37 Ky. 301 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1838
delivered the Opinion of the Court in this case — in the decision of which, Chief Justice Robertson took no part.
This was an action of covenant, brought by the heirs of Jeremiah Turpin, against the executors of Samuel Me-Kee, upon a bond executed to them by the said McKee, in the penalty of ten thousand dollars, conditioned for the discharge of the duties required of him by the decree appointing him commissioner, or any other decree that might be made. The decree appointing him, provided for the sale of certain lands, the property of said heirs, which were to be sold on their prayer. A subsequent decree, after stating the return of the commissioner’s report, and its approval, orders that he have leave to withdraw the sale-bonds, for the purpose of collecting the money secured thereby; and it is averred that he did withdraw the bonds for the purpose of collection.
The first count of the declaration alleges, as a breach of the bond sued on, that McKee, instead of collecting the amount of the sale-bonds thus withdrawn, received, in discharge of part thereof, a note on other persons for
The second count avers as a breach, that McKee collected the money secured by the sale-bonds, in part, and in part sold, traded off, and disposed of, said bonds to his own use: whereby he became liable to pay to the plaintiffs, the full amount thereof, with interest; which he and his executors have wholly failed and refused, and still fail and refuse to pay &c.
As the decree did not require the commissioner to pay over to the plaintiffs, the money to be collected by him, the mere fact of collecting a part, did not, as is assumed in the second count, render him liable on his bond, to pay to them the amount collected, until ordered to do so by the Court. The breach laid in the second count is, therefore, not good as to that part of the sale money averred to have been collected, and should perhaps be deemed bad, for want of certainty as to that part of the sale-bonds which is averred to have been disposed of by the commissioner to his own use. But it is unnecessary to decide this point, as there was no attempt to establish by proof, a conversion of any part of the sale-bonds, except that which is specially averred in the first count, which is no doubt the same that was intended to be charged in the second, and was the real matter in issue between the parties.
The defendants pleaded that their testator had not violated the condition of the bond, and had leave to give special matter in evidence.
It was proved that the sale-bonds were taken payable to the commissioner; that, after one of them was due, he received, in part discharge thereof, the note of H. Pawling and J. Yantis, for six hundred and fifty dollars, due one day after date, and payable to himself as commissioner, and gave a 'receipt for that amount on the
1. That it was McKee’s duty to have collected the sale money in reasonable time after the bonds became due.
2. That if the plaintiffs had assented to his taking the, note of Pawling and Yantis in discharge of so much of the sale-bond, and .had also assented to the delay in collecting said note, McKee was not liable for the failure to collect it.
3. That in no event, were the defendants liable for more than the injury sustained by the failure to collect this note in McKee’s lifetime.
Under these and other circumstances, which, in their application to this case, seem to be but an amplification of the third proposition above stated, the jury found a verdict for the defendants; and the motion of the plaintiffs for a new trial having been overruled, they prosecute this writ of error for the reversal of the judgment.
The first question now to be considered is, whether , ... . , , there was any error m the instructions given; and the
With regard to the two first of these propositions, we are of opinion that, whatever, in a general point of view, may have been the rights or duties of McKee’s executors, on finding among his papers, (if they did so find it,) either the note of Yantis or one of the sale-bonds payable to him as commissioner, and whatever may have been their liability for a breach of those duties — no right or duty was secured to or imposed on them by the bond, or the decree. They could not themselves have committed a breach of the bond, had it remained unbroken by McKee. They were, therefore, only answerable upon it, for a breach committed by him. As the bond did not bind them to collect the money remaining uncollected at McKee’s death, they are not responsible on the bond for their own failure to collect, or for any of the consequences of that failure; but only for the failure of McKee, (if it amounted to a breach of the bond,) and for the injury consequent upon such failure.
The instruction, however, restricts their liability to the injury arising from the failure to collect this particular note, and it is objected to on this ground. It is contended, and truly, that this restriction assumes that the defendants were not liable for the mei’e fact of changing the securities for the sale money, by taking the note of other persons in discharge of so much of one of the sale-bonds; or, in other words, that the Court decided that, this act of the commissioner was not in itself such a failure to collect that amount of the sale-bond, or such a conversion of it to the use of McKee, as ren
Assuming the facts which have been stated on this subject, viz. that the sale-bond and the note were each payable to McKee as commissioner, and that the note * * * was on solvent men and due immediately, we think it entirely clear that this transaction, which did not neces- .. . , n • „ , , , sanly obstruct the collection oí the sale money, but may have been calculated and intended to facilitate it, ■was not in itself either a conversion, or such a failure to collect, as rendered McKee liable on his bond. And that, notwithstanding this change of securities, there was no breach, unless he failed to collect the sale money in reasonable time. Although, therefore, the instruction would have been more formally correct, if it had submitted the assumed facts hypothetically to the jury, and based the conclusion upon their being found true by the jury: yet, as the facts were clearly proved, and there was no countervailing testimony, the plaintiffs were not prejudiced by their assumption of the facts on the part of the Court. And as the breach of the bond, if any, consisted only in the failure of McKee to collect the amount of the sale money secured by the note of Pawling and Yantis — there was no error in referring to the injury arising from that failure, as the limit beyond which the defendants could, in no event, be made liable in this action. If the failure of McKee to collect the sale money secured by that note, was not such as authorized the plaintiffs to charge him with converting it, or the amount secured by it, to his own use, he could not, on his obligation to collect, have been made liable for its whole amount; nor could his executors after his death.
With regard to the second instruction above stated, it is contended that there was no evidence of the assent '
Wherefore, there being no substantial error in the instructions of the Circuit Court, and the verdict not being, in our opinion, contrary to the evidence — the judgment is affirmed.