114 Va. 308 | Va. | 1912
delivered the opinion of the court.
This controversy originated in a petition filed by Senseny’s administrator in the chancery suit of Senseny’s Executor v. Senseny’s Devisees, from which it appears that E. Holmes Boyd, general receiver of the Circuit Court of chancery cause styled McKown v. McKown, a bond for Frederick county, held as such receiver to the credit of the
The petition of Senseny’s administrator states that at the time of this transaction, the 1st of March, 1896, William A. Buck was notoriously insolvent, and that all the other obligors were dead and their estates insufficient to pay their debts; that these facts were known to the receiver; and that the investment of money in his hands as receiver in the Senseny suit in a bond known by him to be worthless constitutes in law a fraud upon petitioner, and that no statute of limitation can avail to bar petitioner’s right.
Boyd’s administrator, in answer to this petition, says that the accounts of Boyd, as the general receiver of the Circuit Court of Frederick county, having been settled and approved by the said circuit court more than ten years before the filing of either the original petition or of the amended and supplemental petition, the said accounts cannot now be surcharged and falsified upon any charge or pretense, nor can either the estate of E. Holmes Boyd, deceased, or the sureties on his bonds as general receiver be held liable for any claim asserted, or which may be proved upon a surcharging or falsification of the said accounts. He therefore prays and claims the benefit of the statute of limitations especially applicable in these respects, and also the benefit of the statute Of limitations, which denies any right of action after five years after the right to bring the same shall have accrued.
It is provided by section 2920 of the Code that “if the case be upon an indemnifying bond taken under any statute, or upon a bond of an executor, administrator, guardian, curator, committee, sheriff or sergeant, deputy sheriff or sergeant, clerk or deputy clerk, or any other fiduciary or public officer, or upon any other contract by writing under seal,” the suit shall be brought within ten years.
. By section 2921, which sets out when a right of action upon bonds of fiduciaries is deemed to first accrue, it is provided that “The right of action upon the bond of an executor, administrator, guardian, curator, or committee, or of a sheriff, or sergeant acting as such, shall be deemed to have first accrued as follows: * * * and as to any suit against such fiduciary himself, or his representative, which could have been maintained if he had given no bond, there shall be no other limitation than would exist if the
So that it seems that the case before us is within the exception of section 2921, and that the bar of the statute applies. Of course, if fraud had been established, the statute would only run from the time that the fraud was discovered, as appears from Craufurd v. Smith, 93 Va. 623, where it is said that “No lapse of time and no delay in bringing a suit, however long, will defeat the remedy in case of fraud or mutual mistake, provided the injured party, during such interval, was ignorant of the fraud or mistake, without fault on his part. The duty to commence proceedings can only arise upon discovery of the fraud or mistake.”
The decree of the circuit court is, therefore, affirmed.
Affirmed.