County of Cass v. Lee

1 Comp. Laws 1929, § 1193 et seq., are specific in their provisions for deposit of county funds. Under the statute the bond at bar expired December 31, 1932. It was the duty of the board of supervisors to designate depositories for the two-year period beginning January 1, 1933. The bid of the five banks of the county, filed October 18, 1932, was provided for by statute and covered the ensuing two years after December 31st. It was the duty of the board to accept or reject the bid. If it accepted, it would contract for the safe keeping of the funds and arrange the depository bond. If it rejected the bid, it was bound to seek bids from other banks. The law provided that no county *Page 493 moneys should be deposited until a depository bond had been approved.

Act No. 40, Pub. Acts 1932 (1st Ex. Sess.), made no change in the machinery of the above statute except that it suspended operation of the provision requiring depository bonds and committed to the board the discretion as to whether bonds should be required. This act was adopted to relieve an intolerable situation caused by banking conditions, refusal of surety companies to write depository bonds or official bonds carrying depository liability, and inability of private sureties to qualify or their unwillingness to assume the risk of bank failures. Suspension of laws requiring depository bonds was necessary to carry on the public business and to prevent general bank failures. It was done by providing that all public bodies, except the State, should designate depositories, the designation to relieve the bonds of officers from liability for bank deposits, and permitting local funds to be deposited locally on such conditions as local boards should find possible or advisable.

In line with what seems to have been a practice of the board of supervisors, the matter of deposits was not determined at the October, 1932, meeting, but the bid was referred to the judiciary committee and the meeting was adjourned to January. On January 9, 1933, the board adopted a resolution:

"On motion of Supervisor Harwood, supported by Supervisor Carter, the following county banks were named as depositories: The clerk and treasurer were instructed to divide the funds as equally among the five banks as possible."

The banks named were the five which had submitted the bid in October. Informally and not of *Page 494 record, in October and January, the board and the judiciary committee discussed the clause in the bid:

"We will furnish no bond for such deposits in compliance with Act No. 40, Pub. Acts 1932 (1st Ex. Sess.)."

The movers of the resolution testified they thought the former bonds would continue to cover past and future deposits, and so the failure to insert in the resolution a requirement for depository bonds was intentional. This view was not communicated to the banks or sureties; nor can it change the legal effect of what was done. They understood the resolution was an acceptance of the bid.

Aside from the understanding of individual supervisors, the bid and resolution constituted an offer and acceptance, resulting in a contract, in accordance with the statutes and the powers of the board, for deposit of county funds for two years without depository bonds. It substituted a new contract of deposit for the arrangement which had expired on December 31st. If a new depository bond had been ordered and given, it would have been substituted for the former bond and have discharged it. Lawrence v. American Surety Co. of New York,263 Mich. 586, 604 (88 A.L.R. 535). And the new bond would have covered both existing and future deposits.

"Presentation and approval of security for funds already deposited is equivalent to withdrawal and redeposit and releases the former security from future liability and binds the new, if so intended." Lawrence v. American Surety Co. ofNew York, supra, 602.

The intention must be gathered not from what a party now says he then thought but from the contract *Page 495 itself. The unequivocal acceptance of the offer fixed the intention of the parties to create a depository contract without bonds. It could have no other effect than a substitution for the former arrangement and its release.

Separation of the deposits into old and new, with reference to the date of the resolution, is artificial and arbitrary. The statute does not provide for it. The statute contemplated a new arrangement after December 31, 1932, covering all county funds. The board could have ordered a separation and bond for part but did not. The bid did not suggest a division; nor did the resolution. On the contrary, the latter contemplated a single arrangement covering all funds because it provided for equal distribution among the banks.

United States Fidelity Guaranty Co. v. City of Pensacola,68 Fla. 357 (67 So. 87, Ann. Cas. 1916 B, 1236), and contra cases, Pacific County v. Illinois Surety Co., 234 Fed. 97, andUnited States Fidelity Guaranty Co. v. American BondingCo., 31 Okla. 669 (122 P. 142), are not in point because they did not involve a new depository agreement made after the termination of the bond nor a statute such as Act No. 40, Pub. Acts 1932 (1st Ex. Sess.).

In my opinion, the invoking of Act No. 40 results in a new depository arrangement which supersedes and discharges all former ones except as they may be expressly reserved. Upon no other construction could the purpose of the statute have been worked out and the public interest and necessities of official business conserved.

Reversed, without new trial, and with costs to defendants.

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POTTER, C.J., and NELSON SHARPE, NORTH, WIEST, BUTZEL, and EDWARD M. SHARPE, JJ., concurred with FEAD, J.