230 Wis. 137 | Wis. | 1939
The appeal herein is from an order sustaining a demurrer to an amended complaint on the ground that the facts alleged are insufficient to constitute a cause of action. Liberally construed the allegations of the complaint, including facts stated in exhibits attached thereto, are to the following effect, in so far as here material. The surety bond, by reason of which the plaintiff sustained the damages which it seeks to recover, was furnished by the plaintiff as surety for the defendant, as principal, when he qualified on December 8, 1917, as the testamentary trustee of a trust under the will of Mary S. Potter, deceased. Upon receiving assets of the trust estate from the executor, the defendant executed a
The trial court concluded, in passing upon the demurrer to the amended complaint, that because no appeal was taken from the order sustaining a demurrer to the original complaint, the court’s ruling in sustaining the latter demurrer constituted the law of the case excepting in so' far as the amendment supplied allegations which were lacking in the original complaint, and which are necessary to set forth a cause of action. That conclusion was erroneous. The practice is well settled that “an order of the trial court sustaining a demurrer to’ a pleading is not res adjudicata upon the same questions raised upon a second demurrer.” Rogers v. John Week Lumber Co. 117 Wis. 5, 8, 93 N. W. 821; Schoenleber v. Burkhardt, 94 Wis. 575, 69 N. W. 343; Watson v. Appleton, 62 Wis. 267, 22 N. W. 475; Hackett v. Carter, 38 Wis. 394.
The court’s principal grounds for holding that no cause of action is stated in the amended complaint were (1) that because the defendant did not make the original investment in the Cushman mortgage, and it was turned over to him by the executor, the defendant is not responsible for the consequences of the investment’s failing to conform to the statutory requirements in the first instance; and (2) that there is no allegation (a) that the mortgage security depreciated in value during defendant’s trusteeship, or (b) that any loss was sustained by the trust estate by reason of any lack of diligence on his part in enforcing payment of the mortgage loan. In arriving at those conclusions the court relied upon
“Humphrey held the securities for nearly a year after the widow’s death before resigning, but up to this time there had been no depreciation of the securities. They were of value when he received them as trustee as set forth in the inventory of the estate, and were of the same value when he turned them over to Wendt. As the estate was not damaged by Humphrey’s failure to convert the securities and invest the proceeds as required by statute, Humphrey and his bondsmen, who were also parties to the petition for accounting, were discharged from liability and properly so.”
Thus it is evident that the conclusion that the fiduciary was held not liable, although he had accepted and held securities ineligible for the investment of trust funds, was reached because the facts proven did not warrant finding that a loss was sustained by the trust estate during his administration thereof. However, it will be noted that in the Estate of George, supra, the trustee Wendt, — who succeeded the exonerated trustee Humphrey in the administration of the estate, and to whom Humphrey turned over securities in which neither of the trustees had made the original investment,— was held liable for the loss by reason of their diminution in value during Wendt’s administration.
That such a loss was sustained during the defendant’s trusteeship in the case at bar, is sufficiently shown by the allegations in the amended complaint, which are to the effect here-
“One confronted with an obligation that he cannot legally resist is not obliged tO' wait tO' be sued and to lose a reasonable opportunity for a favorable compromise in order to avoid assuming the character of an interloper or volunteer in the matter of paying a liability common to him and another. Western Casualty & S. Co. v. Milwaukee G. C. Co. 213 Wis. 302, 306, 251 N. W. 491; 13 C. J. p. 823, § 6; 6 R. C. L. p. 1045.” United States F. & G. Co. v. Hooper, 219 Wis. 373, 380, 263 N. W. 184.
The prima facie showing as to liability of the defendant to the plaintiff under the allegations of the amended complaint is sufficient to constitute a cause of action until the effect or consequences thereof are avoided or defeated by a showing that there was no such loss to the trust estate; or that the defendant or the plaintiff, as his surety, was not liable therefor ; or that the latter’s right to reimbursement by the defendant is defeated by some want of notice to the defendant, or by bad faith on the surety’s part in settling with the successor
By the Court. — Order reversed, and cause remanded with directions to enter an order overruling the demurrer.
Formerly sec. 21005, Stats. (1923 and prior); now sec. 320.01, Stats. (1935 and after).