107 So. 63 | Ala. | 1926
The bill is filed to collect a decree of the probate court rendered on final settlement of an estate. The appeal is from a decree overruling demurrers thereto. Briefly stated, the case made by the bill is this:
Margaret B. Perkins was administratrix of the estate of John R. Perkins, deceased. Fidelity Deposit Company of Maryland was surety on her administration bond. She died without making a final settlement. A. M. Boyte became administrator of her estate. American Surety Company was surety on his bond. John R. Perkins, Jr., became administrator de bonis non of the estate of John R. Perkins, deceased. Pursuant to section 5925, Code of 1923, a final settlement of Margaret B. Perkins' administration of the estate of her intestate was made by her administrator, resulting in a decree being entered, pursuant to directions of this court on appeal, in favor of John R. Perkins, Jr., administrator de bonis non, and against A. M. Boyte, administrator, for $2,900.10. Boyte v. Perkins,
Fidelity Deposit Company of Maryland, surety on the bond of Margaret B. Perkins, American Surety Company, surety on the bond of A. M. Boyte, and Jessie B. Cowan, as administratrix de bonis non, are made parties defendant.
At common law, if an administrator committed a devastavit, his administrator, upon his death, was not liable at law. It was regarded at law as a personal tort which did not survive. It resulted that his administrator could not be required to settle the former administration in the orphans' court. The remedy was in equity. Gray v. Jenkins,
But the decree so rendered does not conclude nor in any way bind the surety of the deceased administrator. He became bound for the faithful administration of the trust by his principal, and a decree against the principal on final settlement by him concludes the surety, but there is no privity between such surety and the administrator of his principal. The surety has not contracted for his faithful performance, and is not bound by his acts. Neither can an action at law be maintained against the surety for a devastavit by the deceased administrator. The remedy is by accounting in equity against the surety, whose liability accrues upon the death of the administrator. U.S. Fidelity Guaranty Co. v. Pittman,
It is suggested in argument for Fidelity Deposit Company of Maryland that complainant had an adequate remedy at law under section 5937, Code of 1923, authorizing the administrator de bonis non to call the surety of the deceased administrator to account in the probate court. That section is part of the act of March 8, 1915 (Gen. Acts, p. 138). This act is codified as sections 5935 to 5939, inclusive. By section 1 of the act (Code, § 5935), it is limited to cases wherein there is no personal representative of the estate of the deceased administrator.
Nothing appears in the statute indicating a purpose to modify or repeal Code, § 5925, requiring the settlement to be made by the personal representative of the deceased administrator, if there is one. Neither does it contemplate separate proceedings in the *158 probate court, one against the administrator, and another against the sureties. This is made manifest by section 2 of the act (Code, § 5936), providing that, should an administrator be appointed pending the settlement by the sureties, he should be made a party. If a like provision was made for bringing in the surety on a settlement by the administrator under section 5925, then both would be bound by the decree rendered. But no such provision is made, and the long-settled rule that the surety of the deceased administrator is not bound by the decree rendered against the administrator of the deceased administrator's estate still prevails.
It may be added that, if section 5937 be construed as extending to the case before us, such statutes have never been held in this state to oust the general jurisdiction of courts of equity to settle estates of decedents.
Dealing with the insistence that an adequate remedy existed by issuing of execution on the decree against A. M. Boyte, administrator, it is sufficient to say that by directions of this court the probate decree declared no execution should issue thereon, but the decree should stand as a valid allowed claim against the estate of Margaret B. Perkins, deceased. Boyte v. Perkins,
It is significant that provisions are made by sections 5928 and 5929 for stay of execution and cases of insolvency, where, on the settlement, the balance is found in favor of the dead administrator, and decree rendered against the administrator de bonis non of the original estate. The fact that the decree against the estate of the dead administrator is not binding on his sureties, and, therefore, the full remedy for its enforcement is in equity, probably influenced the lawmakers in providing no appropriate proceedings by execution in this class of cases.
This decree is a primary charge against, and due to be paid from the assets of the estate of Margaret B. Perkins, deceased, if sufficient for that purpose. If A. M. Boyte committed a devastavit in course of his administration, as charged in the bill, the surety on his administration bond is answerable in equity therefor. The funds in the hands of Jessie B. Cowan, administratrix de bonis non, are still chargeable with this decree. The purpose of the bill is single — the collection of this debt from the estate of Margaret B. Perkins, or the surety liable for her devastavit, or the surety of A. M. Boyte, in so far as he committed a devastavit of the funds of her estate. There is no misjoinder of parties respondent. The rights of subrogation in equity can be worked out by having all the parties before the court in one suit.
It is scarcely necessary to note that the decree here involved is not subject to the statute of nonclaim. The law charged A. M. Boyte with notice of the unsettled trust of his intestate in a court of record, and required him, of his own motion, to make settlement and have a final adjudication so far as the liability of her estate was concerned. That it was a validated, adjudicated claim, to be paid in due course, was, in effect, declared in the decree.
Affirmed.
ANDERSON, C. J., and SOMERVILLE and THOMAS, JJ., concur.