48 Vt. 620 | Vt. | 1876
The opinion of the court was delivered by
This is an action, under the statute on a bond given by the defendants to the Probate Court for the district of Randolph, for the faithful performance by Almou Brainard, of the duties of administrator on the estate of Austin Brainard. On demurrer, the County Court adjudged that the declaration was sufficient, .and rendered judgment against the defendants for the amount of the penalty named in the bond. This judgment must stand if the declaration sets forth sufficient facts to sustain it. It
The alleged breach of the conditions of the bond is, the failure of the ancillary administrator, Almon Brainard, to pay, on the order of the Probate Court, to the principal administrator, who resides in Wisconsin, the sum found in his hands on the settlement of his account with the estate. Do the facts admitted by the demurrer, place the prosecutor in such relations to the bond and its alleged breach that he may be entitled to damages, or may have been injured by such breach ? It is to be remarked that the permission granted to him by the Probate Court to prosecute the bond, is not conclusive on this question. The statute is mandatory upon the Probate Court to grant such permission to any one claiming to have been injured by a breach of the conditions of the bond, if he shall give a bond to the satisfaction of the court, to prosecute the suit to effect and pay such costs as shall be adjudged against him in case he fails to recover. The Probate Court, in granting such permission, except in determining the amount and sufficiency of the bond required from the prosecutor, acts in a ministerial rather than in a judicial capacity. Hence, the facts stated in the prosecutor’s declaration must bo considered, in order to determine whether he may have been injured by the conceded breach of the conditions of the bond in suit. The prosecutor is not the principal administrator to whom the Probate Court has ordered the principal in the bond to pay the sum found in his hands on the settlement of his administration account. He alleges that he was a creditor of the estate in the jurisdiction of the principal administration, and that he had there proved his debt. He docs not allege that his claim remains unpaid, nor that the funds in the hands of the principal administrator are insufficient to pay it, except inferentially. He does not state that the court in Wisconsin has ever ordered the principal administrator to pay his claim. There is no fact stated in the declaration that shows that the prosecutor would have received, or been entitled
If this court had affirmed the judgment of the County Court, it could not have rendered final judgment in the case, inasmuch as the damages, if any, resulting to the prosecutor from the alleged breach of the bond, had not been ascertained. Ordinarily, this court would have treated the case as prematurely brought into it, and have dismissed it as a misentry. As the case has boon fully argued, and as the views of this court are such as will finally determine the case, we have thought best to make it an exception to the general rule, but we do not wish to be understood as relaxing the rule. Besides, the proceedings under the statute in this class of cases are somewhat peculiar. There are two judgments in this class of cases, the latter of which does not necessarily or ordinarily vacate the former. The preliminary judgment in favor of the Probate Court, would stand, though the final judgment might be against the prosecutor. Generally, a final judgment in favor of the defendant, vacates all preliminary judgments in favor of the plaintiff; so that in such cases, an exception taken by the defendant to the rendition of the preliminary judgment, need not be insisted on by him. In the case at bar, if the defendants had de
The defendants, by the demurrer, having admitted the execution of the bond, and a breach of its conditions, are not entitled to a general judgment in their favor, fiuch a judgment might embarrass a future suit upon the bond for the same breach, by a prosecutor entitled to relief by prosecuting the same. They have the right to such judgment only as will end the right of the present prosecutor to pursue them on the facts alleged in the declaration. A nonsuit is effectual for that purpose, and protects the rights of all parties who may be entitled to prosecute the bond for this particular breach.
Judgment reversed, the declaration adjudged insufficient, and judgment that the prosecutor become nonsuit.