53 W. Va. 432 | W. Va. | 1903
Clarkson having been killed in a railroad wreck, Mann as his administrator brought an action to recover damages for his death against the Chesapeake and Ohio Railroad Company, and recovered $2,000.00. Thompson & Lively, claiming that they had rendered service for the administrator as attorneys in the prosecution of the action, sued Mann as administrator in assumpsit and recovered a judgment for $250.00. An execution
Appellants claims that there is no jurisdiction of this suit in equity, because there is adequate remedy at law by action on the bond. It is enough to say in response to this that the bill seeks to falsify the settlement before the commissioner of the probate court, and this justified the overruling of the demurrer, as equity is given jurisdiction to so sur-charge and falsify. Hogg, Eq. Principles, sec. 119; Seabright v. Seabright, 28 W. Va. 412. The question which is intended to be raised is whether a creditor of a dead man who has obtained judgment against his administrator, after execution returned unsatisfied, can at once sue alone the principal and surety on the bond in equity, or must sue at law. Equity in this state has jurisdiction of a bill by one creditor for himself and other creditors to compel an administrator, who has not made the settlement required by law, to be made before a commissioner of the county court, to make a settlement, and to administer the assets and pay creditors out of them. This is but the administration or marshalling of assets for creditors^ a jurisdiction well known. There may ■also be a bill to sur-charge and falsify an ex parte settlement before a commissioner, and to have debts paid out of the assets. 2 Lomax, Exec. 472. A bill may also be file(L for a discovery of
I do not think that there is equity jurisdiction for a creditor upon a legal demand, though there is a judgment and abortive execution, to sue on the bond simply; that is, unless he surcharges and falsifies a settled account, or calls for a settlement for himself and others, where there has been no settlement. Basset v. Cunningham, 7 Leigh 402. In Hale v. White, 47 W. Va. 700, we held that a single creditor could not maintain for himself a suit in equity upon a legal demand against the executor, who had rendered an account, without sur-charging or falsifying. Thompson v. Nowlin, 51 W. Va. 346, is cited to' uphold jiirisdiction in the case supposed. It holds that where the executor has made no settlement, squandered assets, and is insolvent, a chancery suit may be brought'against him and his sureties, not the broad proposition asserted. Long ago the rule that one must get judgment against an administrator, have an execution returned “ISTo property,” and then bring a second action to establish a devastavit by showing his judgment and execution, and proving assets once' in the administrator’s hands'; and then'he could bring a third action upon the bond. But-long¿ long agdi the Virginia legislature passed an 'act dispensing with a' second suit, and allowing action on -the bond at once upon the return of “no property”'on thé execution. This provision lives in our day in section 23, chapter 85,. Code of West Virginia: ■ This'is common sense; for when the administrator tells the sheriff that he has no assets applicable to an execution,' why should not the creditor, if the administrator has wasted or misapplied the assets, have right-to sue on the bond.' But the only effect of such judgment and execution is to dispense with, the'second'suit to establish a devastavit', and does not operate on
The appellants further say that the paper offered to prove the judgment does not show a judgment against Mann as administrator, and that it is one against Mann individually. If this is so, then (1) there is no jurisdiction, as the case does not proceed to enforce an individual judgment against Mann’s estate, and (2) Flanagan cannot be sued at law or in equity on the judgment, since he did not engage for Mann’s individual debt. A bill of exchange signed, “Chas. F. Hale, Prest.” was held an individual bill. Rand v. Hale, 3 W. Va. 495. A note signed “James'Bennett, agent .for Lewis county)”'held to bind Bennett, not the county. Bank v. County, 28 W. Va. 273. We said in Fidelity Ins. Co., v. Railroad, 33 Id. 784, that -an' aL tachment against “William Milnes," president of the Shenandoah Valley Railroad Company,”- was against Milnes, not the company. A note signed by an administrator specifying the estate is his individual note. Schouler Exr. sec. 258; 3 Rob. New Prac. 264. A writ declaration and judgment against A, administrator of B’s estate, held to be against the administrator, not the estate. Rich v. Sowles, 64 Vt. 408. See State v. Hudkins, 34 W. Va. 372; Early v. Wilkinson, 9 Grat. 71. If the- full judgment were before us, wc might -see that it was to be levied .of the goods of the deceased in the. hands', of his, ad
Appellants say it was error to decree without passing on exceptions. made by plaintiffs to the commissioner’s report. They were ’for allowance of the sums paid by Mann to the widow and child, and for allowing the $950.00 attorneys’ fees. I do not see that the defendants are aggrieved by failure to hold that the $950.00 was erroneous credit to Mann. The commission was in their favor. The decree is inferentially one sustaining the exception so far as to decree the debt of plaintiffs regardless of the credits. But, in fact, the commissioner made no report as to these items of credit in the settlement, but submitted-them to the court, and the exceptions are immaterial.
Decree reversed and case remanded.
Reversed.