57 Mo. App. 120 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1894
— Plaintiff sues on the administration bond, given by defendants as surviving partners of the
The petition alleged that defendants, Charles W. Smith and Wm. Schirk, Jr., were the surviving partners of the late firm of Chas. W. Smith, Wm. Schirk, Jr., and Christian Burger (deceased), under the partnership name of the Burger Grocer Company; that such surviving partners were duly appointed administrators, after the death of their copartner, of said Burger Grocer Company, and as such, -together with the other defendants, executed a bond for the faithful administration of said partnership estate in words and figures, to wit:
“That, if C. W. Smith andWm. Schirk, surviving partners of the late firm of C. W. Smith, Christian Burger and Wm. Schirk, doing business under the firm name of the Burger Grocer Company, shall use due diligence and fidelity in closing the affairs of the late copartnership, apply the property thereof toward the payment of the partnership debts, render an account annually upon oath to the probate court of Newton county, whenever by it thereto required, of all the partnership affairs, including the property owned by the late firm and the debts due thereto, as well as what may have been paid by the survivors toward the partnership debts and what may still be due and owing therefor, and pay over within two years, unless a longer time be allowed by the said probate court to the executor or administrator of the said Christian Burger, the excess, if any there be, beyond satisfying the partnership debts and costs and expenses in closing the affairs of the partnership, then the above bond to be void; otherwise to remain in full force and effect.”
That thereafter said surviving partners entered upon the administration of the effects and estate of
The answer of defendants admitted the execution of the bond sued on, and averred that said administrators used due diligence and fidelity in closing the affairs of the said late copartnership, and applied the property théreof toward the payment of debts so far as it was possible for them to collect the assets of said partnership and to reduce them to cash by lawful sale; that, although the nominal amount of the assets- in their hands as administrators was $5,263.01, yet a large part thereof consisted of insolvent accounts, and a large portion of the goods and chattels embraced in said assets were necessarily sold below their appraised value, thus- reducing the available assets in their hands to the sum of $2,833.08; that said copartnership was largely indebted to sundry persons and on divers accounts, and that they applied $2,691.45 in payment of said indebtedness and the expenses lawfully incurred in collecting the assets, and were accordingly credited in their settlements of accounts as surviving partners by. the probate court; that they still hold in their hands as surviving partners accounts in favor of said firm amounting to $1,227.21, which they have been unable
The replication contained a denial of the new matter set up in the answer.
The case was tried by the court sitting as a jury. The evidence tended to show that defendants Chas. W.
The evidence tended to show that, in pursuance of an order of sale, said administrators sold the goods and personal effects, constituting the stock of groceries and effects belonging to said estate, for the sum of $2,206.15, and that, on the twentieth of October, 1889, the record of the probate court of Newton county showed the presentation and allowance of plaintiff’s claim sued for; that no final settlement of the copartnership of said estate had been made.
The evidence also tended to show that said administrators have paid out all the assets received by them in administering the estate, except insolvent accounts, amounting to about $1,200; that the cash used by said administrators in payment of the debts of said partnership has been applied to the payment in full of a large number of the claims against said estate, and the payment of thirty per cent, on the dollar on certain claims which had been allowed by the probate court; that they have, however, paid no part of the allowed demand of plaintiff; that the demands against said partnership, which were paid by said administrators in full, were not paid by order of the probate court, nor were they allowed demands, and were paid without knowledge on the part of said administrators that there was a sufficiency of assets to pay all the claims against said estate.
At the instance of defendants the court gave the
“2. The fact that the surviving partners preferred and paid in full any debt or debts of the partnership existing at the time of the decease of Christian Burger, can not be regarded as a breach of any condition of the bond sued on, notwithstanding the fact that such preference and payment may have exhausted the cash assets of said partnership, and left no money to be prorated to the relator upon his demand against the partnership.”
And the court refused, among others, the following declarations of law requested by plaintiff:
“2. The conditions of the bond in question are sufficient to entitle the plaintiff to recover damages against the securities on said bond, provided the surviving partners have wrongfully and unlawfully refused and neglected to pay plaintiff’s claim and any part of it.
“3. The plaintiff in this case is not precluded from recovering damages against the securities on the bond sued on for the wrongful and unlawful refusal of the surviving partners to pay plaintiff’s claim, or any part of it, by reason of the fact that said bond does not contain certain conditions found in the form of such bond prescribed in Revised Statutes of 1889, section 59.
“4. Under the undisputed evidence in this cause plaintiff is entitled to recover nominal damages against the securities on the bond for failure and refusal of the surviving partners to make a settlement of the affairs of said estate, when lawfully required by the probate court to so do.
“5. If the assets of the Burger Grocer Co. were not sufficient to pay all the partnership debts in full, then it was the duty of the surviving partners to pay said debts pro rata; and if, after the neglect and refusal of said partners to pay this plaintiff’s claim in full or-*126 In part, plaintiff exhibited, the same to the probate court, and the said claim was duly allowed by said court, and then said surviving partners still refused and neglected to pay said claim pro rata, the plaintiff is entitled to recover as damages against the principals and securities on the bond in question his pro rata share of the assets of said estate.”
