State v. Teague
State v. Teague
Opinion of the Court
The opinion of the Court was delivered by
This was an action to recover from B. H. Teague, as executor of Isaac N. Teague, deceased, late County Treasurer of Barnwell County, and the other defendants, as sureties of said Isaac aST. Teague, on his official bond, various sums of money alleged to have been collected by him, as well for the Counties of Barnwell and Aiken as the above named plaintiff, and not accounted for. The record filed in this Court, though quite voluminous, presents but few questions for our consideration. The first error complained of is that the Referee to whom the issues in the action were referred should have regarded the tax duplicate as the legal and proper basis of charge against the County Treasurer and any other evidence as secondary. We are not aware of any statute declaring such a rule of evidence in conducting an investigation of the fiscal transactions of a County Treasurer, and, indeed, it would be very extraordinary if such were the ease, for, if so, then the Treasurer would be relieved from accountability for various items,
The next ground of complaint is that the cash books of Isaac N. Teague, deceased, are secondary evidence, and are not admissible so long as “ the statutory basis of charge is available.”
Besides the considerations which have just been adverted to for the purpose of showing that the tax duplicate, which we understand as designated in this exception by the terms “ statutory basis of charge,” is not the only evidence in such a case, it is difficult to perceive what objection a party could properly make to the introduction of his own admissions in evidence against him, especially when such admissions are in writing, entered in a book, which, it is but reasonable to suppose, would be kept with all due care. And when, in addition to this, it appears, from the testimony of Hewitt, that Teague, in his lifetime, had stated “ that the debits in these books (referring to the cash books) represented moneys received by him as County Treasurer,” there cannot be a doubt that these books constituted a proper source of evidence.
It is said, however, that, granting this to be so, if they are received in evidence they should be received as evidence for as well as against the County Treasurer, — that is, if the debit side is to constitute evidence to charge him, the credit side must be received as evidence to discharge him.
Without entering upon the discussion of the general question as to when and in what cases the rule contended for applies, for it certainly does not apply in all cases and under all circumstances, it is sufficient for us to say that the Treasurer is a public officér, who is only allowed to pay out the public money for the purposes, in the manner and upon such authority as the lavv prescribes; and if in any of these respects the law is not complied with, such omission constitutes an official default, for which both the officer and bis sureties are liable. And as the County Treasurer could not lawfully pay out the County funds, except upon the warrant of the Board of County Commissioners, only in certain specified cases, not necessary to be mentioned here, as théy do not affect the inquiry which we are pursuing, even before the passage of the Act imposing a penalty for so doing, or the school fund, except upon the approval of the County School Commissioner, or the State funds, except upon the receipt of the State Treasurer, any other evidence of such payments would be secondary and inadmissible until the
The appellants insist, however, that even if the Treasurer himself cannot successfully sustain the objection to the admissibility of his cash books, that the sureties can, so far as they are concerned. This objection proceeds from ignoring the terms of the condition of the official bond. The sureties as well as the principal bind themselves, not that they, but that the principal, shall perform the duties of his office in the manner required by law. Their contract is simply an undertaking that the principal will perform his duties. Hence, in an action founded on the breach of such contract the conduct of the sureties is not in question. The only inquiry is whether the principal has failed to perform any one or more of such duties, and his admission of such failure is legal and proper evidence of the fact in issue, not only against him, but against his sureties also, when they are, as in this case, parties to the proceeding.
In Ordinary vs. Condy, (2 Hill, 313,) Harper, J., says: “It seems to be matter of absolute necessity in many eases that the admissions of the principal, or some of his acts which are equivalent to admissions, should be admitted to charge the sureties.”
Indeed, in a somewhat analogous case, the Courts of this State have gone even further and held that, in an action against the sureties upon an administration bond, the decree of the Ordinary fixing a default upon the administrator, even under a proceeding to which the sureties were not parties, is at least prima faeie evidence against the sureties, and, unless it is rebutted or shown to be erroneous, will be conclusive.- — See Lyles vs. Caldwell, 3 McC., 225; Shelton ads. Cureton, 3 McC., 412; The Ordinary vs. Condy, 2 Hill, 313. In this case there was no offer or attempt to introduce auy evidence tending to show that the admissions of the County Treasurer, as derived from his cash books, were not true or were erroneous, the principal evidence relied upon being the credits which he had given himself on his cash books and certain papers purporting to be vouchers, many of which were so manifestly illegal and defective that no attempt has been made here to sustain them.
The next error complained of, in improperly allowing an amendment of the pleadings, is of no practical importance as we are given to understand at the bar, and therefore has received no consideration either in the argument or at the hands of the Court.
The motion is dismissed.
Reference
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