Court Opinion

ID: 7099548
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-24 12:14:24.380853+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:13:21.918583
License: Public Domain

Seevers, J.
i official not required: aiuutfonaf penitentiary. The additional penitentiary at Anamosa was established- by an act of the General Assembly passed in 1872. Three commissioners were appointed to • carry out the provisions of the act. They were authorized to elect a warden whose duties and p0werg were declared to be the “ same as prescribed by law for the penitentiary at Fort Madison so far as practicable.” Chapter 43, Acts of the Fourteenth General Assembly.
The Attorney General does not claim there is any statutory provision which in expi’ess terms required the defendant Fleisey to give the bond in question. But he insists as the duties were the same as the warden of the penitentiary at Fort Madison such bond was required because it was the duty of the warden at Fort Madison to give a bond.
Section 4747 of the Code provides in relation to the warden at Fort Madison that: “Before entering upon the discharge of his duty he shall execute a bond.” In no just sense can it be said an act which is required to be done in order to qualify a person to discharge the duties of an office is an official duty pertaining to the office. The person elected warden at Fort Madison did not become such until he had given the bond required by law. "When this was done he became warden, and it was only the official duties of warden Heisey was by the statute required to perform. The bond in question, not having been required by statute, cannot be enforced as a statutory bond.
*406effect of. *405II. The Attorney General further insists the bond is a *406valid obligation at common law, and in support of this posihe relies on Sheppard & Morgan v. Collins, 12 Iowa, 570; Garretson v. Reeder, 23 Id., 21; and The Postmaster General v. Early, 12 Wheaton, 136. The two former actions were brought on delivery bonds executed to the sheriff for the return or delivery to him of property he under process had attached. Such bonds were expressly authorized by statute and those in question were merely defective in that the conditions required- by statute were not contained in them. In this respect the cases are distinguishable from the one at bar in two important particulars. 1st. As has been said the bonds were authorized by statute and were defective only; and 2d. There was a sufficient consideration because by reason of their execution the sheriff delivered to the obligors the attached property. The question in the last case wffiich can be regarded as an authority in the case before us was “ whether under a fair construction of the acts of Congress the Postmaster General may take bonds to secure the payment of money due or which may become due to the general postoffice ” and it was held the bond sued on was authorized by the acts of Congress. ■ In the present case Heisey received nothing by reason of the execution of the bond. No benefit or advantage was conferred on him because of its execution. It must, therefore, be regarded as having been voluntarily executed, and as there was no consideration therefor, it cannot be enforced. The State v. Bartlett, 30 Miss., 624.
Affirmed.