59 Ala. 559 | Ala. | 1877
The present appellants are not in a position to inquire into and dispute the validity of the grant of administration to Albert W. Plowman. The bond into which they voluntarily entered, and which is matter of record in the Court of Probate, affirms the validity of the grant, and enabled the principal to gain access to the trust, assume its authority, and take possession of the assets of the deceased. Now that he has abused the authority with which they asserted he was clothed, wasted the assets he received, and from his infidelity, they, or those, who relied on the bond as a security, must be involved in loss, they cannot escape from liability by a disputation of the fact the bond affirms. Sprowl v. Lawrence, 33 Ala. 674; Williamson v. Wolf, 37 Ala. 298. “It is well settled that no one who has bound himself by an instrument under seal for the fidelity and good conduct of another in a private trust or public duty, can escape from the liability thus assumed under cover of an allegation that his principal was not duly designated or elected, or was subject to some legal disqualification which should have prevented him from accepting or administering the office.”—2 Smith Lead. Cases 708. The precise question arose in Cutler v. Dickinson, 8 Pick. 386, and it was held the sureties in an administration bond are estopped by the recitals of the bond from denying the regularity of the'appointment of their principal.
We cannot concede, however, that the grant of administration is void, because of the relationship existing between the administrator and the judge by whom it was granted. In our system, the grant of administration is formal, and, of course, unless a contest as to the right of administration arises, no right is determined, no interest is concluded.. The Court, in the absence of a contest, simply appoints an officer or agent of its own, or whom the law devolves the ownership of the personal assets of the decedent. The judge of probate could well have declined to appoint to the trust his son; and if he had indulged proper considerations of judicial delicacy, would not have appointed him. He was without a right to or interest in the administration, and there was a manifest impropriety in his appointment. The-