68 Ala. 17 | Ala. | 1880
W. B. Modawell was appointed administrator de bonis non of the estate of R. H. Hudson on the 15th day of July, 1865, and gave bond with Elijah Steele, Robert L. Steele and S. S. Ring as sureties. On the 13th day of February, 1871, W. B. Modawell resigned bis said administration. On the 15th day of the same month — two days after-wards — the said W. B. Modawell was again appointed administrator de bonis non of the same estate, and gave a new bond, with J. B. Cocke and John Moore as his sureties. In May, 1878, W. B. Modawell, having previously filed his account current and vouchers, made a settlement. The beading of the account current is in this language : “W. B. Modawell, in account current with the estate of R. H. Hudson, deceased, for a settlement of bis past administration from the date of his appointment as administrator de bonis non in 1865, to the date of bis resignation on the 13th February, 1871, as amended, passed and allowed by the court, May 15th, 1878.” On that settlement there was ascertained and decreed a balance of indebtedness against him, with interest computed up to February 13th, 1871, of $19,106.34. The decree rendered in that settlement contains this clause : “And the said administrator moves the court to make distribution of the said balance so found in his hands, as above, amongst the heirs and distributees of the said estate; which motion being refused by the court, the administrator excepted to'
On the same day — May 15th, 1878 — W. B. Modawell proceeded to make another settlement. The heading of the account current, filed for this second settlement, is in the following language : “W. B. Modawell, administrator de bonis non of B>. H. Hudson, deceased, in account for final settlement of said estate, as stated, amended, passed and allowed by the court, this 15th day of May, 1878.” The first debit charged is the amount of the former decree, $19,106.34, with interest on said sum from February 15th, 1871, to May 15th, 187 — 8$11,127.44. The account current contains other debits for collections, and credits for disbursements after February 15, 1871. The balance ascertained against the administrator on this settlement was $28,156.65. The decree then proceeded to distribute this fund, and decrees were rendered in favor of the several distributees for their 'several distributive interests, after charging them severally with partial distributions which the administrator had made before settlement. The sum of these decrees is more than double the amount of the penalty of the second bond.
It will be discovered from what is shown above, that the two administrations are treated as distinct, and that in decreeing on the final account of the second administration, the administrator is charged with the balance found against him on the first settlement, as for a collection by the second, of and from the first administration. This was clearly per
Applying the principles stated above to this case, the following propositions would seem to result necessarily : First, no execution can go against the sureties on the first boud, for they are not sureties for the administration, in which the decrees were rendered. Second, no action could be maintained against the two sets of sureties jointly, for they have incurred no common, or joint liability. The bonds are different in dates, and the penalty of ' the first is many times greater than that of the last. The Probate Court should have quashed or corrected the execution, so far as it related to the sureties on the first bond. And, proceeding to render the judgment the Probate Court should have rendered, it is ordered and adjudged that the executions be amended by striking therefrom the names of Elijah Steele and S. S. King.
Reversed and rendered.