Elbert v. Jacoby

71 Ky. 542, 8 Bush 542, 1871 Ky. LEXIS 95
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedJanuary 23, 1871
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 71 Ky. 542 (Elbert v. Jacoby) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Elbert v. Jacoby, 71 Ky. 542, 8 Bush 542, 1871 Ky. LEXIS 95 (Ky. Ct. App. 1871).

Opinion

CHIEF JUSTICE PRYOR

delivered the opinion oe the court.

In November, 1847, John L. Elbert was appointed by the County Court of Eayette statutory guardian for the infant children of George W. Harp, deceased, and executed bond for the faithful discharge of his duties as such, with Pollard Elbert, the appellant, his surety. At the time John L. Elbert executed this bond as guardian the infants were possessed of but little personal estate, and the liability of the surety at that date was merely nominal.

On the 18th of February, 1856, the guardian of these infants' filed his petition in equity in the Fayette Circuit [544]*544Court, asking a sale of some real estate belonging to his wards; and, having complied with the requirements of the statute in such cases, obtained a judgment and had the land (the tract containing forty-one acres) sold. In this proceeding for the sale of the land the guardian, on the 14th of March, 1856, executed bond with the appellee, Jacob Jacoby, his surety, conditioned that the guardian “would faithfully discharge all his duties under the act of the legislature for the sale of the real estate of infants, and under any order or decree of the Fayette Circuit Court in pursuance thereof.”

The tract of land was sold at fifty dollars per acre, and the proceeds of the sale, after paying the expenses, paid over to the guardian. This guardian (John L. Elbert) soon after the payment of this money to him became insolvent, and on the 5th of February, 1862, executed to Jacob Jacoby, his surety in the bond executed in the circuit court for the sale of the infants’ land, a deed of trust conveying to him all of his estate for the benefit of his creditors.

This trust was not fully executed by the appellee, Jacob Jacoby, and the present appellant, Pollard Elbert, was, for reasons appearing in the record, substituted as trustee in room of Jacoby, and thereupon, by an equitable proceeding in the Fayette Circuit Court against the beneficiaries^m the deed, he asked for a settlement of the trust estate, and a distribution of the proceeds according to the rights of the parties. In January, 1863, the infant children of George "W. Harp, by their next friend, as well as those who had arrived at age, instituted their suit in equity against the appellant, Pollard Elbert, as surety of their guardian, John L. Elbert, on the guardian’s bond executed in the county court, and against Jacob Jacoby, the surety of their guardian on the bond executed in the circuit court for the sale of their real estate, alleging the insolvency of their guardian, his failure to settle and pay over their moneys due them, and asking for a judgment [545]*545against his sureties on the two bonds for the amount found due them by the settlements of their guardian in the county court. Process was only served on Pollard Elbert, the appellant in this case, and the surety in the bond executed in the county court, and a judgment was rendered against him for the amount found due by the guardian.

In this judgment against Pollard Elbert was included the amount of the proceeds of the sale of the forty-one acres of land sold under the proceeding in the circuit court. Pollard Elbert, the appellant, instituted the present action against Jacob Jacoby, the surety in the bond executed in the circuit court, in order to obtain a sale of the infants’ land, alleging that as between him and the appellee Jacoby he is not liable for the proceeds of the sale of the infants’ land by reason of his having executed the bond as surety in the county court, and having paid the same he is entitled to recover the whole of it back from the appellee, whose liability originated by reason of the execution of the bond in the circuit court, and by virtue of which this real estate of the infants was converted into money.

We are not aware of any adjudication by this court involving the rights of sureties in such a case as the one we are now considering. At the time of the execution of the bond by the surety of the guardian in the county court he assumed a liability as such for the personal estate of the ward, and the rents and profits of the realty, or such as might come into his hands as guardian. A guardian has no power to sell the land of his wards except in the manner prescribed in the statute, and when this proceeding is complied with, and the land converted into money, the guardian alone, after it passes from under the control of the court, is entitled to receive it.

By sec. 2, art. 6, chap. 86, 2 Revised Statutes, it is enacted “that the proceeds of the sale of infants’ lands shall be paid [546]*546over to his guardian,” etc.; and by sec. 15, art. 2, chap. 43, 1 Revised Statutes, it is enacted “that the guardian and his surety shall be liable on their covenant for all property or money which comes to the hands of the guardian as such, whether by virtue of an order of court or of any statute passed after the date of their covenant, or otherwise.” The bond of the guardian, as well as the law prescribing his duties and obligations to his ward in relation to the ward’s estate, does not authorize the chancellor, when called upon to settle the accounts between the infant and his guardian, to make inquiry as to the manner in which the guardian has come into the possession of moneys or property belonging to the ward. If it is the property of the ward and in the hands of the guardian, he must account for it.

This court, in Withers v. Hickman (6 B. Mon. 292), decided that the bond taken in the circuit court for the sale of the infants’ real estate was a precautionary measure, and as additional surety to that taken in the county court, “ and does not discharge the sureties in the county-court bond if the money comes into the hands of the guardian. All the sureties in both bonds' are equally bound for the same, and all may bo made responsible to the infants.” The law as it existed at the time the appellant became surety in the county court authorized the guardian to apply to the circuit court for the sale of the infants’ land, and also authorized the guardian to receive the money. The appellant knew of the existence of this law, as well as the power conferred upon the guardian by the execution of the bond upon which he was liable as surety. In the absence of the execution of such a bond the relation of guardian and ward would not have existed between John L. Elbert and the infant children of George W. Harp. All the rights, powers, and duties of the guardian were assumed by reason of this statutory obligation.

The bond of the guardian in the circuit court was not . [547]*547intended as a release of the covenant executed in the county court; it was required as an additional security for the ward’s property, and the reason for this additional bond is very obvious. The guardian in the county court being required to execute bond only for the value of the personal estate and the rents of the land, does not always provide himself with such surety upon his covenant as is responsible in property for the value of the ward’s lands, and therefore, the better to protect the rights of the infant, the guardian is required to give an additional bond in the circuit court for the proceeds of the sale of the land. After this sale is made the bond executed by the guardian has answered its purpose, and the money is paid over to the guardian, and becomes a part of the general estate of the ward for which the original surety is liable.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
71 Ky. 542, 8 Bush 542, 1871 Ky. LEXIS 95, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/elbert-v-jacoby-kyctapp-1871.