Ervin, J.
The appeal of the plaintiffs presents the question whether their pleadings state a cause of action against the defendants or any of them. The rules of law bearing on this question are set forth in the seven ensuing paragraphs.
1. Where an order of attachment is improperly obtained or tortiously employed, the attachment defendant may have several modes of obtaining redress for injuries caused by its levy on his property. He may proceed on the attachment bond if either of the two conditions specified in the statute now codified as G.S. 1-440.10 exists.
Whitaker v. Wade,
*600
2. A proceeding on a.n attachment bond differs greatly from an action for malicious and wrongful attachment. The former is a statutory proceeding based on the contractual obligations of the attachment plaintiff and his surety embodied in the attachment bond and the statute under which it is given; whereas, the latter is an independent common law action founded on the tort of the attachment plaintiff in maliciously suing out an order of attachment without probable cause and procuring its levy on the property of the attachment defendant.
Martin v. Rexford,
3. The right of the attachment defendant to proceed on the attachment bond does not depend on a showing of malice and want of probable cause.' 7 C.J.S., Attachment, section 163. See in this connection the observations of
Justice Platt D. Walker
in
Mahoney v. Tyler,
4. Where the attachment defendant sues the attachment plaintiff for malicious and wrongful attachment, it is incumbent upon him to establish these essential elements of the tort: (1) That the attachment plaintiff sued out an order of attachment against the property of the attachment defendant without probable cause for believing that the alleged ground for attachment existed
(Tyler v. Mahoney,
5. As a general rule, the estate of a decedent cannot he held liable for torts which an administrator or an executor commits in administering the estate. In consequence, an action will not ordinarily lie against an administrator or an executor in his representative capacity for such torts.
Hood, Comr. of Banks, v. Stewart,
6. Under G.S. 35-2, the clerk of the Superior Court may appoint either a guardian or a trustee to manage the estate of a person who is found by an inquisition of lunacy to be mentally incompetent to manage his own affairs. A trustee appointed under this statute “is subject to the laws . . . enacted for the control and handling of estates by guardians.”
7. As a general rule, the estate of an insane person cannot he held liable for torts which a guardian or a trustee commits in managing the estate. For this reason, an action will not ordinarily lie against a guardian or a trustee of an insane person in his representative capacity for such torts. But a guardian or a trustee of an insane person is personally liable for his own torts, even though they are committed in the management of the estate of his ward.
Gillet v. Shaw,
When the pleadings of the plaintiffs are analyzed in the light of these rules of law, these things are manifest:
This is a common law action for malicious and wrongful attachment, and not a statutory proceeding on an attachment bond. The plaintiffs seek to recover damages of the defendant Guaranty Estates Corporation in its representative capacity as trustee of its insane ward Louis Mitchell upon pleadings alleging that in its management of the estate of its ward it maliciously sued out an order of attachment without probable cause, and procured the levy of the order of attachment upon the property of the plaintiffs. These pleadings state no cause of action against the defendant Guaranty Estates Corporation as trustee because their allegations bring the case within the general rule that the estate of an insane person cannot be subjected to liability for the tort of his guardian or his trustee, even though his guardian or his trustee commits the tort in the management of his estate. The plaintiffs seek to recover damages of the defendant Gus G. Mitchell in his representative capacity as administrator of *604 tbe decedent Louis Mitchell upon pleading's alleging that in his administration of the estate of the decedent he maliciously continued an attachment proceeding against the property of the plaintiffs without probable cause, and in that way tortiously deprived the plaintiffs of their right to use their property for any legitimate purpose. These pleadings state no cause of action against the defendant Gus G. Mitchell ’as administrator because their allegations bring the case within the general rule that the estate of a decedent cannot be subjected to liability for the tort of an administrator or an executor, even though the administrator or the executor commits the tort in the administration of the estate. Moreover, the pleadings of the plaintiffs state no cause of action against the defendant National Surety Corporation for the very simple reason that a surety on an attachment bond is not liable for the tortious act of the attachment plaintiff in maliciously and wrongfully attaching the property of the attachment defendant.
What has been said shows that the presiding judge rightly ruled on the oral demurrers.
This brings us to the appeal of the defendants, which challenges the validity of the portion of the order allowing the plaintiff’s “thirty days to amend and/or make new parties.”
The presiding judge murdered the King’s, the Queen’s, and everybody’s English by using the monstrous linguistic abomination “and/or” in this portion of the order. We are constrained to adjudge, however, that the judge’s law is better than his grammar, and that this portion of the order finds sanction in G.S. 1-163, which vests in the judge of the Superior Court discretionary authority to permit an amendment “when the amendment does not change substantially the claim or defense.” McIntosh: North Carolina Practice and Procedure in Civil Oases, section 487. This portion of the order contemplates that any amendment made by the plaintiffs will not offend the restrictive provision of G.S. 1-163. Whether such an amendment can be made is something for their able counsel to ponder.
Affirmed on the plaintiffs’ appeal.
Affirmed on the defendants’ appeal.
