State ex rel. Wheeler v. Adams

BLAND, P. J.

Defendant Adams was tbe county treasurer of Butler county in tbe year 1899. Tbe other defendants are tbe sureties on bis official bond. On July 29,1899, tbe county court of Butler county ordered and caused to be issued and delivered to plaintiff Wheeler a county warrant for $3,900, payable out of moneys that bad been theretofore appropriated to what was called tbe swamp land fund, and which bad come into tbe county treasury from tbe sale of swamp lands. Plaintiff presented tbe warrant to. Adams as county treasurer and demanded payment. Although there were ample funds, which bad been credited to tbe so-called swamp land fund in tbe treasury to pay said warrant, Adams refused to pay tbe same. Afterwards plaintiff sued out of tbe Supreme Court an alternative writ of mandamus directed to Adams to pay said warrant or to show cause. To tbe alternative writ Adams set up in bis return substantially tbe same facts as an excuse or reason for not paying the warrant as is contained in defendant’s answer in tbe present suit. Relator in tbe mandamus proceeding moved for .judgment and for a peremptory writ of mandamus notwithstanding tbe return. Tbe Supreme Court granted tbe motion and awarded a peremptory writ commanding Adams to pay tbe warrant which be promptly obeyed by paying tbe same.

*472The present suit is on the bond of Adams as county treasurer to recover certain damages, which plaintiff alleges he sustained by reason of the refusal of Adams to pay the warrant. The items of damages for which he sues and which the court allowed him to recover were his attorney’s fees and other expenses incurred in the prosecution of the mandamus suit, and six per cent interest per annum on the amount of the warrant ($3,900) from the date of its presentation for payment to the date it was paid.

The special defense set up in the answer is to the effect that the moneys coming into the hands of the county treasurer from the sale of swamp lands belonged to and should be credited to the school fund, that there is no such fund known to the law as the county swamp land fund and that it was beyond the power and jurisdiction of the county court to draw the warrant in question payable out of moneys arising from the sale of swamp lands; that for these reasons the warrant was illegal and void.

The facts out of which the warrant originated are circumstantially stated in the answer. They are substantially the same facts and circumstances contained in the return of Adams to the alternative writ of mandamus issued by the Supreme Court and are effectually and finally disposed of against the contention of defendants by the Supreme Court in its opinion in that case (161 Mo. 369). In view of the decision of the Supreme Court in the mandamus proceeding, there is nothing left in this case for adjudication but the damages which plaintiff ought to recover, for Adams is unquestionably liable for such damages, however honest may have been his intention in refusing to pay the warrant when it was first presented. Being but a ministerial officer, he acted at his peril in refusing to pay the warrant and is liable for his mistake of duty. School Board ex rel. v. Hull, 72 Mo. App. 403; Knox County v. *473Hunolt, 110 Mo. 67; Insurance Co. v. Leland, 90 Mo. 177.

Plaintiff testified tfiat fie paid $500 attorney’s fee, $29.50 for printing briefs and $50 for tfie traveling expenses of fiis attorney in attending tfie Supreme Court in tfie mandamus suit, and proved by several competent witnesses tfiat tfie attorney’s fee of $500 was reasonable. Defendants introduced evidence tending to prove tfiat from two hundred to two hundred and fifty dollars was a reasonable attorney’s fee for tfie prosecution of tfiat suit to a successful termination.

On tfie measure of damages tfie court gave tfie following declaration of law:

“6. The court declares tfie law to be tfiat if tfie court shall believe and find from tfie testimony tfiat tfie plaintiff is entitled to recover in this cause, tfien tfie plaintiff is entitled to recover, as damages, all such, sums of money as fie was necessarily compelled to expend and pay out for attorney’s fees and other expenses incurred by him in and about all such necessary litigation as fie was compelled to institute and prosecute to compel tfie payment of said warrant by tfie defendant Adams, and also tfie interest on tfie amount of said warrant at tfie rate of six per cent per annum from tfie time when tfie said Adams so refused to pay tfie said warrant until tfie time at which plaintiff received payment for tfie same, and tfiat after the court shall have ascertained tfie amount of damages which plaintiff has sustained by reason of defendant Adams’ refusal to pay said warrant, tfien tfie plaintiff is entitled to judgment for double tfie amount of damages so found to have been sustained by him.”

Tfie court, to whom tfie issues were submitted, sitting as a jury, found for plaintiff and assessed fiis damages at $893.50, and on motion of plaintiff doubled the damages assessed and rendered judgment for tfie pen-altv of tfie bond to be discharged on tfie payment of $1,787.

*474Tiie declaration of law given by tbe court shows that the court did not take into account the eight per cent interest plaintiff testified he was compelled to pay for money borrowed during the time the payment of the warrant was withheld and which he counted on as an item of his damages. There is no question but that the plaintiff was entitled to the legal rate of interest on the $3,900 from the date of the presentation of his warrant, when it should have been paid, to the date it was actually paid, and this is what the court awarded on this item. Adams did not stand in the relation of a debtor to the plaintiff, but in the relation of a public officer wrongfully withholding a public fund to which plaintiff was entitled. To obtain this fund, plaintiff was forced to resort to the Supreme Court for the extraordinary writ of mandamus to compel Adams to perform his official duty and we have no doubt that the money he had to pay out as attorney’s fees and other legitimate items of costs and expense in the prosecution of that suit was a proper element of damages to be recovered in this suit, hence we find no fault with the measure of actual damages adopted by the learned trial judge. But it is contended that there is no authority in law for doubling the damages.

