52 P. 517 | Or. | 1898
Lead Opinion
delivered the opinion.
This suit was instituted by D. P. Thompson, a surety on one of the official bonds of Rufus Ingalls, as executor of the estate of Mrs. Esther Holladay, against C. B. Bellinger, guardian of the minor heirs of the deceased, Mitchell & Tanner, attorneys for the executors, and all the sureties on his several bonds, to compel Bellinger to credit the judgment recovered by him in favor of his wards against the plaintiff and defendants Dekum and Spaulding, with $1,480, alleged
Upon final accounting, Ingalls was charged with $560, interest on the money loaned to Spaulding; and it was adjudged and decreed that there was a balance in his hands as such executor, including this sum, of $12,557.09, which he was ordered and directed to pay over to the defendant Bellinger, as guardian, in default of which Bellinger sued and recovered judgment for
The contention for the plaintiff is — first, that the Spaulding bond, being the last in point of time, is, as between the several bonds, the primary security, and that he should, therefore, be compelled to pay the entire judgment; and, second, that, if this is not so, the judgment should be apportioned among the sureties according to the number of bonds, and not pro rata, in the ratio of the aggregate number of sureties; •and, third, that the judgment should be credited with $1,480 on account of the sum alleged to have been overpaid Mitchell & Tanner. The defendant Loewenberg joins in the first and third contentions, but disagrees with the second, and claims that, if he is liable •at all, it is for his pro rata share of the judgment; while the defendant Spaulding contends that the decree should be affirmed, except that it should be credited with the amount paid Mitchell & Tanner as •claimed by the plaintiff.
But it is contended that the liabilities of the sureties in the case in hand ought not to be determined by the rule suggested because Thompson and Dekum agreed with Loewenberg, at the time their bond was giyen, to assume the whole responsibility for Ingalls’ acts as executor and to hold him harmless, and that Spaulding made a similar agreement with them at the time his bond was giyen; but upon this point the ■court below found “that there was no agreement or understanding of any nature between said W. W. .Spaulding and plaintiff herein, and said Dekum or said Loewenberg, or any of them, that their respective liabilities on said bonds, or their contribution to or for each other, shall be other than as fixed by such bonds”; and this finding is abundantly supported by the testimony. Indeed, while there is an allegation ¿o that effect in the complaint, there is no evidence
The remainder of the judgment is largely, if not entirely, on account of waste and misapplication of the assets of the estate, before any of the bonds in question were executed, and the sureties therefore all stand upon an equal footing in relation thereto. Neither has any superior claim in equity over the other, nor would the custody and control of the funds belonging to the estate at the time the bonds were executed have afforded the holder any protection against such liability; and therefore the transfer of such funds from one set of bondsmen to another is of no consequence in determining their liability.
Modified.
Rehearing
On Rehearing.
[52 Pac. 755.]
delivered the opinion.
Rehearing Denied.