123 Minn. 165 | Minn. | 1913
Action by an administrator de bonis non upon his predecessor’s-bond executed by the Massachusetts Bonding & Insurance Co. as surety, to recover moneys received by the administrator in settlement of a claim for the death, by wrongful act, of the intestate, and alleged to have been converted by him. The court, after trial with
Appellant insists that these propositions, together with the constitutional provision defining the jurisdiction of our probate courts, deprive the latter of all jurisdiction and control over matters pertaining to the fund resulting from the statutory liability, and that any default of the administrator in the discharge of his duties, with respect to such claim or fund, constitutes a breach of his trust in the district court only, against which his bond is not conditioned, and Jhence that the question propounded must be answered in the negative.
Obviously this result would be unfortunate, for, so far as concerns the statutory claim for the death of the intestate, it would render purposeless the statutory provision (E. L. 1905, § 3809) requir
E. L. 1905, § 3809, previously referred to, requires the representative in all cases to execute, before entering upon the duties of his trust, a bond in such sum as the probate court directs, with sufficient sureties, conditioned “for the faithful discharge of all the duties of his trust according to law.” It is worthy of note that the legislature has made no express exemption of death claims or moneys received thereon from the terms of the bond. In 1890, this court, in Hutchins v. St. Paul, M. & M. Ry. Co. 44 Minn. 5, 46 N. W. 79, held, upon grounds which have since remained unassailed, and are not here questioned, that the probate court had jurisdiction to appoint an administrator for the sole purpose of enforcing such a claim, the intestate there having been a nonresident without property. See also Austro-Hungarian Consul v. Westphal, 120 Minn. 122, 143, 139 N. W. 300. And it must also be held that the appointment of an administrator, and the requirement of a bond to protect the beneficiaries, are so correlated that the power to appoint necessarily implies the legal and constitutional right to exact the bond.
However, we may concede that if the probate court’s powers ended upon appointment of the administrator and approval of his bond, and if thereafter the administrator owed no duty, the nonperformance of which such court might take cognizance of, then no breach of duty has been established; yet, if the contrary appears, and such duty not only exists but has necessarily been violated by the conversion, it must be held that there has been no “faithful discharge of all the duties of his trust according to law” by the administrator. In this ■connection it must be remembered that we are not dealing with the powers of the district court to make, enforce, and punish violation's
Order affirmed.