Compton v. Marengo County Bank
Compton v. Marengo County Bank
Opinion of the Court
Motion for summary judgment against depository (Gen. Acts 1915, p. 348) under Code, §§ 5938, 5899, 5900..
In August, 1918, G. E. Compton, styled appellant on the record, was a jury commissioner of Marengo county, under the authority of the act approved August 31, 1909 (Gen. Acts, Sp. Sess. 1909, pp. 305 et seq.), creating such offices and officers.- Section 3 of this act provides:
“Each commissioner shall be paid the sum of five dollars per day for the time actually engaged in the discharge of his duties as such commissioner, to be paid out of the county treasury, upon the warrant of the probate judge of said county. Such warrants are to be issued by said probate judge upon evidence satisfactory to him that such service has been rendered. * * * ”
The motion proceeds on the theory that the depositories of county funds created by the act approved September 15, 1915 (Gen. Acts 1915, pp. 348-350) are public officers, substituted county treasurers, and, primarily, that tbe provisions of Code, § 5938, authorizing summary judgments, under defined circumstances, against a county treasurer and the sureties on that officer’s official bond, have application to such depositories; and, failing this, that Code, §§ 5899, 5900, justify the remedy.
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Since the county depository is not a public, county officer — is a contractee only — and hence not a county treasurer by another name, the summary remedy afforded by Code, §§ 5899, 5900, or 5938 cannot be invoked unless some enactment renders available, by assimilation or otherwise, the summary remedy, against a depository, provided by the Code sections mentioned.
“The bank or banks so designated as depositories for county funds shall be charged with all the duties and subject to the same liabilities in so far as the safe-keeping and paying out of the funds of the several counties are concerned, as are now imposed by law upon county treasurers.”
This language from section 5 of the act of 1915 did not effect to subject depositories to the summary remedy provided by Code, § 593S. In terms the quotation restricted the duties and liabilities of the depositories to “the safe-keeping and paying out of the funds.” The closing expression in Code, § 5938, is penal in nature; and there is nothing in the act creating depositories which indicates any legislative purpose to impose the remedy of the penal statute upon depositories. Even within the purview of the restricted sense in which the terms “duties” and “liabilities” are used in the above quotation, the language employed is not specific, manifesting no particular intent to subject the depositories to the penalty carried by this remedial statute. It is not reasonable to suppose that if the lawmakers had intended to subject the depositories to this summary remedy, penal in some respects, they would have left the expression of that purpose to terms not at all specific. The phrase “the safe-keeping and paying out of the funds,” restrictive of the duties and liabilities therein enjoined upon depositories, itself indicates an intent to go no further than to impose upon the depositories duties and liabilities to those ends, and not to subject the depositories to the provisions of section 5938, whereby a failure of a county treasurer, a public officer, to discharge a defined duty effects to impose upon that officer and the sureties on his official bond, or either, the summary remedy and the penalty of the statute. The conclusion of the Court of Appeals in Underwood Typewriter Co. v. Marengo County Bank, 81 South. 543, decided on certiorari in Ex parte Underwood Typewriter Co., ante, p. 128, 82 South. 158, accorded a different effect to the quoted provisions of section 5 of the act of 1915, and is, hence, grounded in error.
The demurrer to the motion was properly sustained.
Affirmed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Compton v. Marengo County Bank.
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- Published