Opinion by
Mr. Chief Justice Moore.The question to he considered is whether the statute referred to prescribes the means of disbursing to the persons entitled thereto the moneys so collected by taxation. Section 1 of the enactment substantially directs the County Court of Multnomah County, Oregon, to make good the loss of $15,522.43 “by giving the present county clerk, John B. Coffey, credit in his fee account to the amount of said deficiency”: Laws Or. 1915, c. 62, p. 71. The other parts of the statute, so far as material herein, read:
“That the said John B. Coffey shall pay to litigants having funds as shown by the records of the said county clerk’s office due them on account of said litigants’ deposit fund, the full amount thereof as the same shall become due to them under the existing laws of the state, and shall also permit papers to be filed and charged against said several funds to the same extent as though he had received said money in full from the said F. S. Fields”: Section 2.
“The auditor and treasurer of Multnomah County, Oregon, shall give the said John B. Coffey credit for the full amount of said deficiency, and shall charge against said amount the fees earned by said county clerk and charged against the credits on the records of *431Ms office which stood to the credit of said litigants at the time the said F. S. Fields retired from office. As soon as said several items of litigation have been concluded and all of the litigants have been paid the balance due them under the laws of the state, the county clerk shall pay over to the county treasurer the balance of the fund received by Mm from the said F. S. Fields”: Section 3.
1. The rule is quite general that, in the absence of a statute imposing upon a county liability for the default of any of its officers in the performance of a duty •enjoined by law, a private party who suffers injury by reason of a breach of such duty cannot maintain an action against the quasi corporation to recover the damages sustained: 11 Cyc. 498. Thus in Vigo Tp. v. Knox County, 111 Ind. 170 (12 N. E. 305), it was ruled that a county treasurer was not such an agent ■of the county as to render it liable for his misappropriation of public funds, in the absence of a statute creating the responsibility. To the same effect, see, also, Cedar Rapids, I. F. & N. W. Ry. Co. v. Cowan, 77 Iowa, 535 (42 N. W. 436); State ex rel. v. Spinney, 166 Ind. 282 (76 N. E. 971).
2. In the case at bar the statute by express terms makes Multnomah County, Oregon, wMch is a party hereto, liable for the money lost by F. S. Fields, its former county clerk, in consequence of the failure of the bank in which he deposited the litigants’ funds. In referring to such enactments a text-writer observes:
“As counties are not suable except by statute, the mode' pointed out by the statute must be strictly pursued”: 7 E. C. L. 966.
The enactment relied upon herein is therefore to be strictly construed.
3. It will be remembered that Section 1 of the statute under consideration commands the .Comity Court of *432Multnomah County, Oregon, to give the relator credit in his fee account for an amount of money equal to the deficiency mentioned. No part of that sum ever came into his possession, and for that reason he is not. legally chargeable therewith or required to account, therefor: Saradon v. Coffey, 66 Or. 80 (133 Pac. 815). To the same effect see Cedar Rapids, I. F. & N. W. Ry. Co. v. Cowan, 77 Iowa, 535 (42 N. W. 436), where, in discussing a right of action against a public officer, it is said:
“It is insisted, on behalf of appellants, that plaintiff’s only remedy is by mandamus against the treasurer of Hardin County. But he never received any of the money in controversy, and is not liable for it”— citing in support of the language quoted the case of Minneapolis & St. L. Railway Co. v. Becket, 75 Iowa, 183 (39 N. W. 260).
The relator herein never having been charged with any of the money so lost it is difficult to understand why he should be given credit therefor. It was evidently the practice of his predecessor in office to deposit in a bank the litigants’ fund when received and to issue checks to the proper officer for sums of money as they were earned by the county as fees for services performed by the county clerk, and also to issue checks to parties for any remainder in his possession due them when their causes were finally determined. A party to a suit or action who had advanced sums of money on account of fees was not obliged, every time it became necessary to file a paper, to pay the prescribed fee, since it was charged to his account as the service was performed, and he was not permitted wholly to exhaust the money required to be paid beforehand until his cause was ultimately adjudicated:Section 1114, L. O. L. By keeping the money thus collected- in a.bank subject to check the county clerk had *433constant control of the litigants’ fund and could disburse it as the law required. If the act of February 10,1915, had directed the County Court of Multnomah County to cause the issuance of a warrant in favor of the relator for $15,522.43, or to deposit that amount in some reputable bank in Portland, Oregon, for Ms account, subject to check, he could have been legally charged with the money, and might then have disbursed it as provided by statute, receiving proper credit therefor on or before the fourth day of each month upon a report thereof: Section 3056, L. O. L.
4. The demurrer confesses that the deficiency in the litigants’ fund has been made good by the County Court as an available asset by levying and collecting a tax for that purpose, and, this being so, no mandatory writ is necessary to compel a performance of that duty, wMch has already been discharged: Jacksonville School Dist. v. Crowell, 33 Or. 11 (52 Pac. 693).
5. It will be remembered that Section 2 of the act in question required John B. Coffey, as county clerk, to pay litigants having funds as shown by the records of Ms office the full amount thereof as the same shall become due, and also to permit papers to be filed and charged against the several funds to the same extent as though he had received the money in full from the former county clerk. The relator cannot comply with this reqmrement without rendering himself and his-bondsmen liable, until the sum of money so collected has been placed at his disposal. No express provision therefor has been made by the enactment. Mandamus will not lie unless the ministerial duty enjoined by law is free from doubt: Habersham v. Sears, 11 Or. 431 (5 Pac. 208, 50 Am. Rep. 481); Mackin v. Portland Gas Co., 38 Or. 120 (61 Pac. 134, 62 Pac. 20, 49 L. R. A. *434596); State ex rel. v. Malheur County Court, 46 Or. 519 (81 Pac. 368).
The demurrer should be sustained, and it is so ordered. Demurrer Sustained.
Mr. Justice Bean, Mr. Justice Harris and Me. Justice Benson concur.