221 Wis. 347 | Wis. | 1936
The principal facts upon which the plaintiff seeks to recover herein from the defendant Mehlberg and the Guaranty Company, as surety on his bond as administrator of Samuel McKee’s estate, for Mehlberg’s failure to account for $5,000 of the assets of that estate, were stated in the opinion filed herein on a former appeal, and reported in Jones v. United States F. & G. Co. 214 Wis. 629, 254 N. W. 95. Substantially the same facts were established on the trial which resulted in the judgment now under consideration. That judgment was ordered by the court after a trial upon which it was established conclusively that Mehlberg, as administrator of Samuel McKee’s estate, had failed to inventory and account for $5,000, either invested in bonds or owing by Mehlberg to Samuel McKee, and constituting part of the latter’s estate to be accounted for by Mehlberg as administrator. .Upon the trial, the court submitted two questions to the jury for a special verdict, and answers were returned by the jury in accord with contentions of the appellant. As the jury’s first finding is immaterial in this action, it is only necessary to consider the second answer, by which the- jury found that Mehlberg’s failure to include those $5,000 in the assets of the estate was not a result of an agreement or conspiracy between him and the appellant.
Upon motions after verdict, the court changed that negative finding by substituting therefor its affirmative finding that Mehlberg’s failure was the result of such an agreement or conspiracy between him and the appellant; and the court then ordered the judgment under review, holding the appel
On this appeal, the appellant contends that the jury’s finding that Mehlberg’s failure to inventory and account for the $5,000 was not a result of'such an agreement or conspiracy between him and Mehlberg, was sustained by credible evidence; that the court erred in holding that the appellant’s testimony was not credible, and that there was no credible evidence to sustain that finding; that the burden of proof was upon the surety to establish the existence of such an agreement or conspiracy by clear and convincing evidence to a reasonable certainty and it failed to discharge that burden; and that, in any event, there was under the evidence at least an issue of fact for the jury in that respect, and the court erred in substituting for the jury’s answer, its finding that Mehlberg’s failure to account for that $5,000 was the result of such an agreement or conspiracy between him and the appellant. Those contentions (excepting in so far as the proposition as to the burden of proof is concerned) cannot be sustained. A review of the evidence discloses that the court was fully warranted in substituting its affirmative finding for the jury’s negative answer because the existence of such an agreement or conspiracy between the appellant and Mehl-berg, and the latter’s failure as a result thereof to inventory and account for $5,000 of the estate’s assets were established beyond room for dispute by admissions in appellant’s testimony and other undisputed proof on the trial to the following effect: That Mehlberg suggested to appellant before he joined in petitioning for Mehlberg’s appointment as administrator the withholding of the $5,000 from the inventory. That although appellant knew of Mehlberg’s concealment of
Appellant further contends that even if Mehlberg’s failure to include $5,000 in the assets of the estate was the result of an agreement or conspiracy between them, then the only affirmative relief which can be granted in this action against the appellant is to bar him from participating in the proceeds of the judgment rendered in favor of the plaintiff for the benefit of the estate, and that after the payment, of expenses of administration and inheritance tax, one half of the remaining proceeds so paid in by the Guaranty Company, which would otherwise go to the appellant, should be returned to that corporation; but that the appellant cannot be required to pay to the Guaranty Company any moneys which it is required to pay in this action to the estate for either the benefit, of Elmer McKee or for use for inheritance tax purposes. In that connection, appellant claims that under the decision on the former appeal herein (see Jones v. United States F. & G. Co., supra), the interpleader of appellant was permitted not for the purpose of cross complaining against him because of a conspiracy, and awarding affirmative relief by way of penalty for moneys which Elmer McKee should receive, but
It is true that in so far as the judgment now provides that the Guaranty Company is entitled to recover from appellant such amount as it pays to the estate on account of Mehl-berg’s default, that provision thereof goes beyond the relief which was discussed in the opinion filed on the former appeal, when we held that the surety was entitled to an order interpleading the appellant. In that opinion the allegations of the cross complaint which the Guaranty Company proposed to file against the appellant upon his being interpleaded were treated solely as matters of equitable defense to any recovery for his ultimate benefit. The sufficiency of those allegations as a basis for affirmative relief was not considered then, and nothing was said in the opinion in relation to such relief. Consequently, there was no adjudication at that time in that respect. However, in the cross complaint which the. Guaranty Company served on the appellant, when he was in-terpleaded, that corporation also prayed for judgment providing that if it was required to pay any money by reason of Mehlberg’s default as to that $5,000 of assets, that it then have judgment against him and the appellant for such amount as it was obliged to pay, together with all costs, etc. The Guaranty Company’s right to seek such affirmative relief was not challenged by a demurrer or similar pleading. Instead, the appellant filed an answer on the merits.
