194 S.E. 271 | W. Va. | 1937
Paul J. Davis, committee for John Knight, an insane person, instituted this suit in equity in the Circuit Court of Mineral County, seeking an accounting from Ernest A. See, a former committee for said Knight, as to the funds which went into his hands as such. In his bill, two specific items on which an accounting was sought were set up: (1) An item of $3,971.20 found to be due from See to his ward's estate by a decree entered by said Circuit Court, on the 27th of July, 1933, and ordered to be paid or replaced on or before October 1, 1933; and (2) the sum of $4010.20, representing the amount paid for four notes of $1,000.00 each, executed by Caleb J. White and Mabel A. White to the Huffman Fruit Company, Inc., which the said See, as committee, purchased from the payee, under the assumed authority of an order of said Circuit Court, entered on the 29th day of August, 1931, but which order, the plaintiff avers, was violated by See. The bill does not allege a loss on account of the purchase of said notes. The claim of the plaintiff is based on the contention that the alleged violation of the court's order with respect to the purchase of said notes created a liability on See, and the surety on his bond as committee, for the total amount paid therefor. *492
The cause was finally heard upon the report of a commissioner. The Circuit Court found that on the claim of $3,971.20, See was indebted to the plaintiff in the sum of $20.89, which amount was paid prior to the actual entry of the decree giving effect to the court's ruling. As to the item of $4,010.20, based on the Caleb J. White notes, the court relieved See and the surety on his official bond from all liability therefor, basing such action upon the following grounds: (1) No loss was clearly and satisfactorily shown; (2) no bad faith or carelessness that could be construed as negligence imposing liability had been shown; (3) little or no effort had been made by See's successor to collect the White notes, although possibility of some recovery thereon was shown by the evidence; and (4) the said White notes were accepted by the plaintiff without protest and had been held by him without positive action.
From this decree the plaintiff prosecutes this appeal.
We see no reason to disturb the action of the court below with respect to the item of $3,971.20, and therefore affirm the same. The small sum found due having been paid, and the matter of costs involved controlled by our decision on other points raised on the record, there is no occasion to further consider that part of the decree.
No question is raised as to the right of the plaintiff to demand and receive from the former committee an accounting of the estate in his hands, and to maintain a proper suit or action to enforce the same. That such right is clearly vested in the plaintiff under Code, 27-9-4, has been held by this court in Straight v. Ice,
In considering the question of whether or not See is liable on account of the transaction by which he purchased the Caleb J. White notes, a study of the background leading up to the purchase of said notes is required. It appears from the record that one J. R. Hayden was the owner of a tract of 266 acres of land, situated in Mineral County, and that in 1929 he conveyed the same to T. T. Huffman, Jr., and Fred N. Huffman for an actual consideration of $10,000.00, evidenced by five notes for $2,000.00 each, secured by a deed of trust, and that said notes were by Hayden placed with the District National Bank of Washington, District of Columbia, as collateral *494 on a loan made by said bank to Hayden; that in 1930, the Huffmans conveyed 144 acres of said land to Harry C. Stouffer, who assumed the payment of four of the $2,000.00 notes held by Hayden; that in 1931, the Huffman Fruit Company, a corporation, successor to the Huffmans in the remaining 122 acres, sold 104 acres thereof to Caleb J. White in exchange for certain property in the State of Maryland and a cash payment of $600.00, but leaving unpaid of the consideration the sum of $4,000.00, represented by four notes of $1,000.00 each, dated March 14, 1931, payable to the Huffman Fruit Company in one, two, three and four years, with interest, and secured by a deed of trust on the 104 acres of land so conveyed to said White, which deed of trust was, of course, subject in priority to that covering the entire tract of 266 acres.
The Huffman Fruit Company being still indebted to Hayden in the sum of $2,000.00, even should Stouffer pay the notes assumed by him, and being desirous of liquidating said indebtedness, proposed to the said Ernest A. See, committee for John Knight, that he purchase from it the four notes executed by Caleb J. White. T. T. Huffman, Sr., who acted on behalf of the Huffman Fruit Company, represented to See that Hayden, in consideration of the payment of $2,000.00, would release the 104 acres of land from the deed of trust securing the five notes which had been executed to him, representing purchase money for the 266 acres. It is shown that Huffman understood that Hayden had executed a release and had placed the same in escrow with the District National Bank in Washington, to be delivered upon the payment of $2,000.00, and that he communicated this understanding to See. The matter progressed to the point where See, as committee, filed a petition in the Circuit Court of Mineral County, seeking authority to purchase the White notes, and upon that petition, after a full hearing, the purchase of the notes was authorized by the court. At that time all of the parties to the transaction believed that in the purchase of these notes they were securing a first lien upon the 104 acres. A decree of the court, in effect, approved the purchase of the notes on condition that a first lien upon the 104 acres of land be obtained. The language *495
used by the court with reference to this condition was: "and the release of the two thousand dollar ($2,000.00) deed of trust on said real estate hereby making this loan a first lien on said real estate." Following this order of the court, See, as committee, paid to the Huffman Fruit Company $4,010.20, and at the time of this payment, the said company made out and forwarded to the District National Bank in Washington a check for $2,000.00 for the purpose of obtaining the release of the Hayden lien on the 104 acres, which, had it been obtained, would have secured the first lien on said 104 acres as contemplated by the court's order. The release of the lien was not obtained, and Hayden refused to execute and deliver the same, insisting upon his lien as against the entire 266 acres which, of course, included the 104 acres conveyed to White. A suit was afterwards instituted in the name of T. T. Huffman, trustee, against Hayden, in which suit, See, as committee, sought to obtain the release of the Hayden lien so far as it affected the 104 acres, but this relief was denied him. Whereupon the cause was appealed to this court (Huffman, Tr., v. Hayden,
The claim of the plaintiff is based upon the action of See, as committee, in purchasing the White notes without securing thereby a first lien upon the tract of 104 acres of land, as directed by the court. It is contended by the plaintiff that this act was such negligence or improper conduct as to make See liable for the entire amount paid for said notes. See contends that he, in good faith, attempted to carry out the direction of the court with respect *496 to the purchase of these notes, and that in relying upon the assurance of Huffman that the release would be delivered upon the payment of $2,000.00, he was acting in good faith, and was guilty of nothing more than an error of judgment for which, under the law, he cannot be held responsible. He further contends that no loss on account of this transaction has been shown, and that when he delivered to the plaintiff the White notes, and at his request endorsed the same, and they were received by the plaintiff without protest, such delivery operated to release him from any liability arising from the original purchase thereof. He also relies upon the claim that at the time he delivered said notes to the plaintiff, there was a fair prospect of a substantial recovery thereon, either from Caleb J. White and Mabel A. White, makers of said notes, or the Huffman Fruit Company, the endorser thereof, and that the plaintiff neglected and failed to take advantage of such opportunity for recovery as then existed.
