Bryan v. Alexander

4 F. Cas. 506, 4 Woods 529

This text of 4 F. Cas. 506 (Bryan v. Alexander) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bryan v. Alexander, 4 F. Cas. 506, 4 Woods 529 (circtsdal 1879).

Opinion

BRUCE, District Judge.

These two cases are heard together on demurrers to pleas of the statute of limitations in each case. The substance of the bill is as follows: The complainants are the legatees under the will of John Horn, deceased. The defendant J. D. Alexander was a surety on the bond of John A. C. Horn as executor of the last will and testament of said John Horn. On June 15. 1877, a decree was rendered in this court, sitting in equity, in favor of these plaintiffs respectively, and against John A. C. Horn ■ as such executor. John A. C. Horn has never paid said decrees* of this court in favor of complainants, although he has received sufficient assets of his testator’s estate for that purpose. He has consequently [507]*507failed in Ms duty as such executor, and there is a breach of said bond, and the defendant Alexander is liable as surety thereon to the complainants respectively for the amounts of said decrees, with interest and costs. The pleas set up that on May 2, 1864, there had been a final settlement in the probate court of Marengo county, Alabama, from which the letters testamentary issued, which court had jurisdiction of the subject matter; and that afterwards, to wit, on June 2, 1871, a decree was rendered in this court in a cause in which William Lockhart and Sarah A., his wife, et al., were complainants, and John A. C. Horn et al. were respondents, in favor of the complainants in that suit and against John A. 0. Horn; that to this suit plaintiffs herein, Bryan and Nabors, were made defendants, and subsequently they, by leave of the court, filed their petition in this court in that suit, and on June 16, 1871, procured the said several decrees against J. A, C. Horn as executor. The statute of limitations of six years in favor of sureties on bonds of executors and administrators is then set up in the different pleas.

As to the decree of 1864 in the probate court, and that of this court in 1871, and the question whether plaintiffs are barred by the lapse of more than six years since 1804, and if not, whether they are barred by the lapse of six years since the decree of the court in 1871, it will be. proper to inquire what was and is the nature of the decree rendered in the probate court of Marengo county on May 2, 1864. It appears that the probate court found that there was then a balance due to Frances L. Bryan of $925, which the court ordered paid in the bonds of the Confederate States, in which bonds the funds had been by the executor previously invested under certain legislation authorizing that to be done. The amount due to B. O. Na-bors and wife was $1,295, which by the decree the executor was ordered to retain in his hands subject to the further order and decree of the court, upon the determination of a certain matter. This decree of the probate court, in so far as it authorized and directed the payment of the amounts to the legatees by the executor John A. C. Horn, was not null and void. Horn v. Lockhart, 17 Wah. [84 U. S.] 570. If then, we eliminate from this decree the void portion of it, what have we left? We have an ascertainment of the amounts due the legatees under the will (the plaintiffs herein). It is said the order to pay is left intact, and that it means to pay so many dollars in good and lawful money. But the order is specific to pay in Confederate bonds, and does not admit of that meaning; indeed, it repels it. So that it is clear the court ordered a void thing to be done, which renders the entire order void. So there was nothing left but an ascertainment of the amount due to the distributees. Now, was that sufficient to start the running of the statute of limitations of six years ■ in favor of the sureties on the bond of the executor? The statute is in these words (Code Ala. 1876, § 3226): “Actions to bq Brought in Six Years. Within six years: motions and other actions against the sureties of any sheriff, coroner, constable or any public officer, or actions against the sureties of executors, administrators or guardians, for any misfeasance or malfeasance whatever of the principal, the time to be computed from the act done or omitted by their principal, which fixes the liability of the surety.” This statute has been construed by the supreme court of the state in several cases, and elaborately in the case of Fretwell v. McLemore, 52 Ala. 124, and in the cases therein cited. In that case the court goes on to show that an administration or a guardianship is treated as an entirety, though it comprises many separate-acts and transactions, all of which impose liability; and*the condition of the bond, according to its literal import, is broken whenever the principal violates or neglects any duty the law imposes. “For such neglect or violation the surety is chargeable by virtue of the conditions of the bond, but of themselves they do not separately create a cause of action against or fix the liability of the security.” And the court then says: “Before any cause of action arises against the-surety at law, and before the liability is-fixed at law or in equity, there must be a judicial ascertainment of the default of the principal. * * * The judicial ascertainment creates the cause of action against the surety authorizing the enforcement of the-liability imposed by the bond.” Now in the light of this exposition of the statute, can this decree of the probate court of Marengo county, with the void portion of it eliminated, be held to have been a judicial ascertainment of the default of the principal upon this bond?

What is a default? It is a failure or omission to do something required. The omitted act of the principal obligor here was the failure to pay in Confederate bonds, and can a default be predicated upon an omission to-do that which there is and can be no legal authority to do ? True, the court found amounts to be due to the legatees, and ordered the executor to pay them, in Confederate bonds. But the default, if ascertained at all, was. that payment had not been so made in Confederate bonds, which was no default at all,, that portion of the decree being void. So, as we have said, there was nothing more here than the ascertainment of the amounts due to the legatees, like the verdict of a jury as to damages, which is a different thing from the judgment of a court upon the verdict, upon which execution may issue to enforce the collection of the money if it is not. paid. It is argued that this court (Justice Bradley presiding) considered these decrees as valid adjudications in favor of the legatees (plaintiffs herein). True, he speaks of' [508]*508-them as decrees, but we must not be misled by the use of words; and while the ascertainment of an amount due from one party to another may or may not properly be •called a decree, yet that it is a different thing from an ascertainment of a specific amount due from one party to another and ■ordering its payment, whether that be stated in the formal language of a recovery or an order to pay, or its equivalent language. It is argued that the Lockhart suit in this case was in its nature a suit to enforce the •decree of the probate court, and to remove from it the obnoxious part which was an •obstacle to its enforcement; but that is not the scope and purpose of the bill filed in that case. The prayer of the bill was as follows: ■“Orators pray that your honorable court, •sitting as a court of chancery, will take full and entire jurisdiction of the settlement of •said estate of John Horn, and proceed to distribute the same, to all the persons entitled thereto under the law, as the same may be determined by the court,” etc., etc., and the court did not regard the decree as ■final, for if so, the remedy would have been in the appellate court.

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Related

Fretwell v. McLemore
52 Ala. 124 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1875)

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Bluebook (online)
4 F. Cas. 506, 4 Woods 529, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bryan-v-alexander-circtsdal-1879.