176 Iowa 437 | Iowa | 1916
The guardian whose accounts are under investigation was formerly Mrs. Zora M. Hahnen, the widow of H. F. Hahnen, who died in February, 1911, leaving surviving him such widow and their two minor children, Gretchen and Robert, aged respectively eleven and five years. $9,000 came into the hands of the guardian as the proceeds of a life insurance policy in favor of the children. In March, 1911, she was appointed guardian, her bond being fixed at $9,000. The defendant Bankers Surety Company became the surety on her bond for an agreed compensation of $36 per year. The conditions of the bond authorized the surety company to
The general legal propositions urged by the plaintiff at this point are quite unassailable. It is doubtless true, as. a general proposition, that the estate of these children cannot properly be charged with expenditures which do not fairly operate to the benefit and best interest of the children themselves. Even then, it does not necessarily follow that the expenditures must be confined to food actually consumed or clothing actually worn by the wards. The ease before us is illustrative of the exceptional circumstances which may prop
“See. 1177-a. When a bond is required by law to be given by or for any public officer, deputy or employe of such public officer, or by any person holding a fiduciary office or trust, administrator, executor, guardian, trustee, officer or employe of any public or private corporation or association, when not otherwise specifically provided, [it] shall be conditioned as provided in Section 1183 of the Code.
“See. 1177-b. If any surety on said bond shall so elect, his liability thereon may be canceled at any time by giving thirty days ’ notice in writing to the person or persons authorized to approve said bond, and to the officer or person with whom the same is required to be filed or deposited by law, and refunding the premium paid, if any, less a pro rata part thereof for the time said bond shall have been in force. The liability and indemnity created by said bond shall extend to the date of cancellation as provided by Chapter 11, Title VI of the Code.
‘ ‘ See. 1177-c. No contract, stipulation, or condition limiting the liability created by said bond shall be of any force or validity. ’ ’
It is contended for the surety company that it proceeded in pursuance of the section above quoted and that it obtained from the court a formal order of discharge, which amounts to a complete adjudication of its liability. It will be noted that
Chapter 11, Title VI, of the Code, comprises Sections 1280 to 1288, inclusive. This chapter, originally and on its face, pertains only to sureties on bonds of public officers. By the reference contained in Section 1177-b, a part at least of Chapter 11 becomes incorporated in such section by such reference. Section 1285 in such Chapter 11, among other things, provides:
“Upon such new bond being given, the petitioning surety . . . shall be declared discharged from liability on the same for future acts.”
We think it clear that there is nothing in the statute providing for the release of sureties which authorizes or contemplates a release of liability except “for future acts.” It will be noted that Section 1177-b provides for a pro rata refunding of the premium paid. This implies that a part of the premium may be properly retained. This is necessarily upon the assumption that some liability has been incurred in the past for which a premium may be properly retained. Upon a consideration, therefore, of the statute alone, we think it quite clear that the Bankers Surety Company was not relieved from liability accrued by reason of dereliction already done on the part of the principal; nor is there any means provided in the statute whereby the surety company can institute litigation in advance of complaint by the aggrieved party and thus adjudicate that question. In other words, having
IV. The dereliction as to the $237 loan occurred August 19, 1912, which was within the period covered by the surety-ship of the defendant American Surety Company. At the expiration of the first year of its suretyship, it also resorted to formal proceedings with a view of terminating its liability, and it obtained a formal order from the court to that effect. If the question turned upon the mere form of the order entered by the court, this appellant could perhaps be said to present a somewhat stronger defense of absolution than the Bankers Surety Company. Much of what we have said in the preceding division, however, is applicable here. As already indicated, the method of procedure and the rights accruing therefrom to the surety company are