Code,
But it is contended by See that inasmuch as the 104 acres did not sell for a sum in excess of the $2,000.00 he received from Hayden, when costs of suit and expenses of sale were taken into consideration, the estate of his ward is in as good a situation as if he had obtained a first lien on said land. This contention overlooks the fact that considering Hayden's later attitude, it is a reasonable inference that he would have refused to release the lien, in which event the purchase of the notes would not have been made and no danger of loss would have developed. Counsel devote much space to a discussion of whether or not an order entered by the Circuit Court of Mineral county on the 27th day of July, 1933, in a proceeding relating to See's account with the John Knight estate, in which the court refused to allow See for services as attorney in his effort to protect the estate from threatened loss on account of the purchase of the White notes, because, *499 as the court held, the purchase of said notes was made in violation of its order, was res adjudicata as to the alleged fact of See's violation of such order. Whether or not that order was res adjudicata is not necessary to be determined herein because of our holding that See's action was in violation of such order. The question raised could only be important were we of the opinion that there was no substantial violation of the order, and be confronted with a former adjudication to the contrary, from which no appeal had been taken.
See also contends that the acceptance by the plaintiff of the White notes operated to discharge him from liability on account of the purchase of said notes, and cites 32 C. J., page 705, section 431; Joyner v. Cooper, (S.C.) 2 Bailey 199, and In reHathaway, 80 Hun. 186, 30 N.Y.S. 171, in support of his contention. The citation to Corpus Juris and Joyner v. Cooper covers a case wherein a committee delivered to a successor a bond due by that successor to the estate which, of course, is not the case at bar. In the Hathaway case, the successor guardian acknowledged the receipt of a certain sum in cash, whereas, as a matter of fact, he accepted certain mortgage notes in lieu of cash, and it was held that such notes should be treated as investments made by the new guardian. In the case under consideration, the assets accepted by the plaintiff were not accepted as cash, but were specifically described as cash notes and other assets, as appear from the receipt which See required of William MacDonald, his first successor, and that subsequently were executed by the plaintiff to MacDonald. Under certain circumstances, it might be the duty of a successor guardian to accept assets in the hands of the former guardian, regardless of the form thereof, as a protection to the estate; and when he does so, unless there is a specific agreement to the contrary, he does not waive his right to look to the former guardian for an accounting as to any of the assets so delivered, the value of which might be less than that at which they were accepted.
But when the plaintiff, as the successor guardian, accepted the assets formerly acquired by See, especially the White notes, and secured See's endorsement thereof for *500 the purpose of facilitating their collection, he thereby deprived See of any power to protect himself with respect to any liability he may have incurred in relation to the purchase of said notes. It is in evidence that at the time of See's removal, he had undertaken to realize on these notes by placing the same in the hands of an attorney in Cumberland, Maryland, who was investigating the financial responsibility of the Whites and the Huffman Fruit Company. Whether or not anything could have been realized from the notes at the time is not clear from the record, but whatever opportunity See had to protect himself was lost when he transferred the notes to his successor. We think the plaintiff was under obligation to pursue with diligence an effort to realize on these notes, not only as a matter of protection to the estate of his ward, but as one of equity to the former committee. The plaintiff became responsible to the estate of the insane person for the value, if any, of the White notes, at the time they were delivered to him, and See was entitled to credit for such value as of that date. Whether the notes had any value at that time can only be determined by a further effort to collect the notes, taking into consideration any change of conditions affecting their value which may have been brought about by the failure of the present committee to make reasonable efforts to collect the same.
It results from this discussion that we are of the opinion to reverse the Circuit Court in so far as the decree complained of released the defendant, See, and the surety on his bond as committee from all liability growing out of the purchase of the Caleb J. White notes, and to remand the case for the purpose of determining the value, if any, of the White notes at the time they were delivered to the plaintiff, as committee for John Knight.
The cause is therefore reversed and remanded to the circuit court of Mineral County for further proceedings in accordance with the rulings herein announced.
*501Reversed and remanded.