. 343 ; Kelly v. The State, 25 Ohio St. 567; Inhabitants, &c., v. Fleming, 8 Gray, 613; Commissioners Ramsey Co. v. Brisbin, 17 Minn. 451.

But if Smith was neither constable, de jure, nor, defacto, the bond is a valid common-law obligation against him and his sureties.

It is an elementary principle that a voluntary bond made upon good consideration, and not in contravention of the policy of the law or the prohibitions of a statute, is a valid instrument binding the makers to the performance of its conditions. The bond in suit is precisely within this rule. Bank v. Smith, 5 Allen 413 ; Pritchett v. People, 1 Gilman (Ill.) 525 ; Cobb v. Curtis, 4 Littell, 235 ; State v. Fredericks, 8 Iowa, 553 ; 7 Reporter, 335.

The judgment is affirmed, and the case remanded to be proceeded with in due course.