147 Iowa 294 | Iowa | 1910
The issue to be considered upon these appeals can be best explained by a chronological statement of the material facts. On February 16, 1885, John H. Floyd of Dubuque, Iowa, died testate. Among the legatees named in his will were Jackson G. Tucker, Birdena Tucker, and Olive Tucker, all of whom were minors. Soon thereafter L. E. Tucker was appointed guardian of the estate of said infant legatees, and as such became entitled to receive and hold for their use all the property and moneys coming to them under or by virtue of said will. William G. Stewart was appointed administrator with will annexed of the estate •of said John II. Floyd, and qualified by giving the bond upon which plaintiffs seek to recover in these actions. Said bond was executed by himself, as principal, and by M. H. Waples, Bobert W. Stewart, T. G. Oragin,- and B. W. Lacy, as sureties', and was duly approved June 27, 1885. On February 5, 1890, Stewart, claiming to have fully administered upon said estate, made and filed a written final report, of which he asked the approval of the court. In this accounting he claimed and took credit for an item of $6,000 which he alleged had been paid by him to the guardian of said Jackson G. Tucker, Birdena Tucker, and Olive Tucker on January 2, 1890. Notice of said final report was served upon said wards, all of whom were still minors, and upon their mother with whom they resided. No appearance was made by or in behalf of said wards to contest said report or account. It was examined by a referee appointed for that purpose who recommended its approval, and thereupon the court made an entry in the usual form approving the report, and, upon showing being made that the balance thus found against the adminis
The opinion upon said appeal was filed October 31, 1903, and thereafter on April 8, 1904, the district court, upon application of the plaintiff, entered an order setting aside the approval of the final report so far as it related to said item of $6,000, and directing the administrator to make settlement and accounting therefor to said wards, all of whom had then arrived at their majority, and were competent to make settlement with him in their own right. The administrator having failed to comply with said order and failing to pay -over or account for the moneys so retained by him, separate actions at law to- recover the
The material facts are not tim subject of any serious dispute. As will be seen by reference to the opinion filed in Tucker v. Stewart, supra, Stewart, instead of paying said sum of $6,000 to the guardian, kept and converted it to his own use, giving his personal promissory note for the amount to the guardian, who gave him a receipt for it as for a payment in money. This we held to be a fraud upon the wards, and that they were entitled to have the approval of the final report set aside, the account reopened, and the administrator held liable to pay over the money so withheld by him. Complying with this decision the trial court, as we have seen, did reopen the account and order the administrator to pay over or make settlement for the sum thus found to be in his hands. This he did not do, and plaintiffs seek in the present proceedings to enforce the collection of the debt by action on the bond given by him to secure the faithful performance of his trust. It follows of necessity that unless the plaintiffs have in some manner estopped themselves from enforcing such demands, or it shall appear that the statute of limitations has intervened, or that said judgment reopening the account was obtained by collusion or fraud, they have a clear and unquestionable right to recover, because the failure to make payment of the trust funds in compliance with the order of the court was a palpable breach of the duty, for the performance of which the bond was given as security.
A right of action did accrue to plaintiffs at the date of the judgment approving the report, but it was not a right of action on the bond. The right which they then acquired was to an action in equity to vacate the judg
The inadmissibility of any other rule can be easily illustrated. If, for instance, an estate has been for nine years in the process of administrating, and the .final report reveals a sum of money belonging to the estate which the administrator converted to his own use in the first year of his service in such trust, and an order is entered requiring him to account for it, such order imposes upon him a duty which he can not violate without breach of his bond, if then two years later the order not being obeyed action is brought on the bond and the administrator and his sureties set up in defense the statute of limitations because the original wrong was committed, and the first breach of the bond was consummated, more than ten years before suit was brought, no court would be likely to give such a plea any serious consideration. Obedience to the order of the court is one of the duties pertaining to the administrator’s
Appellees concede in argument that, until vacated and set aside, the adjudication of April 11, 1890, approving the final report, was a complete bar to the maintenance of an action on the bond, but they say this can not prevent the operation of the statute of limitations because (quoting from the brief) : “If such judgment of discharge was in fact subject to attack, the administrator and sureties could have been made parties to a proceeding to set the same aside, as was done in Arnold v. Spates, 65 Iowa, 571, and as was expressly held the proper procedure in Witt v. Day, 112 Iowa, 110, supra; Payne v. Hook, 7 Wall. 425 (19 L. Ed. 260); Reinhardt v. Gartrell, 33 Ark. 727, and Clark v. Shelton, 16 Ark. 474, and these defendants would then have had an opportunity to defend against such an attack. They would have had their day in court, and no other suit or action would have been necessary.” But the conclusion which counsel draw from these premises is clearly untenable.
It may be admitted that appellants could properly have made the sureties parties to the proceeding to vacate the judgment, but certainly they were not necessary parties. Had they been made parties they could have done no more — generally speaking — than to unite with the administrator in resisting the charge of fraud on which the vacation of the judgment was asked. The extent of their liability, if any, on the bond was not, and ordinarily could not have been, put in issue. The essence of the relief asked was the setting aside of the adjudication to
To say that an- order of discharge, obtained by' fraud of the administrator, operates to relieve the sureties from liability on the bond, although that order has been vacated, would be to hold that they may reap advantage from the very wrong against which they undertook to hold the appellants harmless. The sureties upon such bond are in
As the judgment below must be reversed upon the merits of the controversy, we need not consider other questions argued by counsel. The case is ordered remanded for further proceedings not inconsistent with, the views herein expressed. — Reversed.