The act of May 15, 1820, ch. 625, s. 2, which requires new
sureties to be given by certain public officers on or before 30
September 1820, does not expressly or by implication discharge the
former sureties from their liability.
The sureties are not responsible for moneys placed by the
government in the hands of the principal after the legal
termination of his office, but they are responsible for moneys
which came into his hands while in office and which he subsequently
failed to account for and pay over.
In general, laches is not imputable to the government, but
quaere whether in case there is an express agreement
between the government and the principal giving time to the latter
and suspending the right of the former to sue, the sureties are not
discharged as in a similar case between private individuals?
A mere proposition to give time and suspend the right to sue
upon certain conditions and contingencies which are not proved to
have been complied with or to have happened will not discharge the
sureties.
The cases of
United States v.
Kirkpatrick, 9 Wheat. 720, 5 Cond. 733, and
United States v.
Vanzandt, 11 Wheat. 184, 6 Cond. 264, applied to
the determination of the present case.
MR. JUSTICE TRIMBLE delivered the opinion of the Court.
Page 25 U. S. 506
The questions to be decided in this case arise out of a bill of
exceptions taken by the plaintiffs to the charge and instructions
of the circuit court to the jury upon the trial of the cause.
The suit was founded on the official bond of Robert Swartwout as
navy agent, and with whom the defendant had become bound as one of
his sureties. The bond bears date 22 February, 1819, and is in the
penalty of $20,000, with the usual condition, to be void if
Swartwout should faithfully perform the duties of his office and
account for and pay over, when required, the public property and
money placed in his hands.
The declaration alleges as a breach of the condition of the bond
that Swartwout's accounts had been settled by the proper accounting
officers on the ___ day of _____ and that, upon that settlement, a
large balance had been found against him which he had failed and
refused to pay over to the United States when required. The
pleadings having been made up according to the practice of New
York, so as to put in issue the matters in controversy between the
parties, the plaintiffs gave in evidence to the jury the bond, with
its condition, and Swartwout's settled account, duly certified from
the Treasury Department, and the defendant gave in evidence a
letter from the Secretary of the Navy to Robert Swartwout, dated 25
February, 1819; two commissions to Swartwout as navy agent, the one
dated 16 October, 1818, and the other 30 November, 1818, and the
following letter, dated 18 December, 1823, from Mr. Pleasanton,
agent of the Treasury, to Mr. Tillotson, the district attorney,
which will be more particularly noticed hereafter:
"
Treasury Department, Fifth Auditor's Office"
"December 8, 1823"
"SIR: From the best information I can obtain, it seems pretty
certain that if we foreclose the mortgage given to the United
States by General Robert Swartwout and expose
Page 25 U. S. 507
the property to sale, subject to a previous mortgage given to
Mr. Costers we shall lose the whole, or nearly all of our debt,
this property being our only reliance if the sureties should be
discharged by due course of law from their responsibility for the
payment of it. Under these circumstances, the only alternative
which presents itself for securing any considerable portion of the
debt is to allow General Swartwout time within which to make an
advantageous disposition of the property. He expresses a confident
belief that in seven years he would be enabled, by connecting it
with a banking institution for which a charter has already been
granted by the State of New Jersey, not only to pay off the first
mortgage, but our mortgage also."
"It has been recommended by the Navy Department to allow this
time, and I have, accordingly, instead of three years, as intimated
to you some time ago, determined to allow him seven years, provided
the first mortgagee will pledge himself in writing, not to molest
him for the same space of time, and provided also that the bank
with which the property is to be connected shall go into operation
on or before the first of October next. Should the banking capital
not be made up by the time mentioned and the bank fail to go into
operation, this agreement is to be considered wholly null and void.
You will be pleased to take such steps as will give this
arrangement effect."
"As the sureties on General Swartwout's bond dispute our right
to recover the penalty from them, it will be your duty forthwith to
institute suits against them in the circuit court, and judgment
going against us there, you will remove the cause to the Supreme
Court, it being very desirable that the law should be settled in
relation to bonds so situated."
"I have the honor, &c."
"S. PLEASANTON, Agent of the Treasury"
The circuit court decided, and, accordingly, instructed the
jury, first,
"That the defendant, Francis H. Nicoll, was not responsible for
any defalcation that took place on the part of Robert Swartwout as
navy agent subsequent to
Page 25 U. S. 508
30 September, 1820, when in and by the Act of Congress passed 18
May, 1820, new sureties were required by law to be given by the
said Robert Swartwout."
Secondly,
"That the defendant was not responsible for any deficiency of
public money reported on by the account officers of the United
States, subsequent to 30 November, 1822, when it appeared in
evidence that the appointment of Robert Swartwout, as navy agent,
expired by its legal termination."
Thirdly,
"That he left it to them to decide whether the letter from S.
Pleasanton, Esq. addressed to Robert Tillotson, Esq. which had been
read in evidence before the jury, did give further time to Robert
Swartwout for the payment of the debt due the United States, and
that if, in the opinion of the jury, the letter in question did
give time to the said Robert Swartwout until October, 1824, or any
subsequent period, that then the defendant was discharged from his
liability, and their verdict should be rendered for the defendant.
