Plaintiff sued Bates County for the sum of one hundred and forty dollars, being the purchase price of seventy gallons of “Killbug Insecticide,” bought in September, 1911, by a sheriff of that county for use in the jail, the poor house and the court house. On a trial before the circuit court, sitting as a jury, judgment was rendered in favor of plaintiff’ for the sum of twenty dollars only, and plaintiff appealed.
The facts are brief, but unique and illuminating. Whether the case originated in the county court and travelled thence to the circuit court by appeal, or whether it was begun originally in the circuit court, is dark and doubtful. Be this as may be, the proceeding is bottomed upon an account for bug exterminator, which, date *302and merely ornamental externals omitted, reads thus:
“Sold to Bates County, Missouri, 70 gallons Kill-hug Insecticide at $2, $140. Killbug Insecticide, guaranteed by the K. C. Disinfecting & Mfg*. Co., under the Insecticide Act of 1910. Serial No. 175.”
To this account is appended the O. K. of one W. J. Bullock, with the statement, to-wit: “I ordered and received the above bill of goods for Bates County, as Sheriff.” ,
Upon the trial the president of plaintiff testified by deposition, and in order, possibly, to show the extent of the infection, he stated that plaintiff sold “this Killbug” to numerous counties in Missouri, Oklahoma and Kansas, and the witness “judged” that a seventy-gallon order was “a reasonable supply for a county like Bates County.” The witness stated that being advised that “these goods” would be delivered for use to the jail, the poor farm, and the court house, he shipped the goods in ten-gallon cans, so that twenty gallons could be conveniently sent to the jail, twenty gallons to the poor farm, and “so much” (meaning the remainder probably) to the court house. Plaintiff took the order from one, the said Bullock, then sheriff of Bates County, through a certain C. W. Meyers, as agent, to which latter, as a commission for obtaining the order from Bullock, forty per cent of the amount of the order, or $56, was paid. Speaking of the valuable and lethal qualities of what the witness amiably but perhaps euphuistically denominated “these goods” he said:
“If there are any roaches shows up (sic) around the building it is used for them. If there are prisoners brought in, they spray their clothes and sometimes, as you know, it is necessary to spray their person with it too. It is an insecticide. We sell it for insecticide, but it is a standard disinfectant. You can use it in a room like this, or any other room, say where one has 'had smallpox, or something like that. It is not for toilets, it is too expensive for that. It is all right to be used for that, but we do not recommend it for toilets, it is *303too expensive . . . The name shows it will hill any bugs or germs it comes in contact with, any insects.” It also sufficiently appeared from this witness’s testimony, that many demands had been made upon defendant for payment, but that payment had never been made.
Bullock, sheriff when the “Killbug Insecticide” was purchased (utterly reckless of the inherent prohibitive richness of this concoction as a deodorizer for sewers et id omne genus), testified that he bought it as a disinfectant, or deodorizer, to discourage an offensive odor which came from the jail sewer, which sewer passed through or near the basement kitchen of the jail, wherein the witness resided. He also said that during his term of office he might have bought as much 320 gallons of disinfectant, and that there was already a barrel on hand when the witness took office, which latter, however, he had never used because he did not recognize it as disinfectant, but thought it was bridge paint He was, he said, compelled to administer this insecticide to this sewer in portions of three or four gallons at a time.
Other testimony came into the case (over plaintiff’s objection, but subject thereto), to the effect that when the case was tried (some two years after the sale here under discussion), there were yet on hand of divers disinfectants more than 320 gallons, a supply, some of the witnesses say, more than sufficient to last Bates County for ten years. Of this supply on hand more than 60 gallons thereof were made up of the remainder of the identical seventy gallons of Killbug Insecticide bought from plaintiff and now here in dispute. Testimony also came in over plaintiff’s objection and which was likewise admitted subject thereto, that the usual and customary price of standard disinfectants was from seventy-five cents to one dollar per gallon. Other necessary facts, if such there be, will be set out in our discussion.
*304^ssignment Ground. *303Plaintiff complains that the court erred in refusing instructions numbered one, two and three, which were offered by plaintiff, but learned counsel does not favor us with any reasons for the. faith which we assume is *304in him, nor does he furnish us with any authorities for the position which he takes. He merely assigns the error and lets it go at that. 'Moreover, the only assignment of error in plaintiff’s motion for a new trial which is at all apposite, is the general one that “the court refused proper declarations of law offered by the plaintiff.” This is not sufficient as an assignment of error, even in a civil case. [Polski v. St. Louis, 264 Mo. 458; Wampler v. Railroad, 190 S. W. 908; State v. Rowe and Sanders, 271 Mo. 88.]
