77 Va. 376 | Va. | 1883
Lead Opinion
delivered the opinion of the court.
A transcript of the record in these causes discloses the following facts: John P. Parsley, the intestate of appellant, qualified in the county court of Hanover county on or about the 26th of April, 1853, as the guardian of the female appellees, Eugenia E. Turner and George Ella Turner, infants, now the wives respectively of the male appellees, Robert M. Martin and Thomas S. Terry. He received as guardian, for each of these wards, who were sisters, the sum of $363.96 on the 26th day of April, 1853, and on the 3d of January, 1854, the further sum for each of $225.62. He loaned this money at interest for three or four years, until, in the fall of 1858, $500 of it was paid in to him by the borrowers of it, who were unwilling to hold it on loan any longer, the money matters of the country being then plenty and easy. He tried in vain satisfactorily to loan this money out at interest until on the 15th day of January, 1859, upon reliable information and advice, he deposited the said $500 at six per cent, interest in the Commercial Savings Bank of Richmond. Afterwards and during the said year .1859 the farther sum of $1,000 of this money of his wards was paid in to him by the borrowers of it. Being unable to loan the said money out at interest to individuals upon satisfactory security he, in like manner as before, also deposited this said $1,000 in the said Commercial Savings Bank of Richmond at six per cent, interest, on the 1st December, 1859. For both of these deposits in said bank he took certificates of deposits in his own name. He had no money of his own in said bank, and no other money whatever there deposited at any time, and he never checked upon the said money so deposited, or in any way made use or avail of it for any purpose. During the war the bank advertised for the
As soon as his said wards were in condition, from arrival at ag'e, or marriage, to receive payment of the money in his hands as their guardian, he offered to settle with both of them, and offered them these certificates of deposit; their husbands, however, the said Martin and Terry (male appellees here) declined, and positively and persistently refused to receive the said certificates, not because of any question or doubt that they represented the money of his wards, hut expressly on the insistance that the guardian should pay to them in funds equivalent to those in which he originally collected the money from the commissioners of court in 1853 and 1854—that is,.in gold or silver, or its equivalent.
The said Commercial Savings Bank of Richmond was an institution in full business, operation and in good credit, hut, like every other hank in the state, it went down with the fall of the southern Confederacy.
At the February rules, 1861, the said Robert M. Martin and Eugenia E., his wife, filed their hill in the circuit court of Hanover county against the -said John P. Parsley, guardian of Eugenia E. Martin and others, his supposed official sureties, charging that a considerable amount of property, real and personal, had come to the hands of the said Parsley, as guardian aforesaid, and praying for a settlement of his accounts as such and for a decree for the balance which should he found due them on such settlement.
A similar suit was brought at the same time by the said Thomas S. Terry and George Ella Terry, his wife, against the
The answer of J. P. Parsley, guardian, was prepared for him, and under his direction, hut he suddenly died before he had sworn to it. It was adopted and filed as his answer by William M. Parsley, his administrator, who is the appellant here.
At the May term, 1813, of the said circuit court of Hanover, it appearing that all the questions arising in each of these causes are the same, and that the same evidence is applicable to and had been taken in each of them, it was ordered that they he consolidated and thereafter heard together. And it was further ordered, that the reports filed in the said causes by the master commissioner, Winn, together with all the evidence which had been before the said commissioner, or filed in the said causes, should he recommitted with directions to the said commissioner to examine the same and any other evidence that might thereafter he taken or filed by either party, and report to the court.
In his report responsive to this order, made November 3, 1815, the said commissioner reported among other things, that he had carefully examined and considered all the reports and evidence taken and filed in said causes, and that “the funds deposited by John P. Parsley in his own name, in the Commercial Savings Bank, as shown by certificate filed with former report, amounting in the aggregate to $1,500, were funds belonging to the female plaintiffs, then wards of said Parsley.”
“ That the said Commercial Savings Bank was a proper place of deposit for such money, and was such a place as a prudent fiduciary might have made such a deposit at the dates at which said deposits were made by said Parsley.”
“ That the said Commercial Savings Bank has failed, and failed from the results of the late war, the said hank having invested its assets in Confederate bonds or other Confederate securities.” That Mrs. Martin became of age January 1, 1862, and that her husband was a minor when she married him, and did not
At the May term, 1878, of the said circuit court of Hanover, the said court, without passing upon the report of the master commissioner taken and filed in the cause responsive to the order and reference by the court either to approve or disapprove the same in whole or in part,' and without passing upon any of the exceptions filed by both plaintiff's and defendants to the said report, rendered a decree against the defendant, to be satisfied out of the estate of his intestate, the said John P. Parsley, deceased, for the balances found due and reported by the commissioner from the said John P. Parsley, guardian, to his said wards, the female plaintiffs, and the costs. From this decree an appeal and supersedeas were allowed by one of the judges of this court.
The whole finding and report of the master commissioner last made in this cause, in direct response to the order and inquiry of the circuit court of Hanover, was in favor of the good faith, legal action and prudent conduct of the guardian; and should, we think, have induced a decision by the court in- favor of his non-liability. Upon the general principles applicable to the conduct of fiduciaries under such circumstances and difficulties as environed this guardian, these deposits were a legal and proper disposition of the funds of his wards. Ho order of
This guardian made not one cent out of his wards. He deposited their money in a first-class bank at six per cent, interest, just as he received it. He could not pay it to his wards as they were then infants; and he acted prudently as with his own money and as a court would have ordered or sanctioned if applied to at the time.
