17 Mo. 453 | Mo. | 1853
delivered the opinion of the court.
The defendants in error, plaintiffs below, commenced their suit in the Jackson Circuit Court, by assumpsit and attachment against the plaintiff in error, at the September term of said court, 1849. The plaintiff in error appeared at a subsequent term and filed bis plea. Neither party requiring a jury, the cause was tried by the court, which found for the plaintiffs below, and assessed their damages at the sum of eleven hundred and fifty-six dollars and fifty-eight cents, and rendered judgment in their favor for that amount and costs. The plaintiff in error moved the court for a new trial; also moved in arrest of judgment, which motions being overruled, the plaintiff in error excepted, and brings the case here by writ of error.
From the record, the following facts appear, and were found by the court below, as the ground upon which its judgment was rendered : That Jesse Overton, by bis last will and testament, appointed one John R. Swearingen and the plaintiff in error, executors of bis said last will and testambnt; that after the death of the said Jesse Overton, the probate court of Jackson county granted letters testamentary to said Swearingen and plaintiff in error; that they entered into a joint bond, with Samuel C. Owens as one of their securities, on the 20th day of December, 1841, conditioned as the law requires ; that plaintiff in error and Swearingen took joint possession of all property belonging to the estate of said testator, and made an inventory of the same, and caused the same to be sold ; that the notes and bonds, for the purchase money, were made payable to said executors jointly; that all the business in relation to the administration of said estate, was transacted in the names of
The plaintiff in error moved the following instructions :
1. That if they believe from the evidence, that defendant, as one of the executors of said Overton, deceased, collected money and paid the same into the hands of John R. Swearin-gen, his executor, that then they cannot find against said defendant for hny such money so paid to the said Swearingen.
2. That they can only find a verdict against defendant for such moneys as came to his hands, as executor, or he was chargeable with by order of the county court, and which he failed to account for, as such executor.
8. That, before the court, sitting as a jury, could find for plaintiffs, they must' believe from the evidence, that defendant received money as one of the executors of Jesse Overton, deceased, and that he failed to account for such money, or that he was chargeable with money or property by the county court which he failed to account for as such executor.
Which, by the court, were refused ; and the opinion of the court’, in refusing the same, was excepted to.
In the case of Babcock v. Hubbard, 2 Conn. Rep. 536, it was held, that executors, who have given bond with security to the judge of probate for the faithful performance of their trust, are jointly liable, as principals, to indemnify the surety, who has been subjected for the fault of one to pay money. In this case, it was said by Gould, Judge: “But, it is urged that, as the defendant, Mrs. Hubbard, has been personally guilty of no misconduct or default, as executrix, she is not bound to indemnify the plaintiff. For, it is said that, when one executor is liable upon a probate bond, for the default of his co-executors, his liability is only that of a surety or guarantee, and that Mrs. Hubbard is, therefore, so far as regards the default of Stiles Phelps, but a co-surety with the plaintiff. If this were so, she would be bound, it is true, only to contribute a proportion of the amount which the plaintiff has been
It is the opinion of this court, that the doctrine of this case of Babcock v. Hubbard, is most consonant to justice and law. One executor can watch over and guard the conduct of his co-executor. He, with the co-executor, has given the obligation to perform certain trusts and duties, and the sureties in the bond of the executors are bound for the faithful performance of these duties by them as executors. If executors are unwilling to unite in one bond, nothing prevents each executor giving his separate bond, with his own separate sureties; the conditions of which would be, the faithful performance of the duties of such executors ; and then these sureties would be liable for the default of such executors alone, for whom they had become sureties.
Upon the whole of this case, then, as appears by the record, there was no error committed by the court below, in either refusing the instructions asked for by defendant below, and set forth in this opinion, or in refusing to sustain the motion in arrest and for new trial.
The judgment of the Circuit Court is, with the concurrence of the other judges, affirmed.