_ ... It is also urged that it was error in the court nisi to admit evidence tending to show- that at the time the “Killbug Insecticide” here in question was bought by the sheriff, he had on hand more than 250 gallons of other disinfectants and insecticides. Likewise that it was error to admit evidence of the price at which other disinfectants were selling at the date of this purchase. Regardless of whether there be inherent error in admitting this evidence or not, it was all admitted by the court “subject to the objection” of plaintiff. In one case the trial court expressed the opinion that the evidence was not admissible, but admitted it subject to plaintiff’s objection. Plaintiff made no further •effort to obtain a definite ruling, nor was any such definite ruling at any time made upon plaintiff’s objections by the trial court. In such case we cannot know whether the court considered this evidence or not. His language when he came to render judgment would indicate that he did not allow it to enter into the case as a deciding factor.
Power of to Bind county. No other errors are called to our attention, although it is suggested^ apposite to the whole case mayhap, but not in such wise as to call for review by us, that the sheriff had power to bind the county. It is probable that even this suggestion is too broad a statement of the controlling law. We took occasion to say in the case of Lamar Twp. v. Lamar, 261 Mo. l. c. 189, that:
*305“Officers are creatures of the law, whose duties are usually fully provided for by statute. In a way they are agents, but they are never general agents, in the sense that they are hampered by neither custom nor law and in the sense that they are absolutely free to follow their own volition. Persons dealing with them do so always with full knowledge of the limitations of their agency and of the laws which, prescribing their duties, hedge them about. They are trustees as to the public money which comes to their hands. The rules which govern this trust are the law pursuant to which the money is paid to them and the law by which they in turn pay it out. Manifestly, none of the reasons which operate to render recovery of money voluntarily paid under a mistake of law by a private person, applies to an officer. The law which fixes his duties is his power of attorney; if he neglect to follow it, his .cestui que trust ought not to suffer. In fact, public policy requires that all officers be required to perform their duties within the strict limits of their legal authority.”
It is not doubted that the statutes (Secs. 1571 and 1573, R. S. 1909) and the construction thereof by this court in a ease to an extent analogous (Harkreader v. Vernon County, 216 Mo. 696) furnish authority to a sheriff of a county to purchase such articles and supplies as are requisite and necessary to keep and maintain the county jail “in good and sufficient condition and repair.” But such authority, absent an order of the county court, which might pro hac vice make him its agent, would not extend to purchases made for the poor house or the poor farm, the custody and control of which are vested by statute in the county court, and not in the sheriff. [Sec. 1343, R. S. 1909.] Likewise, the county court is by statute vested with the control of the court house (Sec. 4081, R. S. 1909), and while it is made the duty of the sheriff ‘ ‘ to furnish fuel, stationery and other things more necessary for the use of the court” (Sec. 3887, R. S. 1909 ), this duty is delimited by the appended provision directing performance thereof *306“whenever ordered by the court.” [Sec. 3887, supra.] This latter conditional duty is disassociated from control of the premises and it a general one which the sheriff owes to the circuit court, to the probate court, and even to the county court itself, though the latter court is the general statutory contracting, auditing and fiscal agency of the county. Clearly, such an order should either be express, or plainly implied from the necessities of the situation.
If so it be that “Killbug Insecticide” is connoted within the extremely general designation of “other things necessary,” as contained in the statute last above mentioned (touching which we venture no opinion), we are able to appreciate the pertinency of the qualifying provision, that a sheriff in furnishing such other necessary things should act only whenever ordered by the court. For it would be to place too great a burden upon even a sheriff’s omniscience to require him to know when “Killbug Insecticide” becomes an absolute necessity for the sanitation and comfort of any of these several courts. On the other hand it might well happen that the duty of providing seventy gallons of “Killbug Insecticide” for the immediate use of a court would become upon occasion so urgent and pressing as to furnish legal warrant for the sheriff’s acting without a solemn order of the court to that end, and that such act might in law be excused upon the ground of necessity, or even, if we may borrow a term from the criminal law, upon the ground of self-defense.
But these important puzzling arid conflicting questions are not confronting us. We merely suggest them as considerations of grave importance to all courts, whom sheriffs are required to serve, reserving our solemn adjudication till a concrete case shall arise wherein we shall meet these points face to face. Since no errors are urged in a manner meet for review, the case ought to be affirmed. .Let this be done.
All concur.