A bona fide deposit of the money of his wards by the guardian in his own individual name, provided, that it can be shown that it was in fad the money of his toards, will acquit and protect the guardian from the responsibility of loss which ensues not by the form or designation of the deposit, but which has been lost by the general and universal destruction of the whole currency and all the banking and financial interests of the state.
It is shown by the record that Parsley had no money of his own in said bank, .or any other dealing with it whatever; that he never checked on this fund or drew the interest; and it would be unreasonable to suppose that he would have deposited this large sum of his own money and let it remain there for years unused and untouched; a sum, too, within reasonable approximation to the very sum then in his hands due to his wards. It was within $23.46 of the amount then due by him to his ward, Mrs. Terry, and within $16.36 of the amount then due to his other ward, Mrs. Martin. That the sums should not have corresponded to a dollar is perfectly reasonable, as he could not have known exactly, until his accounts had been fully stated. He had lent their money out and it had been paid back to him; and just as he received it he deposited it at interest in bank; and not knowing what else to do with it he let it remain where it was; and where too, it is to be remarked, it would have been safe and returnable to him in good currency after the war but
In this deposit there was no mingling of this fund with Parsley’s own money; it was kept as a special fund; he made no profit and derived no use or advantage from it; he deposited the same kind if not the very same money which he received; he deposited it when he received it. It was lost by no fault or default of his and not because of the form of the deposit (for it would have been equally lost if the deposit had been in his name as guardian).
This case falls directly'within the principles announced by this court in the cases of Davis v. Harman, 21 Grat. 194, and Pidgeon v. Williams, 21 Grat. 251, and in Cooper and, als v. Cooper’s ex’or and als, decided by this court within the last few weeks. Ante, page 198.
Cases in which a fiduciary has been held to responsibility for the loss of the money of his ward or of an estate, which had been deposited in his own name, have all Peen those in which the fiduciary fund was mingled with his own private or personal funds or used by him for his own purposes, or where the deposit was made in depreciated money as compared with the money received. ° This • was the case—this the vice which infected the case of Vaiden and als v. Stubblefield’s ex'or and als, 28 Gratt. 153; and we believe that no case has ever been decided or recognized as authority in this State which would throw the loss of the fund in these causes upon the guardian, Parsley, or upon his estate. It appears from the record that Parsley laid his vouchers as guardian before a commissioner of the court in which he had qualified, for the years 1853-1854, for settlement, hut that they were lost .or destroyed and his account consequently was not then settled. He did subsequently settle before a commissioner of the said court, who returned his accounts to the court, but the public records of Hanover county were destroyed by fire and by the hands of the public enemy. The guardian, Parsley) in 1863, offered and urged a settlement and
In the case cited of Davis v. Harman and als, 21 Grat. 194, the fiduciary, Davis, deposited the fund of his trust in bank in Ms own name, and it was mixed and merged with Ms own money and in his private bank account; yet even in that case Judge Christian, speaking for the court, said: “We would not he understood as at all disputing the authority of the cases relied upon to show that where a trustee deposits the trust fund with a banker or in a hank and does not separate it from his own funds by designating it as the trust fund, and a loss occurs in-consequence of such deposit, that loss must fall on the trustee; as, for instance, where the hank fails or the banker becomes insolvent. But in this case these authorities have no application ; the loss here was not in consequence of the deposit, but the thing deposited perished, without any default anywhere, by the sudden and irretrievable destruction of the whole currency of a country by the termination of a civil war which had destroyed the very power which created it. Neither the authorities relied upon nor the reason upon which they are founded can have any application to a case like this. It would be too rigorous and unjust; it would be in violation of those well-settled principles, founded in reason and conscience, which control the action of courts of equity, to hold that though the appellant has been guilty of no mala fides, no misconduct, no negligence, yet he is to be held responsible for a loss which he had no part in creating and no power to prevent. But that loss, we think, ought to fall upon those who were entitled to the fund that has perished.” Upon the review of this whole case and all the questions presented by the record, and the argument of counsel, we are of the opinion that the decree of the circuit court of Hanover complained of is erroneous, and must he annulled and reversed.
Concurrence Opinion
concurred in the opinion of Fauntleroy, J.
Dissenting Opinion
dissented.
The decree is as follows:
This day came again the parties by their counsel, and the court having maturely considered the transcript of the record of the decree aforesaid and the arguments of counsel, is of opinion, for reasons stated in writing and filed with the record, that the said circuit court erred in adopting statements “A” of Commissioner Winn’s reports, instead of statements “B” of said reports in the settlement of the accounts of the appellant’s intestate of his transactions as guardian of his wards, Eugenia E. Martin and George Ella Turner; it appearing by said statements “B’> in said reports of Commissioner Winn that there is nothing due from the said guardian to either of his'said wards, after crediting him with the amounts deposited by him in the Commercial Savings Bank. It is, therefore, decreed and ordered that said decree he reversed and annulled, and that the appellees pay to the appellant his costs by him expended in the prosecution of his said appeal and supersedeas here. And this court, proceeding to render such decree as the-said circuit court ought to have rendered, it is decreed and ordered that the hills of the plaintiffs in said circuit court he dismissed, and that said plaintiffs pay to the defendant in said circuit court his costs by him about his defence of said causes expended. Which is ordered to he certified to the said circuit court of the county of Hanover.
Decree reversed.