Barnum v. Frost's Adm'r

17 Va. 398
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedApril 15, 1867
StatusPublished

This text of 17 Va. 398 (Barnum v. Frost's Adm'r) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Barnum v. Frost's Adm'r, 17 Va. 398 (Va. 1867).

Opinion

RIVES, J.

The facts of this case are simple and un contested. In December, 1836, Larkin Litchfield having qualified and given bond with security as guardian of Mary Atkinson, placed her, being then of fender years, with her relative Mrs. Ann Frost in the city of Norfolk, for education and support. He defrayed her charges to the year 1839; and afterwards gave three several bonds on settlements, respectively, of the 27th August, 1840, 18th February, 1841, and 14th day of April, 1843. The balance of Mrs. Frost’s demands consists of an open account, extending to August, 1844, and amounting to the sum of $226.99. In March, 1845, Mrs. Frost ^having failed to receive payment of these claims, brought suit in equity against the guardian and his securities, alleging his promise to pay her out of the profits of his ward’s estate; the sufficiency of those profits; the insolvency of the guardian; and concluding with a prayer for the settlement of the guardian’s accounts, and a decree for her debt against him and his securities out of any balance that might be found due to his ward aforesaid. After-wards, in June, 1845, she amended her bill to make new parties of the appellants Barnum, Billups and Diggs, who had, on the 13th of June, 1842, become bound as counter securities for any loss or injury that had accrued or might afterwards accrue to the sureties of his first official bond.

On the 11th day of October, 1851, the said original and amended bills were taken for confessed, and the court directed an account of what was due to the plaintiff, and required of the commissioner a report of the annual income of the estate of the ward, and the suitableness to her estate and condition in life, of the plaintiff’s charges for her maintenance and education.

In compliance with this interlocutory order, the commissioner reported in March, 1852, a balance -due the plaintiff from the said guardian, of $601.65; a statement showing the annual income of the ward in excess of the charges; and lastly, his opinion that these charges were suitable to her estate and condition in life. The materials of this report, so far as it concerned the ward’s income and estate, seem to have been derived from another cause pending in the same court against said guardian in the name of another of his wards, John B. Atkinson.

The appellants, Barnum and Billups, obtained leave of the court on the 12th day of April, 1853, to file their answer; and in that answer, they set up the following de-fences: that the ward’s estate was not liable; that the *claim was by in-tendment of law against the guardian ; that his credit and liability had been [393]*393accepted in discharge of his ward’s estate; that plaintiff’s acceptance of the guardian’s notes, and receipts of the accounts, on which they were based, already credited in the settlement of his guardian accounts, acquitted the ward’s estate and the respondents of all further liability therefor, and ousted the plaintiff of any recourse against the trust funds in the hands of the court for the payment and indemnity of said guardian’s creditors and securities; and that on the ground of equal equities and a special lien under said trust deeds, the plaintiff should lose her debt rather than devolve it upon the respondents.

There was no exception taken to the commissioner’s report. The cause was finally heard on the 12th day of October, 1858. In the meantime Mrs. Frost had died. The cause was then revived in the name of Edward Sale, her personal representative ; the commissioner’s report confirmed; and “decree rendered in favor of the appellee for the sum reported by the commissioner, first against Iyitchfield’s administrator, and then against appellants Barnum, Billups and Diggs’ administrator.”

I presume no question can be made of the jurisdiction of equity in this case. The liability of the ward’s estate, if it exist at all, can only be asserted in a court of chancery. This court has, for a long course of years, reckoned among the subjects of its original jurisdiction, the care of infants and the protection of their rights and estates. Guardians are but the ministers and agents of these courts in the administration of these functions; and are subject to their instructions, in the use of the profits or capital of the' estate of their wards. While the common law admits of a suit against an infant for necessaries, it is the peculiar province of a court of equity to give relief to a creditor as against the estate of such infant. *So far, then, as this bill seeks a discovery of the infant’s income, a settlement of the guardian’s accounts, and a satisfaction of the plaintiff’s claim out of the ward’s estate, for which the guardian’s securities are responsible, it is peculiarly and exclusively a case of equitable resort; nor has any question on this head been raised by demurrer to the bill or otherwise.

At common law, a contract of the guardian is deemed personal, and the liability cannot be shifted to the infant. Thus, where necessaries were furnished by permission of the guardian and charged to him, although the credit was given on the ward’s estate, the infant was not personally liable; but had the guardian taken credit for the account in his settlement, it might be otherwise. Simms v. Norris & Co., 5 Alab. R. 42.

But where there is no ground to assert or imply a personal contract of the guardian, and where the credit and reliance rest exclusively on the ward’s estate, there is no reason or policy of the law that would forbid the assertion in a court oí equity of such a claim upon the ward’s estate in a course of administration and settlement in such a forum.

The first inquiry,’ then, that arises in this case, is as to the nature of the agreement and understanding between the parties as to the support and charges of this infant. Did Darkin Ifitchfield bind or intend to bind himself personally for his ward in this respect? Did Mrs. Frost accept such personal contract of the guardian in lieu of all claim on the infant’s estate? Both of these questions must be answered in the negative, upon the pleadings and evidence in this cause. The bill sets up the guardian’s undertaking to pay out of the profits of the ward’s estate; the bonds of the guardian in terms repel the theory of his personal liability, because they recite that they are for the board of the ward or for the settlement *of ward’s accounts, and are signed by him as guardian; and finally, the testimony establishes the undertaking of the guardian at the time of executing his several bonds aforesaid, that “as soon as he could collect the funds of the estate, he would settle them.”

The guardian rejects the idea of personal accountability; the custodian of the ward neither invites nor insists on it; but by mutual agreement they both refer the liquidation of the accounts for maintenance to the ward’s income. Mrs. Frost had been, doubtless, advised that her accounts could not be permitted to encroach on the capital, but must be satisfied out of the profits of the ward’s estate: hence, she is put off by the. guardian on the pretext of his not collecting the annual revenues; and consistently looks to that source for payment. Perhaps she might have enforced a personal liability on these bonds against the guardian at law, where his addition would be treated as a mere “descriptio persons;,” especially if the bonds stood alone, without the opposing proofs: but it is otherwise in equity, which regards the substance rather than the form, and explores the acts of the parties to give effect to their intentions.

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Bluebook (online)
17 Va. 398, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/barnum-v-frosts-admr-va-1867.