Hughes v. Gray

1 Ky. Op. 1, 1866 Ky. LEXIS 218
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedJune 13, 1866
StatusPublished

This text of 1 Ky. Op. 1 (Hughes v. Gray) 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
Hughes v. Gray, 1 Ky. Op. 1, 1866 Ky. LEXIS 218 (Ky. Ct. App. 1866).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Judge Marshall:

This case is founded on a petition in equity filed by Mary E. Gray to recover against E. B. and W. C. Young, administrators with the will annexed of Ambrose Young, the plaintiff’s grandfather, the money due to her under said will. The action was ■commenced against the administrators on the-day of-, 1861, but on the-day of June, 1862, Hughes and the sureties .and representatives, deceased sureties of E. B. Young in his administration bond, were made defendants with a prayer that they be made the payee. By the filing of the amended petition and the issuing of process thereon, the action is regarded as being commenced against these new defendants, on the-day of [2]*2June, 1862, and they not only deny knowledge and require proof" with respect to plaintiff’s claim, but plead affirmatively “ that the plaintiff was twenty-one years of age more than five years-before they were made parties in this suit, and rely upon the-Statutes of Limitation as a bar to all her claims against them, as sureties as aforesaid.”

The sum due to the plaintiff from each of the administrators-having been ascertained by a settlement of their accounts, it was,, on final hearing, adjudged that the plaintiff recover from W. O. Young, administrator, etc., out of assets in his hands unadministered, the sum of $243.34 with interest from the 1st day of" March, 1865, and further that she recover from B. B. Youngs administrator, etc., the sum of $656.27 with interest from the 1st day of March, 1865. And it was further adjudged that the plaintiff recover from Hughes, a surety in the administration bond of B. B. Young, and from the personal representatives of two deceased sureties in the same bond out of assets in the hands of the said representatives, respectively, the said sum of $656.27, with interest as above. And that she recover her costs from the two administrators, and may have execution for the said sums against the parties adjudged to be liable for the same.

There is no objection made as to the sums adjudged to be due-from the administrators respectively, and neither of them appeals. But Hughes and the representatives of the two deceased sureties appeal from the judgment against them, and complain that' it is not only unjust and erroneous in form, by making the property of the sureties liable in the first instance, without making that of their principal liable at all, but that it violates the law or disregards the evidence in relation to the age of the plaintiff, in-making them in any manner liable to her claim, from which they say they are discharged by the Bevised Statutes, chapter 97, section 13, because there was no suit against them until more than, five years after the plaintiff attained full age.

1. The form of the judgment is attempted to be sustained by reference to section 39 of the Civil Code and to several adjudged, cases in this court. But the section referred to relates merely to-the joining or omitting of joint obligors or their representatives in an action on the bond, and does not relate to the judgment to be rendered when all the parties to the bond are in fact before-the court. It makes a new rule with respect to the form of actions-[3]*3on joint liabilities, but it does not affect the reciprocal rights and equities between defendants in the same action, nor prevent th® court having all the parties before it from recognizing, and as-far as may be done without injury to any, giving effect to them according to the principles of law and equity.

There is no doubt that a judgment may be rendered against the-party or parties sued under this new rule, though other parties’ jointly bound with them in the instrument are omitted from the-action who, as between all of the parties, are primarily liable, and might and before the adoption of this new rule would have been made primarily liable if the suit were in equity; and would have been equally bound by the judgment if the action were at law. It is evident that in such cases something will remain to be done by action or otherwise, in order to do complete justice, or to prevent injustice between the parties jointly bound. But the fact that under the privilege given by the thirty-ninth section cases may happen in which the court, bound to render judgment against such parties as the plaintiff chooses to sue, cannot do complete justice or must cause injustice, because other parties are not before it in the suit, does not tend to prove that the injustice which in such cases arises incidentally from the operation of the section should be made a rule of right in all cases, or to any extent beyond its direct purpose of authorizing the joining or omission of parties to an action in certain cases, with the necessary effect of authorizing or requiring judgments to be rendered according to the authorized form of the action with respect to parties.

If this action had been brought against the sureties alone, or if, having been against the administrator and his sureties, it had been dismissed as to the administrator for a cause applicable to bim alone, the thirty-ninth section of the Code might, perhaps, under the construction given to it in the case of Rogers v. Mitchell, 1 Metc. 22 (cited by appellee’s counsel), have sustained a judgment against the sureties alone. The court decided nothing more in that case than that the petition had been improperly dismissed as to all of the defendants for a cause which was good as to the executor alone, and, therefore, reversed the judgment and remanded the cause for further proceedings against the sureties alone, who might, as the court says here, have been sued alone by virtue of the thirty-ninth section of the Code. • It is not said in that case what evidence would suffice to authorize judgment against the sureties.

[4]*4The court in the case of McCall as Administrator v. Patterson, 18 B. Mon., decided that a return of nulla bona on an execution against the administrator as such was not essential to the liability for a devastavit. But in that case the suit was against the administrator and his sureties jointly, and there had been a former decree and execution thereon returned no property against Patterson as administrator and heir, which was regarded as against him personally. In the case of Lee v. Waller, etc., 3 Metc. 62, the court, though stating it to be ordinarily necessary that the creditor should have a judgment against the personal representative before he can proceed for a devastavit either against him or his surety, yet decided that as the plaintiff was the creditor of the administrator’s intestate, and, therefore, could not obtain a judgment against the administrator, the previous judgment might be dispensed with.

In describing the remedy by which the difficulty under which the plaintiff labored might be obviated, the court says:

The chancellor can do full and complete justice by having the executor and his sureties and all other necessary parties before the court,”

and in indicating the decree to be rendered in case the creditor should establish his demand, get a judgment against the administrator to be levied of assets, which cannot be collected by execution, and a devastavit be proved,

it would be proper to render a joint decree against the executor and his sureties de bonis propriis, to be levied first of the estate of the executor, if any, if none, then to be levied of the estate of his sureties.”

As a return of nulla bona

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42 Ky. 208 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 1842)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1 Ky. Op. 1, 1866 Ky. LEXIS 218, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hughes-v-gray-kyctapp-1866.