And lastly that the said several matters so produced and read in
evidence on the part of the said Francis H. Nicoll were sufficient
in law to maintain the issue on his part, and that the United
States ought not, upon all the matters produced in evidence, to
maintain the said action,"
&c.
These several opinions and instructions are brought before this
Court for reexamination by the present writ of error.
Upon looking into the act of Congress, passed May 15, 1820,
entitled "An act providing for the better organization of the
Treasury Department," which is the one referred to in the first
instruction, we are satisfied it was misconstrued by the judge. The
second section of the act provides a new and summary process
against public defaulters and their sureties, after 30 September,
1820. The scope and design of the act, in requiring new sureties to
be given by that day, was in order that, if such new sureties
should be given, the summary process might operate upon them, as
well as upon the principal, if the Treasury Department should elect
to pursue such summary process. This is manifest from the provision
in the act that the summary process shall not affect the existing
sureties.
Page 25 U. S. 509
The act nowhere directs the principals to be discharged from
office, upon failure to give new sureties, and if the act had so
directed, they would have remained in office until actually
removed. The law does not in terms declare the existing sureties
shall be discharged from and after 30 September, 1820. It would
require a very strained construction of the statute to discharge
them by implication while their principals were permitted to remain
in office. Such construction would be, we think, against the
manifest intention of the legislature. The 10th section enacts
"That nothing in this act contained shall be construed to take
away or impair any right or remedy which the United States now
have, by law, for the recovery of taxes, debts, or demands."
The cases of
United States v.
Kirkpatrick, 9 Wheat. 720, and
United
States v. Vanzandt, 11 Wheat. 184, are in principle
undistinguishable from this case.
They decide, 1st., that laches is not imputable to the
government; 2d., that the provisions of the law requiring
settlements by its officers to be made at short periods, are
designed for the security and protection of the government, and to
regulate the conduct of those officers; that they are merely
directory to those officers, and form no part of the contract with
the sureties; and the last case decides, 3dly, that where the act
expressly directs a defaulting officer to be recalled at the
expiration of six months from the time of his default, his sureties
are not discharged, but remain liable for his defaults thereafter
until he is actually recalled.
If the second instruction given to the jury was intended to
inform them that the defendant, as surety of Swartwout, was not
legally responsible for money placed by the government in his
hands, after the legal termination of his office, it was
unquestionably correct, and this is the sense in which we suppose
the court meant to be under stood. But if it was intended to convey
the idea that he was not responsible for money which came to
Swartwout's hands while in office, but which he afterwards failed
to at count for and pay over, it was clearly incorrect.
Page 25 U. S. 510
In deciding upon the third instruction given, as to the effect
and operation of Mr. Pleasanton's letter to the district attorney,
it is not intended to give any intimation of what would be the
opinion of this Court, if it had appeared from the letter, that the
government had made any arrangement with Swartwout, without the
assent of his sureties, whereby the right of the government to sue
upon the bond had been suspended to the first day of October, 1824,
or to any subsequent time. Nothing of the kind appears from the
letter. It speaks of a mortgage which had been given by Swartwout,
upon property subject to a former mortgage to Mr. Coster; but it
does not appear that, by the terms of the mortgage, the right to
sue on the official bond was suspended; and the taking of a
collateral security, without suspending the right to sue on the
bond, could not bar the action on the bond. The letter speaks of an
intention formed of giving time upon the mortgage, upon specified
conditions and contingencies; but none of those conditions or
contingencies is shown to have been complied with or to have
happened. The letter contains no contract, and gives no time
per se, upon any consideration binding on the government,
and that the letter did not intend to suspend the right of the
United States to sue on this bond is palpable because it directs
suit to be brought thereon immediately. As no fact connected with
the letter was proved by evidence
aliunde, the
construction of the letter upon its face was matter of law, and the
circuit court ought to have decided and instructed the jury
accordingly, that nothing on the face of the letter constituted any
defense to the action. There was nothing but the construction of
the letter to be left to the jury, and the court ought to have
informed the jury that, according to its true construction, it did
not give time so as to bar the action against the surety.
After the observations already made, it cannot be necessary to
go into any further reasoning to show that the circuit erred in its
concluding instruction, that, upon the whole matter, the law was
for the defendant. It was a conclusion drawn by that court from the
premises it had assumed in the former instruction given, and the
error of these premises
Page 25 U. S. 511
having been shown, the error of the conclusion necessarily
follows.
Some observations were made by the defendant's counsel in
argument, as to the manner in which the debits and credits in
Swartwout's account had been adjusted by the accounting officers,
and he seemed to suppose, that credits which ought to have been
applied towards the extinguishment or lessening of the debits, for
money placed in his hands before 20 November, 1822, had been
improperly applied to the transactions of Swartwout with the
government after that day.
The case of
United States v. January &
Patterson, 7 Cranch 572, is in point to show, that,
as to any disbursements of money after 30 November, 1822, for which
Swartwout was entitled to credit, it was at the election of the
government to apply them to either account. But there is no
necessity for the application of the principle to this case, for,
upon looking into the account, we find that, after crediting
Swartwout with all his disbursements up until 30 November, 1822,
there remained on that day a balance in his hands unaccounted for,
much beyond the penalty of the bond, so that no injustice is done
to the surety in the manner of settling the account.
Judgment reversed and a venire facias de novo
awarded.