In ultimately awarding affirmative relief to the Guaranty Company against the appellant and Mehlberg, the court evidently proceeded on the theory that they, as joint tort-feasors,
The court did not err in either of those respects. Precedent for holding the appellant equally liable to the estate for the loss sustained by it as the result of his co-operation with Mehlberg in his breach of trust is afforded by the decision in Bunting v. Ricks, 22 N. C. (2 Dev. & B. Eq.) 130, 32 Am. Dec. 699. In that case it was held that co-operation of a stranger with a trustee in an act amounting to a breach of the trust was sufficient to render the stranger liable for the loss occasioned thereby, if he had such notice of the existence of the trust as was sufficient, ordinarily, to awaken distrust, or put him upon inquiry. The court said:
“But much less than actual or particular knowledge in detail is sufficient to convert a person into' a trustee, who cooperates with a dishonest trustee in an act amounting to' a breach of trust. Constructive notice, from the possession Of the means of knowledge, will have that effect, although the party were actually ignorant, but ignorant merely because he would not investigate. It is well settled, that if anything appears to' a party calculated to' attract attention or stimulate inquiry, the person is affected with knowledge of all that the inquiry would have disclosed. This principle we deem decisive of the present case.”
However, liability on the part of the appellant and Mehl-berg as joint tort-feasors for the loss sustained by the estate because of Mehlberg’s failure to include the $5,000 in the assets of the estate as the result,of an agreement or conspiracy between him and appellant can also be predicated
“A mere tacit understanding between conspirators to work to a common purpose is all that is essential to a guilty, ac■tionable combination. . . . Mutuality in the undertaking may be secured without any express agreement and without a spoken or written word between the conspirators or a meeting of the members of the combine, or their, even, all knowing each other; or the precise thing to be accomplished or plans for its accomplishment, either in a general way or in detail, being distinctly stated by any member of the combine to any other member. If there is a meeting of minds, brought about in any way, to accomplish the common purpose, the essentials of a guilty combination are all satisfied.” Lange v. Heckel, 171 Wis. 59, 175 N. W. 788; Wachowski v. Lutz, 184 Wis. 584, 593, 201 N. W. 234.
The right of a party defrauded as the result of a conspiracy between a third person and one acting in a fiduciary capacity for the defrauded party, to recover the loss from either of the conspirators, as joint tort-feasors, was recognized in Columbia Bank of Lodi v. Markgraf, 195 Wis. 472, 218 N. W. 712. In that case the plaintiff sought to recover from one of its depositors the amount of his overdrafts by checks which upon payment by the bank on presentation were not charged in the depositor’s account as the result of a conspiracy between him and the bank’s cashier. This court said:
“It also clearly appears there was a secret understanding or conspiracy between the cashier of the bank and the defendant to defraud the bank by this method. Such a conspiracy would render both parties liable, and the defendant cannot escape the consequences of his fraudulent, unlawful act by pleading that he entered into a conspiracy to perform such act with the cashier of the bank. Both would be equally liable to the bank for the sums so- taken from its custody,*358 and it conclusively appears from the allegations oí the complaint that the defendant profited by this unlawful act on the part of both.”
That is in accord with the decisions in the following cases in which all of the parties to a conspiracy to commit an unlawful act were considered equally liable for all damages caused to those injured thereby: McLennan v. Church, 163 Wis. 411, 158 N. W. 73; Martens v. Reilly, 109 Wis. 464, 84 N. W. 840; Patnode v. Westenhaver, supra; Wachowski v. Lutz, supra.
On the other hand, the rule is well established that the surety of a fiduciary who has been compelled to respond for the fiduciary’s breach of trust is entitled to be subrogated to all rights of action which the cestui que trust or creditor has against the fiduciary and all parties who participated in his wrongful acts which were the cause of the default. Stearns, Suretyship (4th ed.), p. 435, § 248; Bunting v. Ricks, supra; Rhame v. Lewis, 13 Rich. Eq. (S. C.) 269, 330; National Surety Co. v. State Savings Bank, 156 Fed. 21, 84 C. C. A. 187, 14 L. R. A. (N. S.) 155; Richfield National Bank v. American Surety Co. (C. C. A.) 39 Fed. (2d) 387; National Surety Co. v. Massachusetts Bonding & Ins. Co. (C. C. A.) 19 Fed. (2d) 448; Dantzler Lumber & Export Co. v. Columbia Casualty Co. 115 Fla. 541, 156 So. 116, 95 A. L. R. 258, 264; American Bonding Co. v. National Mechanics’ Bank, 97 Md. 598, 606, 55 Atl. 395, 397; American National Bank v. Fidelity & Deposit Co. 129 Ga. 126, 58 S. E. 867, 869; Blake v. Traders’ National Bank, 145 Mass. 13, 12 N. E. 414; Stokes v. Little, 65 Ill. App. 255.
It follows that the judgment must be affirmed.
By the Court. — Judgment affirmed.