Bobo v. Vaiden

20 S.C. 271, 1883 S.C. LEXIS 147
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedNovember 27, 1883
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 20 S.C. 271 (Bobo v. Vaiden) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bobo v. Vaiden, 20 S.C. 271, 1883 S.C. LEXIS 147 (S.C. 1883).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Mr. Chief Justice Simpson.

John Bishop, late of Union county, died intestate in April, 1874. W. H. Yaiden was appointed his administrator May 13th, 1874, upon his entering into bond with Elizabeth J. Bishop, W. A. Johnson and John B. Minter, as his sureties. John B. Minter, one of the sureties, afterwards, to wit, on November 30th, 1874, upon petition to the Probate Court to that end, obtained' an order releasing him from all further liability upon the administration bond which he had signed, and the defendant, W. H. Yaiden, was required in said order to give another bond on or before December 8th next thereafter, and in default thereof, that his letters be revoked. On December 15th, 1874, seven days after the time fixed in the order, Yaiden gave a new bond as administrator, with Caroline Yaiden, James M. Johnson, W. M. Stewart, John Bay and P. M. Cohen, as sureties. The action below was against the administrator, W. H. Yaiden, and some of the sureties on each bond, and was for an accounting.

A short time before Minter was relieved, he had a transaction. [276]*276with the administrator, in which he gave to said administrator a receipt for $788.37, as so much paid on a debt which he, Minter, held on the estate of the intestate, when in fact the administrator only paid him $468.37, just $320 less than the amount called for in said receipt. Minter explained this by the statement that Bishop in his life-time had made payments on the note which he held, leaving a balance of $468.57, which was paid by the administrator, but as there had been no credits on the note of the amounts previously paid by Bishop, that he gave a receipt to the administrator in full. The administrator in his return obtained a credit for the $788.57, as if the whole sum had been paid by him out of assets in his hands as administrator.

In the progress of the case, D. P. Duncan claimed that the share of Mrs. Vaiden, a daughter of the intestate, and one of the sureties to the second bond, had been assigned to him in payment of a debt due to him by Mrs. Vaiden.

The case in one form or other has been heard by Judge Fraser, Judge Pressley, Judge Aldrich and Judge Wallace; the principal questions involved being: First. The respective liabilities of the sureties on the two bonds. Second. Whether Minter shall be held primarily liable for the $320 difference between the receipt he gave to the administrator, and the amount actually paid him; and lastly, whether Duncan should be paid out of Mrs. Vaideffs share to the exclusion of her liability as one of sureties on the bond. Judge Fraser held the second bond the primary security as to Minter, but passed no judgment as to the $320. At that time Duncan had not intervened, and consequently his claim was not before the court, and Judge Fraser seemed to have understood that Elizabeth Bishop, one of the sureties to the first bond, had not been made a party, and consequently he made no decree as to her.

Judge Pressley held the second bond a primary security as against Elizabeth as well as Minter, this, as he said, being in accordance with the rule laid down, by Judge Fraser as to Minter, but he did not pass upon the $320 matter. At that time Duncan had intervened and presented his claim, and Judge Pressley allowed it, holding it superior to the rights of set-off and retainer asserted by Mrs. Vaiden’s co-sureties on the administra[277]*277tion bond. Judge Aldriob recommitted the matter to the referee to state the accounts, and upon the coming in of a second report, Judge Wallace confirmed it, and passed an order in accordance with the previous decrees, making the second bond the primary security as to all of the parties, and allowing the Duncan claim in advance of any appropriation of Mrs. Yaiden’s share to her liability on the bond.

Cohen, one of the sureties on the second bond, has appealed, raising the questions raised below, to wit: 1. What are the respective liabilities on the two bonds ? 2. Is Minter primarily liable for the $320 ? 3. Should Duncan be first paid out of Mrs. Yaiden’s share? Appellant’s counsel admits, that as to Minter the second bond is the primary security, but he claims that Minter should save the sureties on the second bond harmless to the extent of the $320, the amount of the voucher to Yaiden, administrator, in excess of the amount actually paid him. He resists the claim of Duncan, and he denies that Elizabeth Bishop should have the benefit of Minter’s release by the order of the Probate judge.

As to the first question. Under the act of 1789, the court of ordinary had power to grant relief in cases of this kind, either by revoking the letters of administration, or by requiring a new bond; yet the vested rights of the parties interested could not be impaired. Ordinary v. Wallace, 1 Rich. 507; Owens v. Walker, 2 Strobh. Eq. 289. The act of 1839 has made no material changes in the law on this subject. It is in substance the same as the act of 1789, differing principally in its phraseology; but under neither of these acts has the precise question now before the court ever been contested and distinctly decided. In Shelton v. Cureton, 3 McCord 412, there were but two sureties to the bond, and both petitioned for relief. In Trimmier v. Trail, 2 Bail. 480, there was only one, and he petitioned. So, too,'in Waterman v. Bigham & Hudson, 2 Hill 512. So that the question here presented was'nqfc involved in either of these cases. Field v. Pelot, MoMull. Fq. 382, was a case of guardianship, and in Enicks v. Powell, 2 Strobh. Eq. 196, the administration was revoked, and a new appointment was made de bonis non, of the same party, with a new bond. When a revocation [278]*278is ordered and a new appointment conferred on the same party, there is no difficulty, as, by operation of law, payment is presumed to the discharge of the first administration. It is in cases where there has been no revocation — where the original letters continue — that a new bond is ordered, and given at the instance of one or more of the sureties to the first bond, where the difficulty is presented.

As a general principle, it has been settled that the second bond becomes the primary security, and the first is at least suspended until the second is exhausted. True, the first bond cannot be entirely discharged, so far as the parties interested in the estate are concerned; but as between the sureties to the two bonds, the second stands in the front rank and must protect the first. Glenn v. Wallace, 4 Strobh. Eq. 150. See also cases swpra. If this was a case where all of the sureties to the first bond had petitioned, then these authorities would be directly in point. But here one only of the sureties, Minter, petitioned. Can this make any difference? While, as we have said, the question was not directly involved in either of the cases mentioned, yet the opinion of the distinguished jurists pronouncing judgment is manifest from, their utterances therein. See what Chancellor Dargan said on circuit, sustained on appeal, in case of Owens v. Walker, supra. Also the remarks in Field v. Pelot, supra. It seemed to be unquestioned that the general principle above applied as well to cases where any number less than all of the sureties to the first bond petitioned, as where all petitioned.

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Bluebook (online)
20 S.C. 271, 1883 S.C. LEXIS 147, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bobo-v-vaiden-sc-1883.