Kehnast v. Daum

4 Ohio N.P. 366
CourtDefiance County Court of Common Pleas
DecidedJune 15, 1897
StatusPublished

This text of 4 Ohio N.P. 366 (Kehnast v. Daum) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Defiance County Court of Common Pleas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kehnast v. Daum, 4 Ohio N.P. 366 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1897).

Opinion

HUBBARD, J.

. The plaintiff brings this action to obtain contribution from his alleged co-sureties, on bonds of the defendant, Fred W. LeSeuer, as administrator of the estate of Thomas Dempsey, late of Henry county, Ohio, deceased. Service of summons, duly endorsed with the amount for which, with interest, judgment will be taken if the defendants fail to answer, has been had upon [367]*367the defendants, Kiser and LeSeuer, in this county; and service of like summons has been had upon the defendant,, Daum and Meyer, in the said county of Henry, where they reside. These last named defendants, who appear for that purpose only, have moved to quash the service of summons so made upon them, for want of jurisdiction in the court, to issue summons to an ther county, in this action. And upon this motion the case has been heard and submitted to the court. Two questions arise on this motion, which must be determined from the allegations of the petition, which must be taken as true, for the purpose of this action, under the rule laid down in Drea v. Carrington, 32 Ohio St., 595, that: “Where the allegations of the petition upon-its face make a case in which all of the defendants are rightfully joined, and service is made on one or more in the county where the suit is brought, and on the others in another county, the question of the juris diction of the court over the persons of the defendants served in such other county, must be raised by answer,” etc. These questions are, First — Does the petition show upon its face that the defendants, Daum and Meyer, as well as Kiser were co-sureties with the plaintiff, for the performance of the same duty by the defendant LeSeuer?

Second — If so, does it further appear upon the lace of the petition that the defendants, Daum and Meyer, are rightfully joined as parties to this action, with both or either of the defendants who were served in this county? Or, in other words, can an action such as thiB be maintained against all of the co-sureties jointly, or can it be maintained against the principal and the co sureties, jointly?

Referring to the petition, therefore, we find that it alleges the appointment of the defendant LeSeuer, as administrator of rhe estate of Thomas Dempsey, deceased, by the probate court of Henry county, Ohio; the giving of an administration bond by the said LeSeuer, with the defendants, Daum and Meyer as sureties thereon, in the sum bf 82.000, conditioned according to the. law for the faithful performance of his said trust and appointment, and the approval thereof by said probate court: the making of an order for the sale of real estate of the decedent. in proceedings duly had hy =aid administrator. in said-probate court, for that pumose, and in which the said LeSeuer nas ordered to. and did give an additional bond in conformity to the provisions of section 6151, Revisbd Statutes, and conditioned as therein provided, in the sum of 816.000, with the plaintiff and the defendant.Kiser, as sureties thereon; the recovery of a judgment in this court in favor of Henry Rohrs, administrator de bonis non of the estate of Thomas Dempsey, deceased, against the said Fred W. LeSeuer and William A. Kehnast and John B. Kiser upon said last mentioned bond, in the sum of 8900, for moneys which came into the possession of the said LeSeuer, as such administrator of the estate of Thomas Dempsey, deceased, and which he failed to pay over to the said Rohrs, his successor in the administration of said estate,, upon order of the probate court by which he was appointed ; that the plaintiff, Kehnast, was compelled to, and did pay said judgment and the costs of said action, amounting to $932.-03, except the sum of $200, which is alleged to have been paid theieon by the said LeSeuer ; and that the said LeSeuer and the said Kiser are each residents of said county of Defiance, and wholly insolvent. And, upon this state of facts, the plaintiff prays for a personal judgment against all of the defendants in this action, in the sum of 8524.-30, with interest thereon from Dec. 12,1895.

From the averments of the petition, we are fully satisfied that the first .question must be answered in the affirmative, and that it appears upon the face of the pepetition that the defendants, Daum and Meyer, as well as the defendant, Kiser, were co-sureties with the plaintiff, and bound in common with him to answer for and make good the default of the defendant LeSeuer, for which the judgment, that plaintiff alleges he has been compelled to pay, was rendered.

There can be no doubt that this case is governed by the rule given in 4 Am. &Eng. Enc. of Law, pages 4 and 5, as follows: Sureties for the same principal and for the same engagement are entitled to contribution, although bound by different instruments and at differet times.”

And, as stated in Vol. 24 of the same work, page 813, as follows: “If sureties are bound for the debt or default of the same person in reference to the same transaction, they are liable to contribute to each other, although they are bound by different instruments. ”

In this case, the original administration bond on which Daum and Meyer were sureties, was by law required to contain, and it is averred m the petition that it did in fact contain, among others, conditions making the said LeSeuer and his sa:d sureties thereon. Daum and Meyer, liable to the amount therein named, for default of the said LeSeuer as such administrator, to administer according to law, all of 'the moneys, goods, chattels, rights and credits of said deceased, and the proceeds of all his real estate that may be sold for the payment of his debts, which shall at any time come to the possession of said administrator or to the posses'ion of any other person for him. and to pay any balance remaining in his hands upon the settlements of his accounts, to such persons as the court appointing him or the law shall direct.

The second bond, by its terms and con ditions. made the said LeSeuer and his said sureties thereon, Kehnast and Kiser, liable to the amount therein named ,for default of the said LeSeuer as such administrator, to account for and pay over to the persons law. fully entitled thereto, all of the proceeds o [368]*368the real estate of the decedent so ordered to be sold. While the first bond was the general administration bond, and contained obligations on the part of the makers thereof which are not included in the second bond, and for which the makers of the second bond are not liable, their provisions, as to the proceeds of the sale of the decedent’s real estate, which was sold under the said order of the probate court, are substantially identical.

The second bond was not a new bond, in the sense of being intended to take the place of the first bond, as to the proceeds of the real estate. The language of section 6151, under the provisions of which it was ordered to be, and was given, describes the bond to be given thereunder, as “an ad ditional administration bond, to secure the further assets arising from the sale of the real estate.” The word “additional” as so used in this connection, imports ex vi termini that the bond to be given under the provisions of said section is to be in addition to, and not in substitution of the original bond to any extent. And this construction is rendered more evidently correct, from the fact that it is left wholly discretionary with the probate court to require the giving of such additional administation bond or not to require it; the language being that the court may also require such bond to be given, before such sale, if it shall deem it necessary.

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Bluebook (online)
4 Ohio N.P. 366, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kehnast-v-daum-ohctcompldefian-1897.