99 Ga. 356 | Ga. | 1896
1. Where a trustee, after giving a bond for the faithful performance of his duties as such, executed a second bond for the same purpose payable to the ordinary, the latter bond reciting that on account of a change in the corpus of the trust estate from realty to personalty, the principal desired “to ■strengthen the bond heretofore filed, and give this additional bond,” the new bond, both as to the principal and the sureties thereon, rested upon a sufficient consideration; and though a voluntary and not a statutory bond, it was competent for the ordinary, as the payee thereof, to bring his action upon the same for the benefit of any person within its provisions who was injured by a breach of it.
2. That a beneficiary of the trust had before the execution of the new bond instituted proceedings for the removal of the trustee, of which he had privately acknowledged service, and that these proceedings had been kept from the public files of the court, in order to allow the trustee an opportunity to give additional security or to make a settlement, did not amount to such a fraud upon a surety, who signed in ignorance of such proceedings, as would relieve him from liability; it not appearing that any beneficiary of the trust had ever made to him any misrepresentation for the purpose of misleading him as to the truth of the matter or had ever said or done anything for the purpose of inducing him to sign the bond.
3. Where such a 'bond did not expressly or by fair implication stipulate for liability as to past waste or misconduct on the part of the trustee, it would be binding upon a surety only as to a devastavit or breach of duty committed by the trustee after its execution.
4. The bond upon which the present action was brought reciting that the real estate belonging to the trust estate had been sold and the net proceeds invested under an order of court, “and is now held by the trustee to the same uses and trusts as was heretofore said real estate,” and the declaration alleging a failure and refusal of .the principal and sureties to pay over or account for the trust estate upon lawful demand, a cause of action was set forth, and, in the absence of the additional allegations mentioned in the next note, a surety upon the bond would be estopped from denying the above stated recitals therein and from, showing by parol evidence that they were untrue.
5. Inasmuch, however, as the declaration does contain certain allegations which, taken in connection with exhibits thereto attached, leave it a matter of doubt and uncertainty as to whether the trustee in fact had in his hands any assets whatever of the