4 Nev. 429 | Nev. | 1868
By the Court,
Coover having been appointed guardian of the plaintiff, gave the general bond as required by the statute, with the defendants Grove Adams and Louis Feusier as sureties. . Some time before his appointment, certain real estate belonging to the ward had been sold, in accordance with an order of the Probate Court, by one James Henderson, who was then the guardian of the plaintiff; but before the conveyance was made or the purchase money paid, Henderson resigned his guardianship, and the defendant Coover was
This action is brought upon the guardian’s general bond, and judgment asked against the principal and sureties for the sum of fifty-two hundred dollars, with costs of suit. After proving the material allegations of his complaint, the plaintiff was nonsuited by the Court below, and judgment for costs rendered against him, from which the appeal is taken.
In our judgment the nonsuit was properly granted. The action, as we have before mentioned, is upon the general bond of the guardian, and the only material facts proven were the receipt .of the purchase money upon the sale of the real estate, and the refusal by Coover to account for it. But the sureties on the general bond of a guardian are not under our law responsible for the failure by the guardian to account for money received from the sale of real estate, or its misapplication by him.
To sell the real estate of wards for their benefit is not included in the general duties of guardians, nor have they the right or authority to do so except upon obtaining a license from the proper Court authorizing it; and Sec. 32, p. 260, Laws of 1861, declares that every guardian “ authorized to sell real estate * * * shall before the sale give bond to the Probate Judge, with sufficient security, to be approved by such Probate Judge, with condition to sell the same in the manner prescribed by law for sales -of real estate by executors and administrators, and to account for and dispose of the proceeds of the sale in the manner provided by law.” In no case whatever can the real estate be sold until this bond is given. When given, the sureties upon it are very clearly responsible for any misapplication of the money acquired by the sale of such.
Rut the general bond required by the statute of this State is substantially like that required by the Massachusetts law prior to the amendment, hence the case of Lyman et als. v. Conkey appears to sustain our views.
As it was shown by the plaintiff’s proof that the money for which Coover has not accounted was the price of real estate sold, and that the defendants Adams and Feusier were sureties on the general bond only, the plaintiff was properly nonsuited.