106 A. 504 | Conn. | 1919
This action seeks to hold the principal and one surety, Ettie M. Northrop, upon a probate bond, and J. Francis Calef, the executor of the will of another surety, Arthur B. Calef, who was also a distributee of such surety. All of these parties are properly in court and all the steps requisite to be taken to hold the principal, the living surety, and the representative and the distributee of the estate of the deceased surety, have been taken. An adjudication of the entire matter may be had in a single action, each step can be kept distinct, and when this is done the distributee of the deceased surety may be compelled by an appropriate decree to recontribute to the estate to the extent of the share received by him, and this sum is then available to meet the judgment against the estate of the deceased surety. Davis v. Vansands,
The Superior Court rendered judgment against the principal on the bond, and in favor of one surety and the representative and the distributee of a deceased surety upon this bond.
The appeal of the plaintiffs, aside from the correction of the finding, attacks the judgment in favor of the sureties. It is clear that the sureties upon this bond are equally liable with the principal, unless the sureties can avail themselves of one of the statutes of limitation, *563 or the statute of non claim, or a general claim of laches.
Counsel for the sureties argue that the cause of action accrued against the trustee and the sureties on this bond in 1897, when the trustee had lost or misappropriated all of the funds of the estate in his hands; that the breach occurred when the trust fund was converted, and hence an action could have been brought at that time, and that this set in operation the general statute of limitation, which provided that an action should not be brought on contracts under seal but within seventeen years. General Statutes, § 6151.
We think the argument fails to take into account the distinction between the creation of a liability upon a bond, and the accrual of a cause of action thereon. It is undoubted that the statute of limitation begins to run as soon as the right of action has accrued. Eising
v. Andrews,
There is another conclusive reason why the statute of limitation has not run the requisite seventeen years. The trustee fraudulently concealed his breach until about the time of his removal, the court finding that Northrop had "concealed from the claimants of the fund up to the time of his removal in 1911, the fact that he had misappropriated the fund." The fraudulent concealment by the trustee of the cause of action arrested the running of the statute until the time "when the person entitled to sue thereon shall first discover its existence." General Statutes, § 6175. The effect of this statute is that no cause of action came into existence by reason of Northrop's misappropriation until it was discovered in 1911, and the Middletown Trust Company was appointed trustee in his stead.Eising v. Andrews,
The sureties do not pursue in their brief the claim that this action is barred by the statute limiting actions against sureties on probate bonds to those brought within six years from the final settlement and acceptance of the account of the principal. General Statutes, § 6156. The trustee, Northrop, has never rendered a final account, and hence this statute never began to run.
The defendants assert in their brief, but do not there argue, their defense of laches. Our reasons for not thinking this defense available to these defendants are these: No obligation rested upon the distributees of this trust fund to protect the sureties on this bond against the act of the principal, prior to the death of the last life tenant, Susan Brewer, on February 26th, 1913. Until then the distributees could not be known; and in the absence of fraud on their part prejudicial to the sureties, they cannot be held in any degree responsible for the acts or omissions of this testamentary trustee. State v. Howarth,
The finding does not disclose that these defendants or any of them have been prejudiced by the delay of the plaintiffs in asserting their claim between February 26th, 1913, the date of decease of the last life tenant, and December 18th, 1916, the date of the writ in this action. "There is no merit in the defense of laches. That exists only where there has been such a delay in the assertion of a claim as naturally to prejudice him against whom the claim is set up." Hartford v. MechanicsSavings Bank,
Our consideration of the case has led us to examine one question not raised by counsel, viz: whether the agreement to release Northrop discharged the sureties on the bond. The finding recites that Mrs. Blinn and William Brewer entered into an agreement with Northrop, the principal upon the bond, to release him from all obligation to them by reason of his default as trustee, provided he would pay to them $2,000 before May 1st, 1914, and accrued interest on their portion of the trust fund to that date. Two additional facts are of significance. *566 1. The amount of the trust fund which was the share of Mrs. Blinn and Mr. Brewer at the time of this agreement, exceeded the sum of $2,000 and the accrued interest due on their share. 2. There was no consideration for this agreement.
An unqualified release of a principal debtor will discharge the surety. Rockville National Bank v. Holt,
These decisions are authoritative that the agreement to release Northrop from his default did not discharge the surety, since there was no consideration for the agreement, and since the release was not unqualified but was conditional upon the payment of the sum agreed upon. An agreement without consideration is a mere indulgence and unenforceable. It does not *567 prevent the creditor from pressing his claim, hence it cannot operate to discharge the surety. In this case the amount to be paid was less than the amount due, and the interest promised to be paid was the interest accrued. Northrop did not agree to pay anything which he was not already bound to pay.
In Wilson v. Powers,
One other reason takes this case out of the general rule. The agreement to release Northrop was conditioned upon his payment of a part of the sums owed. So long as this condition was unperformed the agreement was executory and the obligation upon the original debt existed. The agreement of discharge must be absolute and unqualified. It must contain words of present discharge. Judge Wells states the principle as well as we have seen it stated, in his opinion in Blake v.Blake,
The defendant J. Francis Calef, as executor of Arthur B. Calef, one of the sureties, further defends upon the ground that this action is barred against him for the reason that the claim on which it is based was not presented to the estate of Arthur B. Calef within the time allowed by the Court of Probate for the presentation of claims. The time thus allowed was six months from the 27th day of August, 1900. The order of the Court of Probate in terms applied to existing claims. It did not contemplate contingent or after-accruing claims which had no present existence. A liability upon a bond which may or may not thereafter accrue is not affected by an order such as this, when it accrues after the period limited in the order. The liability against Northrop accrued when demand was made upon him by his successor in the trust in 1911 for the funds which had been misappropriated by him in 1897. His failure to turn these over fixed his liability and its extent. There was nothing in the probate order which required these plaintiffs to then or thereafter present their claim against the estate of Arthur B. Calef. *569
But General Statutes (1902) § 326, provides that "when a right of action shall accrue after the death of the deceased, it shall be exhibited within four months after such right of action shall accrue"; and the question recurs whether the claim of the plaintiffs, as against the estate of Arthur B. Calef or J. Francis Calef, executor, is not barred by their failure to present it within four months from the time it accrued. This statute, except as to the period of limitation, has remained substantially as first enacted in 1821. Prior to that time there was no specific limitation as to the presentation of claims that accrued subsequent to the death of the deceased, but a claim was barred by unreasonable delay.Griswold v. Bigelow,
The sustaining of the demurrer in favor of J. Francis Calef requires a rescript reversing the judgment in his favor, although the conclusion reached will ultimately require a judgment in his favor.
There is error, the judgment in favor of the defendants Ettie M. Northrop and J. Francis Calef in his personal capacity is reversed, and the judgment in favor of J. Francis Calef, executor, is sustained, and the cause is remanded with direction to the Superior Court to assess the damages against Ettie M. Northrop and render judgment in accordance with the foregoing opinion, and that the cause against J. Francis Calef in his personal capacity be proceeded with according to law.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.