Hammond v. United States Fidelity & Guaranty Co.

155 P. 1023, 29 Cal. App. 464
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 26, 1916
DocketCiv. No. 1764.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 155 P. 1023 (Hammond v. United States Fidelity & Guaranty Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hammond v. United States Fidelity & Guaranty Co., 155 P. 1023, 29 Cal. App. 464 (Cal. Ct. App. 1916).

Opinion

JAMES, J.

An appeal has been taken from the judgment entered in this action in favor of the plaintiff and against the defendant, and from an order denying a motion made by the defendant for a new trial. The suit is upon an undertaking given on appeal to stay execution.

At a time prior to the institution of this action, Merrill A. Weir died, and prior to the conclusion of probate proceedings in his estate his wife, Nancy A. Weir, died. Administrators were appointed in both estates, and the administrator of the estate of Nancy A. 'Weir took into his possession property of considerable value which he claimed belonged to that estate and which, on the other hand, the administrator of the estate of Merrill A. Weir claimed was property upon which he was entitled to administer as belonging to the estate of Merrill A. Weir. Upon the refusal of the administrator in. the wife’s estate to deliver the property to the administrator of the estate of Merrill A. Weir, the latter brought an action to recover a money judgment and certain securities and corporate stocks. In that action he obtained judgment for the return of the personal property or its value, and also judgment for the sum of $4,687.63, with costs. An appeal was taken from that judgment to the supreme court and thereafter the judgment was affirmed. In order to stay execution pending appeal an undertaking was given, with the appellant here as sole surety. That undertaking recited in part that the surety bound itself in the sum of twenty thousand dollars (we here quote from the language of the bond) “(that being the amount agreed upon by the parties for the staying of the execution of said judgment), that if the said judgment or any part thereof be affirmed, or the appeal be dismissed, the appellant will deliver to the plaintiff the personal property described in the judgment or its value as therein fixed, and will pay the amount directed to be paid thereby, or the part of such amount as to which the same shall be affirmed, if affirmed only in part, and all damages and costs which shall be awarded against the appellant upon the appeal.” The undertaking-further provided that upon the going down of the remittitur, *466 the court from which the appeal was taken might enter judgment against the surety. It appeared in evidence that pending the proceedings in the action referred to, the administrator of the estate of Nancy A. Weir disposed of some of the personal property described in the judgment, and also made use of other property which came into his hands as a part •of the alleged estate of Nancy A. Weir. After the affirmance of the judgment was made, the administrator of the estate of Nancy A. Weir turned over to the administrator of the estate of Merrill A. Weir all of the property in his hands. This included property other than that mentioned in the judgment; it being conceded as between the administrators that this additional property was a part of the community estate of the two decedents. In other words, we find no question made but that, in so far as property additional to that described in the first judgment was delivered to the administrator of the estate of Merrill A. Weir, that was property to which the administrator of the latter estate was legally entitled. The attorney for the administrator in the Nancy A. Weir estate, referring to this additional property, testified as follows: “I had long ago had a talk with Judge Britt substantially to the effect that we might as well consider all those things as being a part of the entire community property, and let it be determined by the judgment in the cases that were then pending, without the necessity of Judge Britt bringing new suit to recove! those other amounts.” According to the computation made by the respective administrators at the time this property was turned over, while a total amount in cash of $12,383.21 was paid, applying this money upon the several demands held by the administrator of the estate of Merrill A. Weir, left a balance due on the judgment entered in the action in which this surety gave the stay bond, of the sum of $3,274.34. It is the contention of the appellant that, inasmuch as an amount in cash in excess of the total amount of the money judgment was paid over, the money judgment, which was a part of that for the payment of which it became surety, should be treated as extinguished. We have already noted that it appears that all of the money and property turned over was money and property to which the administrator of the estate of Merrill A. Weir was entitled. The estate of Merrill A. Weir certainly had the right to apply the property and money received in such a way as would *467 extinguish such indebtedness due it and leave whatever deficiency there was owing secured by the undertaking which this appellant gave. We mean by this that the administrator of the estate of Nancy A. Weir, having paid only a part of his obligations and those obligations not being the total of the obligation guaranteed by the appeal bond given by appellant, it must result that there was a liability for the deficiency which might be enforced against the surety. As to some of the personal property of which the judgment appealed from in the action of the one administrator against the other required a delivery, either of the property itself or its value, which latter was fixed, a sale had been made in the Nancy A. Weir estate. Some of this property, it is said, was sold for a price in excess of that fixed as representing its value in the judgment. The accounting made by the administrator of the Nancy A. Weir estate to the other administrator included amounts representing the proceeds of such sales. It cannot be told from the examination which we have made of the testimony whether the overplus represented by such sales was credited on the amount of the money judgment secured by appellant’s bond. However, it seems immaterial, for had the administrator of the estate of Nancy A. Weir disposed of such property and satisfied the money judgment entered against him, retaining in his hands the excess of money derived from the sale of such property, there seems to be no reason why this excess might not have been recovered from him in a separate action. A great deal of the argument on the part of appellant refers to a certain memorandum of agreement which it is claimed was made between the administrators at the time of the alleged accounting, in which it was agreed that the administrator of the estate of Nancy A. Weir might offset the deficiency against the share in the property Of the estate of Merrill A. Weir to which the former estate might be entitled. There is some conflict in the. testimony as to whether this agreement was executed, and as to the fact, the determination of the trial court adverse to appellant’s contention in that regard should be sustained. But even though it might be said that this conclusion was contrary to the evidence, and that the agreement was made as asserted by appellant, in our view it would be of no avail as pointing an argument in favor of appellant. Conceding, as we must, that the administrator of the estate of Merrill A. Weir was *468 entitled as a matter of law to all of the property, then he would be powerless to make any agreement which would postpone the time for the payment of that debt, or to provide by any agreement for a reimbursement to the estate of Nancy A. Weir. The law would either effectuate such a reimbursement or not, regardless of the agreement of the administrator.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
155 P. 1023, 29 Cal. App. 464, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hammond-v-united-states-fidelity-guaranty-co-calctapp-1916.