Judges: Wall
Filed Date: 4/11/1892
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/18/2024
This was debt on the bond of Charles S. Frost as sheriff. The alleged breach was that he had collected certain money on an execution in favor of Kate C. Kingston and had failed to pay the same to her. The money was in fact paid to the attorneys of record of the plaintiff except the sum of about $63.50 which the sheriff retained to pay a fee .bill for that amount he then held against the plaintiff. The payment to the attorneys was rightly made unless it was done contrary to the express order and direction of the plaintiff. She testified that she had told the sheriff to pay the money to her and to no one else, and that after such instruction he paid it to the attorneys. This testimony of hers is not contradicted. The sheriff was not a witness, but it was shown that about a year after the transaction he went to the State of California, and that at the time of the trial his residence was unknown to the sureties, who alone were defending the suit. It appears that immediately upon the receipt of the money the attorneys notified the plaintiff that they had it and she went to, their office in response to the notice.
They explained the matter to her and stated the amount of their charges for fees and expenses in that and other suits connected with it, and it seemed that after deducting this bill there would be but little if anything coining to her. She made no objection whatever except to the fact that the sheriff, who was her brother, had retained the amount of the fee bill, and said she would not stand that, but would have all or nothing. She then left the office and had no further conference with the attorneys in reference to the matter.
About a month later she gave an order to another attorney, directed to these attorneys, for the sum of $50, which they paid. Nearly five years after that the present suit was brought. The case was tried by the court, a jury being waived, and the finding was for the defendants, followed by a judgment accordingly against the plaintiff for cost.
Assuming that the evidence shows an express order by the plaintiff to the sheriff which would revoke the prima faeie authority of the attorneys to receive the money, it is contended in support of the conclusion reached by the court that there was a ratification of the sheriff’s action. We are inclined to agree with this position. It is urged that the payment of the $50 should not be regarded as a ratification because the person to whom it was payable expressly informed the attorneys it was not to be so considered. We think this is not shown by the evidence, but that the remark upon which this assumption rests was not intended to be so construed and that it probably referred to another matter. Such a view was quite inconsistent with the understanding the attorneys then had of the objection and the only objection she had made to the action of the sheriff, viz., that he had retained the amount due on the fee bill.
Considering all that transpired, the relationship of the sheriff and the plaintiff, her conversation with her attorneys, and her apparent acquiescence in their receiving what they had received, her subsequent action in drawing the sum of $50, and her long delay in asserting the present demand, we are of opinion there was enough to warrant the court in holding that the plaintiff had ratified the action of the sheriff. This, upon the assumption that the present position of the plaintiff as to the order alleged to have been given the sheriff, was well founded. Whether this was so or not rested almost wholly if not entirely upon the plaintiff’s own testimony, and much would depend upon the credit to be given to her statement. The court may have been satisfied that after so long a time her memory was probably at fault as to the alleged instruction to the sheriff. It would seem that if she was then conscious that her directions had been disregarded she would immediately have taken the necessary step, to enforce her rights in the premises, and with such a. cause of action as now asserted she would not have delayed bringing the suit for nearly five years. The judgment will be affirmed.
Judgment a/ffh'med.