The Bankruptcy Act, sec. 17, 11 U. S. C. A. 35, provides that a discharge in bankruptcy shall release the bankrupt from *483 all bis provable debts except such as “. . . (fourth) were created by bis fraud, embezzlement, misappropriation, or defalcation while acting as an officer or in any fiduciary capacity . . .” Do the judgments in question come within the quoted exception ? This is the decisive question presented by this appeal.
It is the duty of a guardian to keep his ward’s money and property separate from his own; to keep an account thereof; to make authorized investments, G. S., 34-13, not in his own name, but as guardian; to keep those investments separate from his own; and, when called upon to do so, to account for the same either in cash or in approved securities.
"While he is held to a high degree of diligence and good faith, he is not ordinarily an insurer of funds which come into his hands.
Stroud v. Stroud,
If he, in good faith and with due diligence, invests the funds of his ward in loans upon real estate in which he has no interest and loss occurs by reason of the subsequent depreciation in value of the security or other cause over which he has no control, he is protected from liability therefor.
Sheets v. Tobacco Co.,
He may discharge himself at the termination of his trust by turning over and accounting for authorized investments taken in good faith as a result of prudent management of his ward’s estate even though the securities are not then worth face value.
Cobb v. Fountain,
Conversely, a guardian has no moral or legal right to mingle trust funds with his own and use them as such or to profit by the use of funds belonging to his ward.
Roebuck v. Surety Co.,
If he commingles the guardianship funds with his own and uses them in his business or for his personal advantage he is guilty of a conversion under the statute.
Winstead v. Stanfield,
“Embarking the ward’s funds in business ventures is even more flagrantly improper when they are used in the business of the guardian himself. Such a violation of the trust makes the guardian and his sureties immediately liable as for a conversion of the funds.”
"We must assume that Congress, in using the word “defalcation” in sec. 17 of the Bankruptcy Act, 11 U. S. C. A., 35, was not engaged in the redundant use of synonymous words but included the term for a purpose. *484 It was intended to cover defaults other than malversations implied by “fraud,” “embezzlement,” and “misappropriation,” else it adds nothing to those terms.
“Defalcation” as used in a criminal statute implies some moral dereliction, but in this context it is a broader term and includes any failure of a guardian or other person acting in a fiduciary capacity to account for trust funds. It means the failure of a fiduciary to account for money received in his fiduciary capacity.
Bank & Trust Co. v. Herbst,
93 F. (2d), 510, 114 A. L. R., 769;
Surety Co. v. Lanza,
42 N. Y. S. (2d), 370;
Orndorff v. S. ex rel. McGill,
It has been held to include the failure of: a treasurer, on demand, to account for overdraft of his account with his company,
Bannon v. Knauss,
13 N. E. (2d), 733; a sheriff to account for public money,
Orndorff v. S. ex rel. McGill, supra;
a postmaster to account for Government funds,
Surety Co. v. Wittich,
240 N.
W.;
888; an administrator to account to his successor,
Loan Co. v. Campbell,
On the very day movent received the money in the hands of his predecessor he appropriated $4,000 to his own use. That this transaction was cloaked in the form of a loan does not remove the implications of his act. As other funds were received he commingled them with his own and used them as such. Except for about $1,600 used for the support of his ward, he has failed to account for any of the trust estate.
Congress made provision to relieve an insolvent debtor of his obligations, but there is nothing in the Act to indicate an intention to discharge a debt which arose out of his mismanagement, misuse, or misappropriation of trust funds. The assets of the trust estate do not pass to the trustee in bankruptcy and debts created by a default in accounting there *485 for are not within the purview of the bankruptcy statute. Otherwise the bankrupt would profit by his own wrong.
Clearly then, under the facts here disclosed, the failure of movent to account to his successor guardian constituted a defalcation while acting in a fiduciary capacity. The liability thus created is not dischargeable by a decree in bankruptcy.
As said by this Court in
Simpson v. Simpson,
That the plaintiff’s claims were reduced to judgment does not affect this conclusion. The judgment in each instance ascertains and fixes the amount of the defalcation, but it still remains a debt created by the defalcation of the movent while acting in a fiduciary capacity and, under sec. 17 of the Bankruptcy Act, is exempt from the operation of the discharge.
Simpson v. Simpson, supra; Boynton v. Ball,
The judgments in question constitute liens upon the property of movents and plaintiff is entitled to execution for the enforcement thereof. Sample v. Jackson, ante, 380.
Since the judgment liens were not discharged by the decree of bankruptcy but are still in effect, it is unnecessary for us to discuss the contention that movent was not a bona fide farmer at the time he filed petition in the bankruptcy court or to decide the other questions debated in the briefs.
The judgment below is
Affirmed.
