43 Mo. App. 16 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1890
This was an action on the general bond of a guardian. The defense was that the moneys,, in respect of which the breach of the bond is assigned, came into the hands of the guardian, not in virtue of his general trust, but under a special trust arising out of the fact that, in pursuance of a petition presented to the circuit court, an order was made by that court for the guardian to sell certain real estate of the ward; that; to secure the faithful performance of this special trust, a separate bond was given under the provisions-of the following statute: “To obtain such order, the guardian or curator shall present to the court a petition setting forth the condition of the estate and the facts and circumstances on which the petition is founded. If, after a full examination, on the oath of credible and disinterested witnesses, it appears to the court that it would be for the benefit of the ward that the real estate, or any part of it, should be sold or leased, the court may make an appropriate order for such sale or lease, under such regulations and conditions, subject to the provisions of this chapter in relation to the sale of the-real estate of minors, as the court shall consider suited to the case, first requiring the guardian or curator to-enter into good and sufficient bonds to make such leases and conduct such sales with fidelity to the interests of his ward, and faithfully to account for the proceeds of such sales and leases according to law, and as-the order of the court may require.” 1 Wag. Stat., p. 677, sec. 35.
. The court, sitting as a jury, disallowed this defense and gave judgment for the plaintiff, and the defendants appeal. We are of opinion that in this ruling the-court erred. We take it to be a general rule in respect of the liability of sureties, that, where the officer or trustee is required to perform a duty which is special in its nature, arid he is required to give a special bond for the faithful performance of such duty, in the absence of any statutory declaration that his general bondsmen.
Several of these cases are precisely in point on the question before us. They hold that a guardian, under-a statutory system such as ours, ordinarily takes charge ■only of the personalty and the rents of the real estate of his ward, and hence if, under a special license obtained from a court having a statutory power to grant such a license, he sells the real estate of his ward for reinvestment or otherwise, and by such statute a special bond is required of the guardian for the performance of this special trust, the sureties in his general bond will not be liable for the loss of moneys accruing from such sale, but the ward is remitted to his remedy on the special bond. Lyman v. Conkey, 1 Metc. (Mass.) 317; Mattoon v. Cowing, 13 Gray, 387; Williams v. Morton, 38 Me. 52; s. c., 61 Am. Dec. 229; Henderson v. Coover, 4 Nev. 429; Morris v. Cooper, 35 Kan. 156; s. c., 10 Pac. Rep. 588; Madison County v. Johnston, 51 Iowa, 152; Bunce v. Bunce, 65 Iowa, 106; s. c., 21 N. W. Rep. 205; Warwick v. State, 5 Ind. 350. In Lyman v. Conkey, supra, the reason for the rule was stated by •Chief Justice Shaw in the following language: “Whenever the object is to dispose of the real estate of the ward, to raise a fund'to stand in lieu of real estate, for the future use of the ward, or of any other person who may have béen entitled to the real estate, it is deemed a
We have met with one case only, which takes the-opposing view that the general bondsmen are liable. That is the case of Wann v. People, 57 Ill. 206. In that case it is held that the general sureties of a guardian are liable for the rents of the lands of the ward which have been leased, notwithstanding there is a statute-requiring a special bond for the application of such funds, — distinguishing the Massachusetts case above cited on the ground, that the Illinois statute requires the guardian’s bond to be in double the amount of both the real and personal property of thp ward, “thus showing the intention of the legislature to require security for all acts to be done by him in reference to either class of property, and recognizing the fact that he would have to deal with both classes.” Our statute does not contain, such a provision. It requires, in general terms, that the general bond of guardians and curators shall be, “in double the value of the estate or interest to be committed
There is no direct decision on the question before-us in this state; but there is an analogous decision in the case of State to use v. Johnson, 55 Mo. 80. There it was held that the sureties in the general bond of a. county treasurer áre not liable for his failure to account for, and pay over to his successor, state and county school funds, for the reason that he is answerable for those funds under the special bond required to-be given-by the statute.
It is true that in the case of State ex rel. v. Colman, 73 Mo. 685, there is a dictum by Mr. Justice Hough, referring to the statute which requires a special bond to-be given by a guardian when he sells the real estate of the minor, — that the object of the statute “was to provide-additional security for the safe keeping and disbursement of such personal property as should come into thq hands of the curator through the action of the circuit court, as well as for the fidelity of such curator in the-execution of the orders of said court.” But the question there was, whether the special sureties of the-curator would remain liable for funds arising from the sale of the ward’s land after the curator had charged himself with the funds in a settlement in the probate court, and the court held that they would remain so liable. If it was intended by the above observation to-intimate that the general sureties of the guardian would also be liable for such funds in consequence of the act of the guardian in taking them upon his general account in the probate court, it is to be observed that it was an observation upon a question not before the-
It remains to consider whether the mere fact, that the guardian took up the proceeds of the sale of the ward’s real estate on his general accounts as guardian, and charged himself with the same in his settlement in the probate court, can have the effect of making his general sureties liable for them. If, as we hold, they are not liable under the law, and the term of their bond, we know of no principle on which they can be rendered liable by any act done by the guardian with which they are not in privity. The obligation of such sureties, being strictissimi juris, cannot be enlarged by the voluntary action of their principal in respect of a fund ,for which their bond does not make them liable. In the leading case in Massachusetts the decision went further on this point than we are called upon to go in this case. There the surety in the general bond of the guardian sought to be charged had subsequently become the judge of probate, and, in his official character as such, had approved a settlement of the guardian, (his principal in the bond) in which the guardian had charged himself with the proceeds of the .sale of his ward’s real estate ; but it was held that this worked no estoppel against the surety, and did not operate to render him liable.
In this case it is said that a portion of the fund, which the guardian has failed to pay over, did not arise from the sale of the real estate of the ward. In the view which the learned judge took of the law of the case, this became an immaterial inquiry. But it will become material, should there be another trial; and for such portion as did not arise from the sale of the real estate the sureties in the general bond will of course be liable.
The judgment will be reversed and the cause remanded.