64 Cal. 35 | Cal. | 1883
Action by the heir of Jean Lacoste, deceased, upon the bond of one of the administrators of his estate. The defendant, Splivalo, was appointed one of the administrators on the 10th day of February, 1870; gave the bond then required of
In response to this order the bond in suit was given. After the execution of the bond, and on the 12th of September, 1872, Splivalo was ordered by the Probate Court to file an account of all matters in relation to.his administration of the estate occurring subsequent to the filing of his first account, which was in March, 1871. Pursuant to this order for an accounting, Splivalo, on the 20th of September, 1872, filed his account, which was settled by the court on the 13th of November, 1872, after a contest. In settling this account the Probate Court found that the estate was in a condition to be closed, and ordered the account to stand as the final account of the administrator, Splivalo. By the account as thus settled it appeared, and was so adjudged, that there then remained in the hands of Splivalo as administrator, the sum of $36,095.53, subject, however, to the payment of the commissions of the administrators, fixed by the court at $6,421; and subject also to the necessary costs of distribution. Subsequently, to Avit, on the 22d of November, 1872, the Probate Court made and entered a decree of partial distribution, Avhereby Splivalo Avas directed to pay to the plaintiff as heir of the deceased, the sum of $20,000. This money Avas aftenvard paid, but the administration of the estate remained pending. At length, and on July 7, 1874, Splivalo rendered an account supplemental to the account Avhich had been settled by the court as his final account. On the. credit side of this supplemental account Avas included the item : “ By cash deposited Avith N. Larco, Esq., and lost by reason of said N. Larco having gone into bankruptcy—No. 88— $11,828.80.”
In the settlement of the supplemental account this item Avas disalloAved, and in disalloAving it the Probate Court said: “ In
The Probate Court proceeded to settle the supplemental account of Splivalo and found that after deducting all credits to which he was entitled, there remained in his hands as administrator the sum of $9,474.08, in mouey, and entered an order to that effect. On the 28th of August following, that court made and entered a final decree of distribution by which Splivalo ivas directed to pay over to the plaintiff as heir of the deceased Lacoste the aforesaid sum of $9,474.08. This he failed and refused to do, after demand, and. hence the present suit on his bond—the bond executed pursuant to the order requiring him to give further and additional security.
The appellants are the executors of one of the sureties on this bond, since deceased, and they contend, first, that the sureties are unaffected by the decree of the Probate Court settling the accounts of the administrator, and by the decree of distribution directing him to pay over to the party entitled thereto the money found to be in his hands; and secondly, that not being bound
Involved in this last proposition is, of course, the further one, that the facts stated in respect to the loan by Splivalo to Larco themselves establish a devastavit on the part of the administrator.
Entertaining the views we do, it makes no difference which of appellants’ propositions is first considered, but, logically, it would seem proper first to inquire what was the undertaking of the sureties. To correctly determine this question, the law under which the bond was given, and the purpose for which it was required, must be taken into consideration. As has been observed, it was given pursuant to an order of the Probate Court requiring the administrator to give “ further and additional” security. Pie had long before been appointed, had given the bond first required of him, had entered upon the discharge of the duties of his trust, had received large sums of money belonging to the estate, and then he was required by the court in which the administration of the estate was pending to give “further and additional” security. By the statute in force when the bond in suit was executed the Probate Court was, and indeed yet is by the Code of Civil Procedure, authorized to require the administrator to give further security in two cases: (1) upon the petition of any one interested in the estate representing to the court, or the judge thereof, that the sureties have become, or are becoming insolvent, or that they have removed, or are about to remove, from the State or that from any other cause the bond is insufficient; and (2) when it comes to the knowledge of the probate judge that the bond of any executor or administrator is from any cause insufficient, he must, without any application, cause such executor or administrator to be cited to appear and show cause why he should not give further security. (Hittell, arts. 5776-5781; Code Civ. Proc. §§ 1397-1402.)
Counsel are mistaken in referring to section 1403 of the Code of Civil Procedure (which is similar to article 5782 of Hittell), , as another instance in which “ further security ” may be required of the executor or administrator. That and the succeeding section provide for the obtaining by a surety of his release from
There is no doubt that the general rule relating to sureties on official bonds is that they are not liable for any official delinquency or default of their principal occurring prior to the execution of the bond. Such is the purport of numerous cases cited by counsel for appellants. But the case in hand is an exception to that rule, and it is an exception because the law under which, and the purpose for which, the representative classes of bonds are given, differs. This distinction was recognized and enforced by the court of appeals of New York in the case of Scofield v. Churchill, 72 N. Y. 567, 568, which was an action upon an executor's bond, in which the sureties sought to defend, as the sureties here do, by showing that the funds for which they were sought to be charged had been lost to the estate before the bond in suit was executed. But the court there overruled the defense and held the sureties liable. That case is a strong authority in support of the view we take of the contract of the sureties here.
Holding as we do that the sureties on the bond in dispute became responsible for the faithful execution by the administrator of the duties of his trust without regard to the time of the execution of the bond, it becomes unnecessary to determine any other point made for the appellants. x Judgment and order affirmed.
McKee, J., and McKinstky, J., concurred.
. Hearing in Bank denied.