Hobbs v. Middleton

24 Ky. 176
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedApril 13, 1829
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 24 Ky. 176 (Hobbs v. Middleton) 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
Hobbs v. Middleton, 24 Ky. 176 (Ky. Ct. App. 1829).

Opinion

Judge Robertson

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Joseph Middleton obtained a judgment, in the Jefferson circuit court, against ffm. C. Hobbs, as administrator of Peter Woolford, in a petition and summons on the following note. “Due Doctor Joseph Middleton or his assigns, the sum of one hundred and sixty seven dollars and sixty-two and a half cents specie, it being the amount of his medical account, against-the estate of Peter Woolford deceased. Witnesss my band, this 14th day of June, 1825.

W. C.- HOBBS, Administrator.”

5—— -—- ¿farátün .Demurer,; , de en an s° judgmrkfor plaintiff, Declaratiori sustained,

The execution on this judgment was returned, “nulla bonaMiddleton then brought an action of debt against. Hobbs, with a suggestion of a “devasta7¡it;” and haying obtained a judgment by default, issued an execution “de bonis propriis,” which was returned “no propertywhereupon this siiit was brought on the administration bond, in the naihe of the commonwealth for the benefit of Middleton, against Hobbs, and Chu^ chill and Buckner; his securities.

The declaration, after reciting the note and two judgments, exécuíions and returns aforesaid, makes proferí of k copy of the administration bond, and avers in súbstanée, á súíficiency of assets, át the date of the note, and h waste of them by the administrator, to which a demurrer and four pleas were filed; the first plea, is by Hobbs, and alleges only, that a former judgment had been obtained against him which was in full force; the second is by the securities, and fivers that the note was for Hobbs’s individual debí» and was executed by him fraudulently, to make the assets liable for its payment. To each of these pleas a joint demurrer was filed, which thé court sustained ás to the first; but Overruled ás to thé second. Issues v^as then taken on the second plea. The third plea is by the securities, and is, in substance “no assets,” and that the judgment was obtained against Hobbs, by his fraud and negligence; a demurrer to this Was sustained; and issue td the court wds taken to the fourth; which was a plea of nul iiel record;

Judgment ivas dbtáined against Hobbs and Chirrchill, the suit having abated as to Buckner; various errors are assigned; but it is h'ot deemed néfcéssáry to notice them specifically;

The declaration is substantially good; it contains on a reasonable construction, all the facts nécessary to shew a good cause of action. The suit is maintainable against the securities and principal jointly.

Whether a recent opinion of the late judges Bibb and Owsley, from which judge Mills dissented, deciding that two judgments against the administrator; o.ne establishing the debt, and the other fixing á .■devastavit, are necessary before the security can by’ [178]*178sued, shall he considered as the settled law or not, *s immaterial in the consideration of this question. We shall however notice that Opinion presently.

Upon a joint and several bond, either one or all the obligors must be sued. The responsibility of principal and securities in an administration bond is the same. Convicting administrator of ‘devastavit, does not release him from his liability upon his bond; it only determines the extent of responsiblity, and binds him personally, as well as in his fiduciary character.

The two judgments required by that opinion, had been obtained against the administrator in this case, before this suit was instituted.

We cannot doubt that it was proper to sue, as well the administrator,' as his securities on the official bond. The bond being joint and several, either all, or only-one should have been sued on it. The administrator had never been sued on the bond before. He was not liable to suit on it sooner, or for any other cause, or to any greater extent, than the securities were. They are responsible on their bond, whenever he is; and when he is not, they are not; and consequently, when they are not, he is not. When the principal is not liable to a suit on his bond, his security certainly cannot' be sued on it. A bond by principal and securities, on which the latter could alone be sued, would be an anomaly. If the judgment for a devastavit, against the administrator, exempt him from suit on his bond, it equally and for the same reason, would absolve his securities. The principal may be sued alone for a devastavit

This does not extinguish his liability on his bond., according to the decision referred to, it is necessary to fix his liability on his bond. For if the devastavit be essential to the liability of the securities on their bond,it must be equally so to that of their principal and coobligor, on the same bond.

Fixing a devastavit on the administrator, does not release him from the obligation of his official bond. If only establishes his accountability more clearly, and makes it personal as well as fiducial.

It was therefore right to sue the administrator with' the securities, and of course the former judgments-against him constitute no bar, and consequently Hobbs’s plea was immaterial.

It was not strictly, regular to lile a joint demurrer to the plea of Hobbs, and to one of those offered by the' securities. But this irregularity, can have no material effect now; nor should it have been considered [179]*179material, when it occurred, as the plea of Hobbs was virtually no plea at all, and needed not to be noticed.

judgment against ad^‘“¿judea the gecur¡ties, as to the nature °íat¿¿.de~ ’ whether the debt was personal, or questioned in a suit o¡aTbond°ffi" unless fraud be alleged creditor^ ^“«•e—Wbeóhanoery^bn not the appropriate, if not tlie only remedy?

The second plea filed by the securities, was also improper. It was, that the debt for which the judgment had been rendered against the administrator, •was not that of the administrator, but of Hobbs, individually.' The responsibility of securities being incidental and collatteral to that of the principal, a judgment in favor of a creditor, against the administrator, concludes the securities, as to the existence and character of the debt thus ascertained, and cannot be questioned or reviewed in a suit on the official bond. As the judgment was against Hobbs as administrator, the securities therefore could not deny that he owed it as administrator.

But if the securities were not estopped from gainsaying the truth of the judgment, there would be another objection in this case, to the sufficiency of the defence attempted in their second plea. The note on which the judgment was rendered, was executed by Hobbs as a fiduciary, and expresses the consideration to have been a debt due by his intestate. Hobbs cóuld therefore have escaped the payment of it, by sustaining plea of no assets, or plena administrmit; 1 Saunders, 210, and N. 2, 211. Roberts on Frauds, 206. But if Hobbs had been personally liable, he was also responsible as administrator, and therefore the securities are also hound eventually by their bond, and after two judgments against the administrator, cannot plead that the debt was not that of Hobbs as administrator, unless they impeach the judgments for fraud by the- créd-, itor in obtaining them.

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Bluebook (online)
24 Ky. 176, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hobbs-v-middleton-kyctapp-1829.