delivered the opinion of the court.
By art. 10 of c. 39 Code 1871, the county treasurer of each county is made the custodian of the school funds thereof, and his duties in that behalf are prescribed. ' Among these duties are those of receiving all moneys on account of the school fund of the county, and paying out the same on warrants signed by the president of the board of school directors (now board of supervisors).
To a suit brought upon the bond of the county treasurer of Yazoo County, given under this statute, in which the breaches alleged were, 1st, that the treasurer had negligently suffered *419the school funds to be taken out of his custody, so that he could not produce the same; 2d, that he had wasted them; 3d, that he had not safely kept said funds, — the sureties on the bond demurred, upon the ground that none of these breaches was within the condition of the bond or the requirements of the law. The condition of the bond was that the principal should “ faithfully perform and discharge all the duties of the office of treasurer, under chapter 39 of the Revised Code . . . and all acts and things required by law or incident to the said office of treasurer of Yazoo County, under chapter 39 of said Code.” The position of the sureties is that there is no requirement in the statute that the treasurer shall keep the money, but oiily that he shall receive it, and pay it out on proper warrants, and that, therefore, as the obligation of the sureties is strictissimi juris, they will not be liable for negligence, waste, or even embezzlement, on the part of their principal. The demurrer proceeds on this idea, and assigns for cause, substantially, that there is no allegation in the declaration of a failure to receive or to pay out, on proper voucher, or to do and perform any other of the duties specifically enjoined on the treasurer by the statute.
It is difficult to see how the treasurer could pay out, on proper warrants, money which he had not kept; and it may well be doubted, therefore, under the most stringent rule as to the liability of sureties, whether the duties of receiving-money, and of paying it out on proper voucher, do not, ex vi termini, import and include the duty of keeping it. All doubt, however, is put at rest by reference to other sections of the Code and other conditions of the bond. By § 309, Code of 1871, it is enacted that all officers of this State required to give bond shall, in addition to the special requirements of the statutes pertaining to their office, give bond in the form therein set forth. Among the conditions of the form of bond which follows is one to the effect that the principal shall faithfully perforin and discharge all the duties of the office, “and all acts and things required by law, or incident to the said office.” This condition is incorporated in the bond sued on, with the addition of the words “under chapter 39 of said Code.” Now, if the faithful keeping of the school fund is *420not one of the acts required by said chapter, it is manifestly “incident” to the office under said chapter. It.certainly can require no argument to show that the duty of faithfully keeping public money is a necessary incident to the duties of receiving and disbursing it upon proper vouchers. The rulings of the court below were not in accordance with this view, and are therefore erroneous.
Garnett Andrews and R. Bowman, with whom were now Uugent $ MeWillie, filed for the defendants in error a petition for reargument, suggesting that the court erred in construing the statutes, and decided the case without reference to §§ 261, 262, Code 1871. The treasurer is to be held, if at all, for the loss of the fund in this case, under his general bond, not on his special bond prescribed by c. 39 Code 1871.The suit was properly brought in the name of the State of Mississippi, for the use of the board of supervisors.
Judgment reversed, and the demurrer overruled, with leave to plead.
Chalmeks, J.,delivered the following opinion of the court on the petition for reargument: —
Sects. 261, 262, Code 1871, have nothing to do with the case at bar. Those sections relate alone to the bond which the county treasurer gives for the safe-keeping of the county funds eo nomine. This suit is for money belonging to the school fund; and the duties of the treasurer and the bond to be given by him in tins regard are prescribed and regulated by c. 39 Code 1871. The two bonds are as wholly distinct as those which a sheriff gives as sheriff and as tax collector. To hold that the duty of receiving the school funds is covered by the special bond, and the duty of keeping them by the general bond, would be an absurdity. The obligation of the sureties in this case is to be tested by the provisions of c. 39, by the terms of the bond which they signed, and by § 309 of the Code, because this latter section applies to all bonded officers. The conditions of the bond sued on are four: 1st, That the treasurer “ shall faithfully perform and discharge all the duties of treasurer under chapter 39 of the Code; ” 2d, “ and all acts *421and things required by law ” under said chapter ; 3d, “ or incident to said office of treasurer under said chapter; ” 4th, or any laAvs enacted subsequent to the adoption of the Code.
Among’ the duties prescribed by c. 39 are those of receiving' the school funds, and paying them out on proper vouchers. These duties, therefore, are covered by the bond. In addition to these and the other duties specifically enumerated in the statute, the bond, by its terms, protects “ all acts and things required by law, or incident to the office of treasurer, under chapter 39.” These words must be given some meaning. They were thought so important by the law-giver, that it was enacted by § 309 that “ all officers of this State required to give bond for the faithful discharge of the duties of their respective offices ” should insert these words in their bonds. The plain meaning of this is, that the bond shall protect not only a faithful discharge of all the duties which are specifically enumerated in the statute, but also “ all acts and things incident to the office : ” that is to say, all things which necessarily belong to or are incidental to it. What these things are must be determined by looking to the character of the office, as indicated bj^ the specific duties enumerated. When we see that among the duties annexed to this office are those of receiving and paying out school money, on proper vouchers, we have no hesitation in saying that there also necessarily belongs to it, as one of its incidents, the duty of keeping such money. Any other construction would strike out of the bond a condition which the legislature thought so important that they directed it to be inserted in all official bonds in this State. The very object of this was to make the bond cover not only duties specially enumerated, but also all duties fairly incidental to the office, as indicated by its character and by those enumerated.
Respect for the eminent counsel who insist that we were in error in our former opinion induces us to submit this exposition of a subject which, we think, is too plain for argument.