80 Ind. 155 | Ind. | 1881
— Error is assigned upon the decision of the court in sustaining a demurrer for want of facts to the appellant’s complaint, the object of which was to obtain the review of a judgment theretofore rendered against the appellant, the alleged error in the proceedings being the overruling of the appellant’s demurrer, for want of facts, to the complaint on which the judgment was rendered.
The complaint in question was filed December 19th, 1876, and contains the following averments:
The State of Indiana, suing upon the relation of Albert A. Barnes, guardian of the person and property of Alpha Medsker, a minor, complains of John Lingerman and William Q.
The copy of the bond which was made an exhibit, and which was in the penal sum of $4,000, corresponds in recital and condition with the averments of the complaint, and need not be set out here.
Counsel for the appellant, in their brief, say:
“ It was the second bond given, the first one having been ■executed at the time of the original appointment, which was made May 22d, 1866. The complaint, as will be seen, alleges explicitly that, on the making of the original appointment, the guardian received every part of his ward’s estate and converted it to his own use and has failed and refused to account for the same or any part.of it. It shows that after receiving the money he made sundry settlements with the court, bringing forward against himself the principal, and as is alleged a part only of the interest for which he was liable, the last one of these settlements having been made the fall before the bond sued on was given, after which it is not alleged or even intimated that any additional funds were received by him, or false account rendered, or act of any kind done, legal or illegal, in connection with the trust. It is true, it is alleged, that he refused to account- and pay over, but this is immaterial so far as the appellant is concerned, unless he was liable on his failure to account. The old theory in such cases, as it was understood by the court trying the case, and as the previous decisions justified, as was believed, was, that the new surety stepped into the shoes of the old one and assumed his liability whatever it was. This court, in the Hull case, 64 Ind. 421, changes the rule, and establishes the more equitable and just*158 one of holding the security liable only for the wrongs done under the bond he signs, and during its existence.”
We adhere to the doctrine of Lowry v. The State, ex rel. Hull, 64 Ind. 421,to which counsel refer; but the case stated in the complaint before us does not, as we conceive, come within the rule there enunciated. Counsel are not quite accurate in their summary of the averments, or in their statements of the legal effect, of the complaint. It is true that it is explicitly alleged that Lingerman had converted his ward’s entire property into money, and that the same “has ever .since his appointment remained and still remains in his hands, and has been by him used in his own private business ever since it came into his hands,” and, if nothing else was averred, it might be deemed that this constitutes the gist of the complaint, and shows a conversion before the execution of the appellant’s bond, for which he is not liable. But the complaint goes further, and after detailing the several reports made by the guardian, alleges that the. amount now — that is at the time of filing the complaint — in the guardian’s hands, due the relator as guardian, is the sum of $1,700, and that since his removal the said Lingerman had refused and still refused to account for and pay over the same or any part thereof. There is im necessary inconsistency in these averments. Lingerman may have converted the money to his own use, used it in his private business, and yet have replaced it, and if he did replace it, or have it in his hands as the trust money, after the execution of the bond in suit, he became liable under that bond to account for it, though at some previous time there may have been no such liability.
This we think a proper construction of the complaint, and it is one upon which the judgment rendered can be maintained.
We are satisfied, too, that this conclusion inflicts no hardship upon the appellant. The record shows that the case was not tried under a misapprehension by the court of the rule of liability, which applies in such cases. The appellant filed an
A demurrer to this answer, for want of facts, the court overruled. It is, therefore, fair to presume that the evidence showed a liability arising out of something done after the execution of the bond sued on ; and as, upon the construction which we have placed upon it, the complaint warranted such a judgment, it follows that the court committed no error in sustaining the demurrer to the complaint for a review of the judgment.
Judgment affirmed, with costs.