Dobbins v. Halfacre

52 Miss. 561 | Miss. | 1876

Simrall, C. J.,

delivered tbe opinion of tbe court.

' An action of debt was brought by W. D. Dobbins, usee, against Jacob Halfacre, principal, and Coleman and Grillis, .sureties on tbe bond of the said Jacob, conditioned for tbe true and faithful and prompt performance of all tbe duties required of him by law, or tbe order of tbe court, as administrator of tbe goods * * * of H. L. Halfacre, deceased.

Tbe declaration alleges tbe recovery by Dobbins, in tbe circuit court of Winston county, of a judgment against Jacob Halfacre, administrator of H. L. Halfacre, for tbe sum of $707, and costs of suit, upon a debt of tbe intestate in bis life-time ; that tbe administrator received assets amply sufficient to pay the debt; that no part of tb'e debt has been paid, by reason whereof tbe defendants have become liable to pay ,$5,000, tbe penalty of tbe bond; wherefore be sues.

Tbe defendants demurred on three special grounds :

T. Tbe court has no jurisdiction.

2. Because no action will lie on tbe bond of an administrator and bis sureties in tbe circuit court until tbe liability of tbe *563¡administrator has been determined in the chancery court upon final settlement of the administrator.

3. Because the declaration does not show that the suit is brought for an amount due by the administrator on his final .account, etc. * * *

The circuit court adopted the view set forth in those assignments, and sustained the demurrer.

The condition of the bond is general, to the effect that the administrator will truly, promptly, and faithfully discharge his duties as required by law or the order of the court. The sum of these is that he will, as soon as convenient, collect in the assets, pay the debts, and turn over the surplus to the distribu-tees. If he has received sufficient assets to pay the creditors, and fails to do so, there has occurred a breach of the bond. But in order that a creditor may avail himself of the breach he must have conclusively established his debt by the recovery of .judgment. Dinkins v. Bailey et al., 23 Miss., 290. Manifestly the creditor need not wait for the final settlement before he can sue for the devastavit, nor is it any part of the office, or effiect of that settlement as assumed in the 2d assignment, to determine the liability of the administrator to the creditor.

The administrator may pay a debt, on the ex parte proof of it by the creditor, or he may await its establishment by judgment. If thus conclusively ascertained, he can prefer no excuse for a failure to pay except an exhaustion of assets for the benefit of creditors who had a preference, or the want of assets. Randolph v. Singleton, 12 S. & M., 442.

The act of 1830, which has been reenacted in the subsequent revisions of the statutes substantially, allows a suit on the bond of the executor or administrator, for a devastavit, in the first instance, without first having instituted suit against the executor or administrator to establish a devastavit. Code, 1871, § 1180.

At common law, if the administrator did not plead plene -administravit, a judgment against him was a conclusive admis*564sion of assets in a subsequent proceeding for a devastavit. The judgment would be evidence of sufficiency of assets. He might, however, qualify his plea, admitting assets to a certain extent, and the presumption of law arising from the judgment would be subject to qualification.

In this state, under statutory provisions, the administrator is not obliged to plead plene administravit,- and a recovery against him does not raise a presumption that he has received enough to pay the judgment, or to any amount whatever.

After some variations in the English courts as to the mode of establishing a devastavit, so as to hold the administrator personally, the English courts finally adopted the action of debt suggesting the devastavit. 1 Saund., 219, note 8.

The statute referred to (§ 1180, Code) dispenses with this-separate suit against the administrator in order to fix the personal liability of the administrator. It permits the devastavit to be primarily litigated in the suit upon the bond.

The chief object was to dispense with this collateral litigation and permit the devastavit to be the gravamen of the action in the suit on the bond. The effect of the statute is that the principal and sureties are liable for the devastavit, which is the gravamen of the action on the bond. In that suit, if the devastavit is proved, then judgment may go against the obligators.

In the case of a creditor, therefore, there are only two conditions to the right of action on the bond: 1st, that he ¡has reduced the demand to judgment, and has not been able to procure satisfaction from the goods of the intestate; and, .2d, that the administrator has wasted or misapplied the assets.

In the case of a distributee he must first have his right, and the amount of it, ascertained by the decree of the' chancery court before he can sue the sureties on the bond;'for, since his interest in the estate is the surplus after paying creditors, it cannot be known until there has been an accounting by the administrator.

*565The circuit court lost sight of this distinction, and hence the error of sustaining the demurrer for the causes assigned. >

Judgment reversed, and judgment in this court overruling the demurrer, and cause remanded for further proceedings.

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