9 Rob. 276 | La. | 1844
This action is brought to recover of the defendants, as sureties on the bond of J. B. Grandchamps, administrator of the estate of P. Baulos, the sum of two thousand three hundred and ninety-two dollars and seventy-four cents, with legal interest from the 3d of April, 1838. The petition avers that the said Grandchamps, as administrator of the said succession, has violated the conditions of his bond, by collecting the monies due to the estate, and appropriating the same to his own use, instead of paying therewith the'debts due by the deceased, and more particularly the plaintiffs’ claim against the succession for sundry goods, wares, and merchandise sold and delivered to the said Pierre Baulos, during his lifetime, amounting, with interest, to the abovementioned sum, for which the said Grandchamps, as administrator, gave the plaintiffs a note, dated the 6th of January, 1838, payable in the month of March following; and that the plaintiffs have used all legal means to obtain payment of their claim from Grandchamps, as administrator, previous to instituting this suit, but without success, on account of his insolvency. The defendants, after a general denial, set up as matters of defence, that the debt claimed of the estate of Pierre Baulos, if it ever existed, has been novated and extinguished by the note of $2392 74, received by the plaintiffs from the administrator ; that the sureties are discharged by the time granted to Grandchamps; that the plaintiffs have never obtained any judgment against the succession of Baulos, for the debt which forms the basis of this action; and that, if they have obtained a judgment, they have not exhausted all legal remedies agains the administrator. There was .a judgment in the lower court in favor of the defendants, and the plaintiffs appealed.
The evidence shows that, in October, 1835, Pierre Baulos died, leaving a solvent estate, of which J. B. Grandchamps was appointed administrator, and that Sylvestre Raehal and J. B. Paliére Raehal became his sureties, in solido, on his official bond. On the 6th of January, .1838, the administrator settled for an
It is next contended that the sureties have been discharged by the granting of time to Grandchamps, the plaintiffs having taken no steps to obtain payment from him, from 1835 to 1838, and having then taken his note in January, payable in March following. The doctrine of releasing a surety because the creditor grants time to' the principal debtor without his consent, has no application, we think, to a case like the present. The sureties on Grandchamp’s bond were not responsible for any of the debts of the succession of Baulos; they did not bind themselves to pay them; their responsibility under the bond was that he would faithfully discharge the duties .incumbent upon him as administrator, and well and truly pay or deliver over to those entitled by law to receive the same, all and every sum, or sums of money, or other effects, and a true account of his administration render, &c. Had the succession turned out to be insolvent, they would not have been responsible for its debts; but they bound themselves to indemnify the creditors and heirs of the succession, in case Grandchamps failed to administer it faithfully and honestly. As to the forbearance of the plaintiffs, from 1835 to 1838, the well settled principle of law is, that no person, against his will, can be compelled to sue another; and our Code gives the surety the right of suing the principal debtor for indemnification, in several cases, one of which is, where the debtor, or principal was bound to discharge him within a certain time. Art. 3026. The term fixed for the administration of executors, curators, &c., is one year. At the end of that time defendants could themselves have compelled the administrator
From the view we have taken of. the note given by Grand-champs to the plaintiffs, and of the circumstances under which it was made, we think that judgment was properly rendered upon it, although it would have been more-regular to have sued upon, or produced the original account, in acknowledgement of which the note was signed by the administrator; but, independently of this judgment, the record shows that, at the suit of the tutrix of the minor children of Pierre Baulos, Grandchamps, in April, 1843, was compelled to present'an account of his administration, showing a balance in favor of the heirs of Baulos, of $1,757 81, which Avas duly homologated. In this account the plaintiffs were set down for a sum of $1,996, that being the balance supposed to be due to them, after a payment of $795 65, which the administrator considered as made to them in 1838, but Avhich was not imputed as credited to him until 1843. The judgment homologating this account, in which the plaintiffs were placed for the supposed balance due to them, is, in itself, a sufficient judgment; but the defendants’ counsel urges that, as in this account, rendered by Grandchamps to the heirs of Baulos, he has credited himself with this balance due to the plaintiffs^ the latter, Avho introduced this account and judgment of homologation, are concluded by the evidence, which shows that they have been paid. The account was rendered in a suit between Grandchamps and the heirs of Baulos, evidently to ascertain the balance coming to the latter, after deducting all the debts due by the estate. He credited himself with all the claims presented to him, whether paid or not; and, on examining the items, we find some mentioned as paid, while most of them merely show thé account, judgment, &c., due by the estate. The credits which the administrator has thus set up against the heirs, claiming the balance of the estate after a deduction of its debts, cannot be opposed to the creditors.
‘It is finally contended, that the plaintiffs must fail in the present action, as they have not taken “ the necessary steps to enforce payment against the principal,” as required by the act of
The judgment obtained against the administrator, the fieri facias, and the return made upon it, show that the plaintiffs had exhausted all legal means of obtaining payment from him, before they resorted to the present suit. As to the credit of $795 65, which Grandchamps was entitled to for a claim he had against the plaintiffs, the record does not enable us to give it any precise date; but their counsel admits that it might take effect at any time since the 1st of April, 1838. This date we will adopt, and reduce to five per cent, instead of ten, the interest to be allowed on the original debt of the appellants.
It is, therefore, ordered, adjudged and decreed, that the judgment of the Court of Probates be reversed, and that the plaintiffs have judgment, in solido, against J. B. P. Rachal, and the widow and heirs of Sylvestre Rachal, for the sum of $1,891 50, with legal interest from the 14th of August, 1835, subject to a credit of $795 65 as of the 1st of April, 1838, (the widow and heirs of Sylvestre Rachal to be liable for the debts of the deceased — the widow for one- half of it, and the heirs each for their virile share, or portion in the other half,) with costs in both courts.