59 Ala. 364 | Ala. | 1877
Thomas B. Carter, father of appellee, William H. Carter, became in April, 1864, guardian of the latter and of his two other minor children,—giving a bond as guardian, upon which appellant, Bnnberry Flinn, and Watson Flinn became his sureties. And on the same day, Carter, the guardian, filed an inventory setting forth that he had received from himself as administrator of some estates, $2,606 43-100 for his three wards, who were also his children. This sum he as guardian, received from himself as administrator in the currency of the late Confederate States;, twenty dollars of which was then, equal to only one dollar in coin.
In 1876, appellee, lYm. H. Carter, who had become of age several years before filed his petition praying that Flinn be brought to a settlement of his guardianship, and charged with the amount of the decree rendered as aforesaid in favor of petitioner with compound interest thereon. There was no other estate of the ward than this to be accounted for. Flinn among other defences, set up as a release or bar a bond executed in March, 1873, by Thomas R. Carter, his wife Mary J. Carter, the said William H. Carter, and one Callaway, who had married one of the other wards, by which instrument, and in consideration of Flinn’s becoming surety for Callaway, (son-in-law of two, and brother-in-law of the other of the Carters,) upon his four promissory notes for $2,000 each, payable in one to four years, successively, to Josiah Morris, the obligors bound themselves to hold Bun-berry and W. Flinn “harmless and free from all liability whatever by reason of their suretyship on said guardian’s .bond, and by reason of said judgments rendered against them.” The bond here referred to is that for Thomas R. Carter’s guardianship; and the judgments are the decrees above mentioned; all of which are particularly mentioned in the bond of the Carters and Callaway.
The case in hand is very much like the one cited. By the bond of the Carters and Callaway, they bind themselves to hold Flinn harmless by reason of his suretyship on Carter’s bond as guardian, “and by reason of said judgments,” one of which is in favor of "Win. II. Carter, who also executed the bond set up in bar. This bond may therefore be insisted on as a release, unless some of the other objections made to it be valid.
5. It is ingeniously insisted that, the bond of the Carters
It is true that in certain cases where a party is a debtor or responsible for a debt, and in the capacity of administrator, or otherwise, in trust for others, becomes the creditor.to whom payment of the debt is to be made, it will be conclusively presumed when he is brought to a settlement, that he has received payment from himself. The fact may be, though, as the courts well know, that such payment has not been made: and the parties are free to deal with each other in the meantime, according to the real fact. And where another is thg principal debtor, and the person who,as administrator, or in some other capacity becomes entitled to receive payment of the debt, is only a surety, he has the right as such administrator, or in such other capacity, to collect it from the principal: and no presumption that he has paid it to himself will make void his arrangements to that end with the parties concerned.
Legal presumptions should, like legal fictions, be adopted only to promote justice not to defeat it, and not to defeat the lawful acts and intentions of parties who are sui juris.. The bond executed to Flinn would by such reasoning, be made of no effect; and the argument is founded on an erroneous assumption. Flinn was not bound to pay himself the amount of the decree in question, the moment he became guardian and the decree was rendered. He had a right at any time during the guardianship, to make the amount out of Thos. R. Carter the former guardian and his principal, he himself being chargeable with it only upon settlement. And since before settlement was required, and when the decree was wholly unsatisfied, the party to whom it was due, with a knowledge of all the facts, released Flinn, the courts will not in order to defeat the release, presume that to have been done which was not done, and which the parties, in the instrument operating as a release, say was not done.
It is unnecessary to decide any other of the questions that were discussed by counsel.
The judgment of the Probate Court of Montgomery county in this cause must be reversed and set aside; and this court.