In re Filer

11 Abb. N. Cas. 107
CourtNew York Surrogate's Court
DecidedJuly 15, 1882
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 11 Abb. N. Cas. 107 (In re Filer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Surrogate's Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Filer, 11 Abb. N. Cas. 107 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1882).

Opinion

Rollins, S.

It is declared by section 2830 of the Code of Procedure that before letters of guardianship of an infant’s property are issued by the surrogate’s court, the person appointed must execute to the infant and file with the surrogate a bond with two sureties in a certain specified sum.

In 1881, after the foregoing provision went into effect, the legislature passed an act entitled “An act to facilitate the giving of bonds required by law” (c. 486). It provided that in cases where a person was required by law to give a bond with security for the faithful performance of any duty, an officer authorized to accept such bond and to pass upon its sufficiency might in his discretion approve the .same “whenever the conditions of such bond should be guaranteed by a company duly organized and authorized to guarantee the same.”

A question has arisen whether it is still necessary that a guardian’s bond should bear the names of two sureties, or whether such a bond is in conformity with law, though it be signed by the guardian alone, if it is approved by the surrogate and is guaranteed by such a corporation as is referred to in the act of 1881. Either view seems to be in harmony with the language of that act. But as to the meaning and intent of its provisions, whatever doubts may at first suggest themselves will [109]*109disappear, I think, upon careful examination of certain of its terms to which reference has not yet been made.

For example, upon reading the statute as a whole, it is discovered that it does not expressly relieve an officer who takes a guaranteed bond from the duty of examining and determining the sufficiency of sureties. Indeed, the very absence of any distinct provision for such relief is urged as an argument against the acceptance of such bond without such sureties. But if it is still incumbent upon the officer to whom a bond is submitted for approval to require justification of sureties in all cases, or by some inquiry to ascertain their responsibility, it was very absurd to provide that lie might accept bonds whenever they were guaran teed by a duly authorized corporation. Of course he might, if they were otherwise in conformity with law and consistent with the proper exercise of his discretion. No legislation was necessary to tell him that, for nobody can ever have supposed that even a worthless guaranty could invalidate a bond which was duly executed and secured by the sufficiency of its sureties, or that the acceptance of such a guaranty upon such a bond was an illegal act until it was expressly authorized by the legislature.

It must assuredly have been intended that the guaranty of the corporation, if satisfactory to the officer to whom a bond was offered for approval, should supply the place not only of justification of sureties, but of any inquiry into their sufficiency, or indeed of any requirement of pecuniary responsibility on their part. But in view of this destruction of the substance of suretyship upon guaranteed bonds there was manifestly no advantage in retaining its form, and herein lies an argument of some force in favor of the view that a bond which is guaranteed as required by the statute, and is duly approved, is effectual without bearing any name as surety.

[110]*110This view is also supported by another consideration. Section 2 of the act provides that the guaranty of an authorized company “ shall not be accepted whenever its liabilities shall exceed its assets.”

Now, unless it is intended that the guaranty may supply the place of the surety, this singular anomaly presents itself: that upon a bond which scrupulously complies with the requirements of law and bears the names of the requisite number of responsible sureties, the officer to whom it is submitted is absolutely forbidden to accept the guaranty of any company whose liabilities exceed its asssets.

So many absurdities seem to result from any other interpretation of the statute than that which vests discretionary authority in the surrogate, in passing upon the sufficiency of a bond, under circumstances like the present, to dispense with sureties upon the due execution of a guaranty, that I must sustain the construe-' tion which would hold that even without sureties a bond so guaranteed is valid and legal.

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Related

White v. Rintoul
19 Jones & S. 512 (The Superior Court of New York City, 1884)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
11 Abb. N. Cas. 107, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-filer-nysurct-1882.