City of Harrisburg v. Guiles
City of Harrisburg v. Guiles
Opinion of the Court
Opinion by
Isaac W. Guiles was appointed by the treasurer of the city of Harrisburg collector of the unpaid taxes for the year 1893. He entered into a bond to the city in the sum of $30,513.02 with the appellants as sureties. The condition of the obligation was that “ if he faithfully accounted, according to law, for all taxes charged in the duplicate delivered or to be delivered to him by said treasurer, and in all respects faithfully performed the duties of his appointment as prescribed by the laws of Pennsylvania and the ordinances of the city of Harrisburg, then the obligation to be void, or else to be and remain in full force and virtue.” As he failed in the performance of the duty imposed by his appointment the city entered judgment on the bond and issued execution thereon. The appellants alleging that the execution was improvidently issued petitioned the court to set it aside. On this petition a rule to show cause why the execution should not be set aside was granted, pending which the writ was stayed, lien of levy remaining. In another petition filed subsequent to the petition already referred to, the appellants claim, inter alia, that they were relieved from liability on the bond in question by the fraudulent concealment by the city officials of the misconduct of Guiles as collector of delinquent taxes from and including the year 1885 down to and including the year 1893. They also charge the city officials with wilful neglect of their duties pertaining to the collection of said taxes. On this petition the appellants prayed for and obtained a rule to show cause why judgment should not be opened to enable them to interpose their defense to it. Upon a full hearing had on the rule to show cause the court below held that the claim and charge aforesaid were not warranted by the evidence and, having ascertained the amount due to the city from the collector and his sureties, discharged the rule to show cause and allowed the execution on the judgment to proceed for the sum due, with interest thereon from October 15, 1897. S. W. Fleming and H. J. Forney, two of the sureties on the bond, being dissatisfied with the decision of the court below, appealed from it.
The principal question raised by the assignments of error is
The assignments are dismissed and the judgment is affirmed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- City of Harrisburg v. Isaac W. Guiles, George R. Fleming, S. W. Fleming and H. J. Forney
- Cited By
- 8 cases
- Status
- Published
- Syllabus
- Principal and surety—Failure to inform, sureties of misconduct of principal. Where a judgment, entered by a city against a eoileetor of delinquent taxes and his sureties, by virtue of a warrant of attorney contained in his bond, is attacked by the sureties, only on the ground that the city did not communicate to the sureties the negligence of the collector, the sureties are not relieved from liability for moneys for which the collector failed to account, where it does not appear that the moneys were embezzled or that the city officials wilfully and fraudulently concealed from the sureties the negligence and irregularities of the treasurer in the performance of his official duties.