Judges: CLARKSON, J.
Filed Date: 1/10/1934
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 4/15/2017
The judgment of the court below is as follows: "This cause coming on to be heard before his Honor, N. A. Sinclair, judge presiding at the August Term, 1933, of Superior Court of Bladen County, and it appearing to the court that at the April Term, 1933, of the Superior Court of Bladen County, on motion of H. H. Clark, attorney for the defendants, for a reference of this action, that the same was referred to R. J. Hester, attorney, who filed his said report in this court; and it further appearing to the court that no exceptions were filed to said report either by the defendants or plaintiffs; and a jury trial having been waived and the questions of facts involved submitted to the court for adjudication, together with the referee's report, and motion being made by attorneys for plaintiffs for adoption of said referee's report as the judgment of this court, said report adjuding [adjudging] that the plaintiffs were entitled to recover of the defendants the sum of $1,000.50 and interest thereon from 23 July, 1928, until paid. It is therefore, on motion of P. R. Hines and H. L. Williamson, attorneys for plaintiffs, ordered, adjudged and decreed by the court that the report filed by said referee to this action be and the same is hereby adopted as the judgment of this court, and that the plaintiffs recover of the defendants, Irene Davis, H. C. Bridger, Jr., E. N. Davis and D. M. Shaw, or either of them, the sum of $1,000.50 with interest thereon from 23 July, 1928, until paid, and that the costs of this action, including allowance to referee, be taxed against the defendants. It appearing to the court that plaintiffs, through their counsel, made a motion as of nonsuit as to the defendant, county of Bladen, it is further ordered and adjudged that a judgment of nonsuit be entered in this action as to the county of Bladen. It is further adjudged that the referee be allowed the sum of $100.00 in full for his services. It is further adjudged that the attorneys for the plaintiffs be allowed for their services in this action the sum of $350.00 jointly."
The exceptions and assignments of error and necessary facts will be considered in the opinion. *Page 567 The only exception and assignment of error is to the judgment as signed by the court below. The defendant, Irene Davis contends that the personal judgment against her should be modified. In this we think she is correct. The record discloses that Irene Davis was the devisee under the last will and testament of W. J. Davis, clerk of the Superior Court of Bladen County, N.C.
The plaintiffs in their complaint say: "The judgment against Irene Davis, the devisee under the last will and testament of W. J. Davis, should be declared by the court to be a specific and prior lien against said property according to law," etc. And in their prayer for judgment: "That in event the funds derived from a sale of the property included in said deed of trust fails to pay and satisfy any judgment rendered herein against her, then the said judgment to be declared by the court to be a specific and prior lien against any other property that may have been owned by W. J. Davis, at the time of his death." We think the judgment should be modified in accordance with the complaint and the prayer of plaintiffs.
In Andres v. Powell,
The defendants further contend: "Accepting the findings of the referee to be true, as we must do, and as the court has done and adopted as a part of the judgment, are defendants, Bridger, Shaw and Davis liable?" We think so.
It is alleged in the complaint: "That as the plaintiffs are advised, informed and believe, the defendants H. C. Bridger, Jr., E. N. Davis, and C. M. Shaw, while acting as county commissioners of said county during the years of 1926, 1927, and 1928, failed and neglected to perform the duties of their office as required by law, in that — (a) They *Page 568 failed and neglected to lawfully induct into office on the first Monday in December, 1926, the clerk of the Superior Court of Bladen County, in that they did not require or receive a bond from said clerk as required by law." The referee finds: "It is admitted that W. J. Davis had no bond from the time he was inducted into office in 1926."
It was the duty of the county commissioners: C. S., 1297 (12) — "To approve bonds of county officers and induct into office. To qualify and induct into office at the meeting of the board, on the first Monday in the month next succeeding their election or appointment, the following named county officers, to wit: clerk of the Superior Court, sheriff, coroner, treasurer, register of deeds, surveyor, and constable; and to take and approve the official bonds of such officers, which the board shall cause to be registered in the office of the register of deeds. The original bonds shall be deposited with the clerk of the Superior Court, except the bond of the said clerk, which shall be deposited with the register of deeds, for safe keeping," etc.
In Hipp v. Farrell,
In Fore v. Feimster,
In the Fore case, supra, the violation of the particular act is made a misdemeanor. In the Noland case, supra (p. 254-5), is the following: "True, in a number of cases, notably Hipp v. Farrell,
C. S., 335, is as follows: "Every commissioner who approves an official bond, which he knows to be, or which by reasonable diligence he could have discovered to have been, insufficient in the penal sum, or in the security thereof, shall be liable as if he were a surety thereto, and may be sued accordingly by any person having a cause of action on said bond."
C. S., 1297 (12), above set forth is mandatory on the county commissioners. An imperative, unmistakable duty is imposed and there is no penalty or crime attached for the nonperformance of this clear ministerial duty in the act under consideration. C. S., 325, provides a *Page 570 penalty for officers acting without bond. C. S., 326, provides for condition and terms of official bonds. C. S., 1302, fixes a penalty on any county commissioner and also makes it a misdemeanor for neglect of duty. C. S., 4384, provides that wilful omissions, neglect or refusal to discharge any duties of his office — guilty of a misdemeanor and removal from office if wilful and corrupt.
C. S., 335, supra, which makes the commissioners liable as surety for taking an insufficient bond, construed in pari materia with C. S., 1297 (12), necessarily takes the present case out of the decisions in the Fore and Noland cases. Public officials entrusted in so important a matter as this mandatory statute, we find from the weight of authority, are held individually liable to any one injured by their wilful failure or neglect of duty. To hold otherwise would put a premium on inefficiency and neglect.
Troop, Public Officers, section 726, in part, at p. 690, thus states the principle: "But an officer owes to every individual, the duty of performing his official acts with due care; and he is consequently liable to any individual, who is injured in person or in property by reason of his negligence in performing a ministerial act. Many instances, where actions for such negligence have been sustained, against not only the officer himself, but against the sureties in his official bond, have been given in former chapters of this work."
The defendants made no exception or assignment of error on the report of the referee. The referee found: "That at the time of the death of Mr. W. J. Davis (20 April, 1928), he was due the estate of L. T. Cain the sum of $2,133.33 and not $1,132.83 (the amount turned over to Newton Robinson by his widow). The estate then is entitled to the difference between $2,133.33 and $1,132.83, which is the sum of $1,000.50, and it is found that the estate is due the interest upon the sum of $1,000.50 from 23 July, 1928, until paid."
It is too late now for defendants to complain. In Mfg. Co. v. LumberCo.,
Modified and affirmed. *Page 571
Morganton Manufacturing & Trading Co. v. Foy-Seawell Lumber ... ( 1919 )