163 S.W.2d 86 | Mo. | 1942
Lead Opinion
This action is on the administrator's bond of George W. Kirk, as administrator of the estate of E.L. Griffin, deceased, *532 against defendant surety only. Judgment was rendered for the full penalty of the bond ($6000.00) to be satisfied upon payment of $1213.45 and costs, consisting of items, as follows: Principal, $935.96; interest, $127.49; attorneys' fees, $150.00. Both parties appealed; relator on inadequacy of attorneys' fees and failure to allow additional damages for vexatious refusal to pay; and defendant upon any judgment in excess of $697.08, which was tendered.
The appeals went to the St. Louis Court of Appeals, which affirmed the judgment, but the case was certified here on dissent of one of the judges. [State ex rel. Gnekow v. U.S. Fidelity
Guaranty Co., 150 S.W.2d 581.] Relator was [88] the divorced wife of E.L. Griffin and made claim as beneficiary in a policy issued by the Metropolitan Life Insurance Company for the amount thereof, which was also claimed by the administrator. The Insurance Company paid the same into court by interpleader, amounting with costs deducted, to $935.96. The circuit court awarded the fund to the administrator and this judgment was affirmed on appeal by the St. Louis Court of Appeals. [Gnekow v. Metropolitan Life Ins. Co., 99 S.W.2d 126.] This appeal was taken without giving an appeal bond and while it was pending the administrator demanded and received the fund from the circuit clerk. Thereafter, on certiorari to this Court, the opinion of the St. Louis Court of Appeals was quashed in part. [State ex rel. Gnekow v. Hostetter,
[1] The question for decision is: If an administrator takes property, actually owned by some third person, under the claim that it is an estate asset and puts it (or its proceeds if he converts it to cash) into the estate, can the owner recover from the surety on the administrator's bond, after final determination that it is not an estate asset, when the administrator refuses to make full restitution?
There are two distinct lines of authority on this question, as follows:
The surety is held not liable in an action on the bond because "the sureties on the bond of an administrator are only liable for a due accounting by their principal for assets of the estate, and the principal *533
cannot extend their liability by taking possession of property which is not assets of the estate." [Commercial Nursery Co. v. Ivey,
The surety is held liable in action on the bond because "all moneys received under color of official authority (as administrator) are covered by the bond." [Parker v. Potter,
The cases based upon each of these propositions may be found in 104 A.L.R. 180, annotation, which demonstrates the existing confusion. [See, also 21 Am. Jur. 787, sec. 723 et seq.; 24 C.J. 1063, sec. 2547 et seq.] There are Missouri cases which seem to take both sides. For reasons hereinafter explained, we think both propositions are too broadly stated.
In Emmons v. Gordon,
On the other hand, while recognizing the rule that real estate descends to the heirs, this court said, in Lewis v. Carson,
We think the language of these cases is too broad. [See Webber v. Detroit Fidelity Surety Co.,
In the latter situation, if nothing was withheld from the estate which could belong to it, of course neither the administrator nor his sureties should be liable. In that situation, therefore, the proper inquiry is whether or not the assets in question were actually estate assets and this determines liability on the bond. However, in the other situation, when the estate has actually been increased by the value of assets put into it by the administrator which belong to a third party, then it has something to which it has no right, and such *535
third party surely ought to be able to obtain his property or its value. Is not the general statement that the bond does not cover property, which is not an estate asset, then inapplicable? The estate has his property and it is not entitled to keep it. If the administrator still has the specific property, the owner may maintain a suit in replevin for it against the administrator in his official capacity. [White v. McFarland,
In so ruling this Court said:
"Dailey (as administrator) having by means of the replevin suit become possessed of property as belonging to the estate, which the circuit court decided did not belong to it, it was his duty as administrator to pay the value thereof to its owner. And the plaintiff having paid it for him under the judgment of the circuit court, became subrogated ipso facto, to all the rights of Patrick Roddy (the owner), to whom restitution should in the first instance have been made. Now the claim of Patrick Roddy to reimbursement did not constitute a demand which could be allowed against the estate of James Roddy, but it was a claim against Dailey in his official capacity, arising out of the improvident exercise of his official functions, which it was his official duty as administrator to pay, and for a breach of which duty, the sureties on his bond are liable."
The prescribed statutory obligations (which this bond contained) are: (1) Faithfully administer said estate; (2) account for, pay and deliver all money and property of said estate; and (3) perform all other things touching said administration required by law or by the order or decree of any court having jurisdiction. We think that failure to hold this fund intact (when litigation was still pending to determine its ownership) could be reasonably said to be a breach of *536
the obligation to faithfully administer said estate, similar to waste as the Court of Appeals pointed out in the Walsh case. That was in effect the holding in the North Carolina case (
[2] However, because of the confusion of the authorities both in this State and throughout the country, we think the surety was justified in litigating the main question. Likewise, the question of liability on the bond in any amount in excess of the amount of assets remaining in the estate after payment of administration costs and expense allowed by the probate court (which was tendered) was not presented by the facts in the Nye case and had not been settled. [For conflict of authorities on estate and bond liability for conversion of property see 21 Am. Jur. 555, sec. 306; Annotation 44 A.L.R. 637; Annotation 127 A.L.R. 687.] These were certainly debatable legal questions. Vexatious delay penalties "must be supported by a showing of obstructing a beneficiary by refusing to pay without reasonable or probable cause or excuse. [91] [Cleaver v. Central States Life Ins. Co.,
The judgment as to the principal sum of $935.96 and interest is affirmed; and the allowance for attorneys' fees is reversed.Bradley and Dalton, CC., concur.
Addendum
The foregoing opinion by HYDE, C., is adopted as the opinion of the court. All the judges concur.