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People v. Otto

Supreme Court of California
Jun 27, 1888
77 Cal. 45 (Cal. 1888)

Opinion

         Department One

         Hearing in Bank denied.

         Appeal from a judgment of the Superior Court of Del Norte County.

         COUNSEL:

         R. W. Miller, R. G. Knox, William H. H. Hart, and Aylett R. Cotton, for Appellants.

          L. F. Coburn, and L. F. Cooper, for Respondent.


         JUDGES: Searls, C. J. Paterson, J., McKinstry, J., and Temple, J., concurred.

         OPINION

          SEARLS, Judge

          [18 P. 870] This is an appeal by the defendants, William M. Waggle, J. L. Lake, and James K. Johnson, sureties on the bond of William H. Otto, sheriff and ex officio tax collector of the county of Del Norte, from a judgment against them for $ 1,769.31, on account of taxes collected by said Otto for the fiscal year ending July 1, 1885.

         Judgment was rendered upon the pleadings as to the appellants, and upon the default of defendant Otto.

         The complaint is not verified. The answer sets out by denying generally all the material allegations of the complaint, "except such allegations as are hereinafter admitted, stated, or qualified."

         It is admitted that Otto was tax collector, and that defendants executed jointly and severally with one Hamilton the bond in question.

A material part of the answer is in the following language:

         " 14. Defendants allege that they are informed and believe, and therefore aver the same to be true, that subsequent to the fifteenth day of November, 1884, and prior to the second day of January, 1885, one Robert Jenkins, acting as under-sheriff of said county, did collect a large amount of state and county taxes from divers persons, tax-payers in said county, for the fiscal year ending July 1, 1885, to wit, the amount of $ 1,769.31, and receipted for the same by signing the name of William H. Otto, tax collector, 'by Robert Jenkins, under-sheriff,' without right or authority of law so to do."

         As Robert Jenkins is averred to have acted as under-sheriff, and there being no allegation that he wrongfully acted as such, it may properly be inferred that he was de jure as well as de facto the under-sheriff of defendant Otto.

         " That a person acting as a public officer was regularly appointed to it," is one of the presumptions of law established by the Code of Civil Procedure, section 1963, subdivision 14.

         " That official duty has been regularly performed," is another presumption, established by subdivision 15 of the same section.

         The question then is, Had Jenkins, as under-sheriff, authority to collect the taxes in question and receipt for the same in the name of Otto, the tax collector, so as to bind the latter and his bondsmen?

         Sections 4176 to 4192 of the Political Code enumerates many of the duties of sheriffs.

         Section 4173 provides that "the sheriff must perform such other duties as are required by law."

         In Del Norte County the sheriff is ex officio tax collector, and all the duties of that office devolve upon him by law, and must be performed by him.

         " Whenever the official name of any principal officer is used in any law conferring power, imposing duties or liabilities, it includes his deputies." (Pol. Code, sec. 4114.)

         " In all cases not [18 P. 871] otherwise provided for, each deputy possesses the powers, and may perform the duties, attached by law to the office of his principal." (Pol. Code, sec. 865.)

         All county officers, except judges, supervisors, and justices of the peace, may appoint deputies at pleasure, and without limitation as to number. (Pol. Code, sec. 4112.)

         The under-sheriff is a general deputy. He performs all the duties of a deputy, has like powers and authority, and his principal is bound by his acts in like manner as by those of other parties. In addition to this, the under-sheriff has certain powers in case of the absence or sickness of his principal not possessed by an ordinary deputy. He may be termed a vice-sheriff, who acts in certain contingencies in place of the sheriff, and who in addition performs the duties of a deputy.

         Under such circumstances, and in view of the various provisions of the law, the tax collector is liable for his acts in collecting taxes, and he being liable, the sureties on his official bond as such tax collector are equally liable.

         It is true, the clause of the answer set out supra avers that Jenkins collected and receipted for the taxes "without right or authority of law so to do"; but this is the statement of a mere conclusion of law.

         His authority depended upon the fact of his being the under-sheriff, which is not denied.

         We find nothing in the answer altering or modifying the effect of the admission under consideration. There is no denial of all the allegations of the complaint, but, as before stated, a denial of all the allegations "except such allegations as are hereinafter admitted, stated, or qualified ."

         The statement that Jenkins acted as under-sheriff, and collected $ 1,769.31, is an admission which qualifies the general denials of the answer.

         The answer further specifically denies that Otto, the tax collector, has collected and withheld from the treasury of the county the sum of $ 1,769.31, but does not aver that he paid over, or deny that he withheld, the money collected by Jenkins.

         Again, in the thirteenth subdivision of the answer, defendants aver that Otto, as tax collector, collected $ 20,711.85, and that he paid it over, etc., "and that he did not withhold from the said treasury of said county the sum of $ 1,769.31, taxes collected by him," etc., or any other sum or sums whatever, as wrongfully alleged in plaintiff's complaint.

         There is nothing in these denials upon which perjury could be assigned, upon a showing that a sum of $ 1,769.31 was collected by Jenkins and never paid over by Otto. The only other denials are of conclusions of law which need not be noticed.

         The further defense cannot be maintained. It is founded upon the statement that Hamilton, one of the sureties on the official bond, was, upon his own application, discharged therefrom as provided by statute; but without any notice to the other sureties, or any notice; that at the date of such release Otto was not indebted as tax collector; that by the release of Hamilton the official bond of Otto was reduced in amount to a sum less than that required by law; that the clerk has neglected and refused to publish notice of the withdrawal of Hamilton from the bond, or of the filing of a supplemental bond, etc., although there is and was a newspaper published in the county, etc.

         The Political Code, sections 972 to 980, both inclusive, provides the manner in which sureties may be released from official bonds, additional sureties obtained, and the effect thereof.

         Section 977 expressly provides that "the release, discharge, voluntary withdrawal, or incompetency of a surety on any official bond does not affect the bond as to the remaining sureties thereon, or alter or change their liability in any respect."

         Official bonds in this state are joint and several, and the discharge of one or more of the sureties under our law does not operate as a discharge of the others. (Supervisors v. Bird , 31 Cal. 67.)          The questions presented in the answer are in the main the same as those raised by the demurrer, which was properly overruled.

         The judgment is affirmed.


Summaries of

People v. Otto

Supreme Court of California
Jun 27, 1888
77 Cal. 45 (Cal. 1888)
Case details for

People v. Otto

Case Details

Full title:THE PEOPLE, Respondent, v. WILLIAM H. OTTO et al. WILLIAM M. WAGGLE et…

Court:Supreme Court of California

Date published: Jun 27, 1888

Citations

77 Cal. 45 (Cal. 1888)
18 P. 869

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