Thereupon the court rendered judgment in favor of the defendants, from which the plaintiff has appealed to this court, and assigns for error, first, the ruling of the court, that plaintiff’s could not recover any damage on account of the insufficiency of the conditions of the bond in suit; second, error in giving and refusing instructions.
The objection of the respondents to the abstract is untenable. It recites the facts essential to the taking of the appeal and the filing of the bill of exceptions, and was not objected to. Mason v. Penn, 53 Mo. App. 118; R. S. 1889, sec. 2253.
The decision of this case turns upon a construction of the scope of the bond executed by the surviving partners. That bond is in exact accordance with the one set forth in section 60, Revised Statutes, 1879. It differs from the one prescribed in section 59, Revised Statutes, 1889, in not containing the additional clauses inserted in the latter bond, to wit: Apply the property thereof, “in payment of legal allowances * * * and in general to do and perforin all other acts and things which are or may be required of Mm by law.” The bond in suit, however, was executed on March 11, 1889, prior to the enactment of the statute requiring a bond with the additional clauses supra.
Before the date of the execution of the bond sued upon the law upon the subject of the payment of partnership debts by surviving partners in administering the estate was changed, so that it was no longer lawful
In the case at bar it is conceded that the surviving partners paid many of the partnership debts in full without allowance thereof by the probate court, and without knowledge on their part of the sufficiency of the partnership assets to pay its debts. That this was a breach of duty on the part of the administering partners, is not denied. The only claim made is that it was not a breach of the terms of the bond sued on, and therefore affords no right of action against the sureties on the bond.
The purpose of the act of 1883 (R. S. 1889, sec. 64), was not to enlarge, but to restrict, the power of the surviving partners in payment of the partnership debts. This regulation was definitive of their duties, to the ex- ' tent of its terms, indisposing of the assets of the partnership.
The first clause of the bond in suit is that the surviving partners shall use due diligence and fidelity in closing the affairs of the copartnership.” This clause comprehends, and is adapted to secure, the duties imposed by law upon surviving partners in administering the assets of a copartnership. It can not, therefore, be held to exclude the performance of the duties required at the time of the execution of the instrument, without narrowing the meaning of the plain terms employed, as well as violating the canon of construction that contracts are presumed to be made (in absence of evidence of a contrary intent) in pursuance of existing statutes governing the rights and duties of the parties thereto. This we are not warranted in doing. We, therefore, hold the clause in question sufficient to embrace responsibility for misfeasance of administration
Again, the second condition in the bond sued on is, to wit: “To apply the property thereof toward the payment of the partnership debts.” This clause, in so many words, obligates the makers of the bond to guarantee the application of the partnership property to the payment of the partnership debts. There is, therefore, no possible room for construction as to its meaning, and the only contention of respondent is that the clause in question does not bind the bondsmen to guarantee the method of payment of partnership debts required by law when the bond was given, because the same clause, anterior to the act prescribing the present method of payment, involved a guaranty of a different method of payment of partnership debts.
This argument involves a non sequiter, for it does not follow because a given clause is sufficient to cover liability for full power of payment of partnership debts, that it is not therefore sufficient to embrace liability for a restricted power of payment of such claims. Whether or not it is sufficient to cover both cases depends on the terms used.
Again, that the clause was sufficient to guarantee full payment under the old law is not disputed, but the claim is that it is not sufficient to guarantee liability for fro rata payment under the law as existing .at and before the making of the bond. This view, as we have seen, is opposed to the general rule subordinating bonds and contracts to existing statutes.
It' is also illogical in concluding that not the fact of payment or nonpayment of partnership debts, but whether or not they are to be paid in full or fro rata, is of the essence of the obligation imposed by this clause. There are no restrictive terms in the bond limiting the liability of the sureties to the application by the administrators of the assets to the partnership debts
As, therefore, neither the bond nor this condition limits the liability of the obligors to a particular or partial application of the assets;' and as there was a statute then regulating the duty of the surviving partner in this respect, the conclusion is unavoidable that the statute in question is applicable to the general and unrestrained terms of the condition. This conclusion is also in accordance with the evident intent of the legislature, since it appears that the law requiring pro rata paj^ment instead of full payment of partnership debts, in the contingencies therein expressed, was passed in 1883; and no other or different clauses were prescribed for administration bonds of surviving partners until the revision of 1889 went into effect. Unless, therefore, the legislature deemed the general conditions of the bond then required by statute ample security for the restricted duty cast upon surviving partners by the act of 1883, it would have required a new and different bond at the time of the act in question. This, however, was not done.
Our conclusion as to the extent of the conditions in the bond in suit is supported by the general rule as to the scope of the conditions of official bonds, announced by the supreme court of the United States, viz: “The official bond of parties undoubtedly covers not merely duties imposed by existing law, but duties belonging to, and naturally connected with, their office or business imposed by subsequent law.” United States v. Singer,
This rule, which, we think is the correct one, applies with greater force when (as in the present case) the statute governing the bond was enacted anterior to its execution. In such cases, if the conditions of the bond fairly embrace the regulations of the statute, the latter is as much a part of the obligation of the former as if it had been written therein. The declaration of law given by the circuit judge was contrary to these views, and therefore erroneous. There was error also in the refusal of the requests, supra, of appellant. They stated correct principles of law, and were applicable to the facts in this record.
The result is that the judgment herein is reversed ' and the cause remanded.