Barton County v. Harrington
Barton County v. Harrington
Opinion of the Court
This is a petition to the circuit court of
The case of Turner v. Clark Co., 67 Mo. 243, was an ejectment, and the title of the county was by purchase under a foreclosure of a mortgage given by the collector under circumstances similar to those in the present case, and the title was held good. A suit upon the collector’s official bond was dismissed and a mortgage taken, and a foreclosure of the mortgage was had, and the only question in that case was as to the validity of the title so acquired by the county. In the case now under consideration, a mortgage was taken in 1871 to secure the delinquency of the collector for' $2,000, but in 1872 the county court directed the clerk to cancel the bond, and enter satisfaction of the mortgage, and surrender the same to the collector. The county now applies to a court of equity to set aside this order of the county court. In the Clark county case the mortgage was foreclosed and the title of the county, as purchaser, was questioned in an action of ejectment. In the present case the mortgage was surrendered, and the bond it was given to secure was canceled, perhaps for the reason that the court discovered or believed that they had acted unwisely in allowing such a substitute for the security of the official bond of the collector, and as preliminary to ordering a suit on the official bond.
We are unable to see any ground for the interposition of a court of equity. If the action of the county court in 1872, cancelling this bond and mortgage, was illegal, then the county had nothing to do but proceed on this bond and mortgage. The same facts now alleged could hare been alleged and proved in an action at law on this substituted bond and mortgage. If the action of the court in allowing the substituted bond and mortgage was illegal, the remedy on the official bond of the collector had not been impaired. In either event there was no need of the interposition of a court of equity. There are allegations of fraud and conspiracy in the case, but we presume they were intended merely to give some color to an equitable jurisdiction. It is not easy to conceive of any fraudulent motives that could induce a county court, who had no personal interest in the matter, one way or the other, to annul their first action, which, whatever may be thought of its validity abstractly, was clearly impolitic, unwise and contrary to the spirit of our revenue laws. A delay of -three years was given upon securing six per cent, interest, whilst our statute evidently intends such defalcations to be promptly collected by suit on the' official bond of the defaulting officer. The object of the bill seems to have been to get the advice of the court as to which legal remedy the county should take, whether to sue on the original official bond-of the collector or the substituted One; but it is not
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.