109 P. 388 | Or. | 1910
Opinion by
A statement of the incidents involved is deemed essential: H. L. Buell, as principal, and John Graham, as surety, executed to H. C. Brown a negotiable promissory note for $1,000. Thereafter Buell died intestate, and the plaintiffs were appointed and duly qualified as the representatives of his estate. Brown filed with them a verified claim for the remainder due on the note, which demand was approved. The defendants herein as partners commenced an action in the circuit court for Union County against Oscar Eden and H. C. Brown, as partners, to recover money, and, having sued out a writ of attachment, a copy thereof and notice of garnishment were served on Thorson, who, as administrator, responded in writing in part as follows: “I will say that there is a balance due H. C. Brown of $500 principal and accrued interest,” but no reference was made to any promissory note. Prior to the service of the notice Brown had assigned the negotiable instrument and the verified claim based thereon to Jennie P. Brown. A judgment was rendered in that
*81 “Now it appears from the facts, as alleged in the pleadings in the case at bar, that the payment by Thorson to the sheriff was made under a mistake of fact as to the nature of the order of the circuit court and upon the advice of the attorney for the defendants, who he supposed at the time was acting for the estate. Thorson was notified by the sheriff that the circuit court had made an order in the attachment proceedings requiring him to pay the amount of the judgment, recovered by Hooper and Hudson against Eden and Brown, out of the funds of the estate, and that such order was in the hands of the officer for execution, when, in fact, no such order had been made. Relying upon this statement, and the erroneous advice of the attorney for the defendant, he paid the amount of the judgment out of the trust funds in his hands, and the money was subsequently paid to the defendants. If these facts are true, and for the purposes of this case it must be so assumed, we think in equity and good conscience plaintiff should be permitted to recover it.” Thorsen v. Hooper, 50 Or. 497, 500 (93 Pac. 361, 362.)
The issues were thus clearly defined and findings of fact should have been made thereon. No order of the county court having ever been made requiring the payment of the remainder due on the promissory note executed to Brown, the attempt by garnishment, in the absence of a statute authorizing it, to hold Thorson in his representative capacity, and thus to subject the assets of the decedent’s estate in his possession to the satisfaction of any judgment that might be rendered in the attachment proceedings, was void: Harrington v. La Rocque, 13 Or. 344 (10 Pac. 498.) Such being the case, any order directing the collection of the debt, or the payment of the judgment in that action from the assets of the estate, was futile. If the attorney acted in good faith when he told Thorson that this order was valid and should be obeyed, the advice was a mis-statement of law and precludes a recovery of the money so paid. If, however, the facts stated by Mr. Chief Justice Bean, herein-
An error having been committed in the conclusion of law, the judgment is reversed and the cause remanded for a new trial.
Mr. Justice Eakin took no part in the hearing or consideration of this appeal. Reversed.