Section 6772, article 4, Revised Statutes 1899, provides : “No county treasurer shall refuse the payment of any warrant legally drawn upon him and presented for payment,” when there is money sufficient in the treasury to pay said warrant and all prior warrants drawn against the same fund.

Section 6808, of the same article, provides as follows:

“Any county treasurer violating any provisions of this article shall be deemed guilty of a misdemeanor and shall, on conviction, be punished as provided by law, and be removed from office, and shall forfeit and pay to the party aggrieved thereby, double damages for the injury sustained, which may be recovered by *475an action in the ordinary form, to the use of snch party against snch treasnrer and his sureties on his official bond in any court of competent jurisdiction; or the party aggrieved may recover like damages in a suit before a justice of the peace, in case the amount claimed shall not exceed his jurisdiction, against such treasurer and his sureties jointly or severally, at the option of the party suing; and such suit, when commenced, shall be conducted to final action in the same manner as provided by law for the commencement and prosecution of suits in justices’ courts.”

It was on the authority of the latter section that the circuit court doubled the damages.

If an indictment or information had been filed against Adams in a court of competent jurisdiction, charging him with wrongfully and willfully refusing to pay the plaintiff’s warrant and he had been put upon his trial and convicted, we think, if the fact had been alleged in the petition, there is no doubt that the damages assessed in this case might have been doubled, not as compensation to plaintiff, but as an additional penalty for the violation of the law.

The penalties prescribed by the statute to be assessed on conviction are, first, punishment “by imprisonment in the county jail not exceeding six months, or by fine not exceeding two hundred dollars, or by both such fine and imprisonment.” Sec. 2378, R. S. 1899. Second, forfeiture of his office. Third, a penalty by doubling the damages actually sustained, by the party aggrieved by the commission of the misdemeanor, to be assessed, if the aggrieved party after the criminal conviction shall prosecute his civil action in the ordinary form to a successful termination. The penalty of doubling the damages does not follow as a matter of course on the recovery of a judgment against a county treasurer for an omission of duty, but it is a part and parcel of the punishment to be assessed after conviction of the treasurer of a misdemeanor committed by *476a willful refusal to perform, or a willful omission to perform, some duty required of Mm by article 4, supra. And it seems to us that tbe authority to assess this punishment is as much dependent upon a verdict of guilty on an information or indictment against the treasurer as is the authority to send him to jail, to assess a fine against him, or to declare his office forfeited. To entitle the plaintiff to have Ms damages doubled, it devolved on him to plead and to show that Adams had been convicted of a misdemeanor for refusing to pay plaintiff’s warrant on presentation and demand.

2. There is another view of the case wMch we think should prevent the doubling of the damages. It is this: The evidence is that Adams took legal advice in respect to the validity of the warrant and was advised that all moneys coming into his hands from the sale of swamp land belonged to and should be credited to the school fund and that it was beyo.nd the power of the county court to divert such moneys to any other purpose; that acting upon this advice Adams, in good faith and with an honest purpose to protect what he believed to be a sacred fund, refused to pay the plaintiff’s warrant. It is clear that, under tMs evidence, he did not act willfully, that is, knowingly, in disregard of his official duty. In such circumstances he could not and should not be convicted of a misdemeanor for refusing to pay the warrant.

The statute is criminal and penal and should be strictly construed in favor of the citizens. Rozelle v. Harmon, 103 Mo. 339; The State v. McLain, 49 Mo. App. 398. And. the penalties prescribed by the statutes should not be imposed upon a county treasurer unless he wrongfully and willfully violates the law. Penalties are not to be imposed for misconduct unless such conduct comes strictly within the terms of the statute. Houston, etc., R. R. v. Campbell, 43 L. R. A. (Tex.) 225.

It certainly was not the intention of the Legislature that a county treasurer should be fined and im*477prisoned and forfeit his office for honest mistake or omission in the performance of some dnty required of him by article 4, nor was it its intention to punish him hy doubling the damages recovered of him in a civil suit hy a private individual for some mistake, honestly made in the performance of the duties of his office. On the contrary, we think that none of the penalties prescribed hy section 6808 should be inflicted upon him except upon conviction of a misdemeanor in office, as where he had acted willfully in disobedience of the law, or where the act was done without reasonable grounds to believe that it was lawful. There was no conviction of Adams, no evidence that he refused to pay the warrant, without reasonable grounds for believing he was .acting lawfully. We therefore reverse the judgment with directions to the circuit court to enter judgment for the amount of the actual damages assessed, to bear interest from the date of the judgment appealed from.

Ueyburn and Goode, JJ., concur.