63 S.W.2d 916 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1933
Reversing.
On May 3, 1921, H.N. Lewis qualified as guardian of his sister, now Mrs. Francis Lewis Drinkard. He executed bond in the sum of $10,500 with his mother, Mrs. Fannie Lewis, as surety. After becoming of age Mrs. Drinkard filed six separate suits against the sureties on the several bonds of former county judges of Livingston county to recover the loss which she sustained in her estate, upon the ground that the respective officers were negligent in failing to require proper accounting and sufficient surety on the bond of her guardian. Rider's Ex'x v. Sherrard's Guardian,
It is insisted, upon the one hand, that the evidence shows each of the judges was negligent in failing to use proper diligence in respect to requiring timely settlements of the guardian and to know that the surety on his bond had become insolvent, insane, and a nonresident of Kentucky. Sections 186d-1, 1065, 1068, 2018, 2024, 2026, Kentucky Statutes. The contrary is the appellants' contention, coupled with the plea of settlement and estoppel against the former ward, since she had received the notes in which her estate had been invested and ultimately the land securing them. Over against this plea is that of infancy at all times. Under the view we take of the case, these particular issues are wholly immaterial.
Although all of the judges may have been negligent and faithless in the respects claimed, (a matter we do not decide) yet if no loss was sustained by the ward by reason thereof, neither the judges nor their sureties can be held responsible. American Surety Company v. Skaggs' Guardian,
That loss was not occasioned by reason of any insufficiency in the guardian's bond, nor any failure to comply strictly with the law as to timely settlements, nor any breach of duty. It came about wholly through a depreciation in the security in which the ward's estate was invested. The statutes authorize investment by a fiduciary of a trust estate in mortgage notes or such other interest-bearing securities as are regarded by prudent business men as safe investments, with certain exceptions not material here. Section 4706, Statutes. A guardian is required only to exercise such prudence as ordinarily prudent men do in their own affairs in investments of this character. Bohn v. Bohn's Guardian,
Wherefore the judgment is reversed, with directions so to do.