Nanz v. . Oakley

24 N.E. 306, 120 N.Y. 84, 30 N.Y. St. Rep. 885, 75 Sickels 84, 1890 N.Y. LEXIS 1230
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 15, 1890
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 24 N.E. 306 (Nanz v. . Oakley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Nanz v. . Oakley, 24 N.E. 306, 120 N.Y. 84, 30 N.Y. St. Rep. 885, 75 Sickels 84, 1890 N.Y. LEXIS 1230 (N.Y. 1890).

Opinion

*86 Haight, J.

One Eliza Munday, as the present owner of the claim in suit, joins with the plaintiff in this appeal. The action was brought against the defendant, as surety, upon an administrator’s bond to recover the amount adjudged by the surrogate to be due and owing by the administrator, and which he was ordered to pay to Cornelius W. Depew, as administrator of Eachel Depew, deceased.

It appears that one Mary Ann Schultz died in the city of Hew York intestate, and that Eachel Depew was her only heir at law and next of kin. That on her petition Bomt P. Winant and herself were appointed administrator and administratrix of the estate, and the defendant and one Peter Cortelyou executed the usual bond, which was joint and several, as sureties. Ji further appears that Winant alone administered the estate, and that on a final accounting before the surrogate it was adjudged and decreed that there was in his hands, as such administrator, the sum of $1,930, which with the interest, costs and disbursements of the proceedings to compel him to account, amounted in the aggregate to $4,017.57, which sum he was ordered to pay over to Cornelius W. Depew, as administrator of Eachel Depew, she having died in the meantime. Winant having converted the money to his own use, failed to make payment and the decree was duly docketed, execution issued and returned unsatisfied, and thereupon this action was brought against the defendant, the sole surviving surety ujion the administrator’s bond, Depew as such administrator having assigned the claim to the plaintiff.

The trial court held that the plaintiff was not entitled to recover, for the reason that Eachel Depew was a co-administratrix with Winant; that she was one of the principals in the bond of which the defendant. was surety, and that she could not maintain an action against her own surety for the wrongful acts of her co-principal. This would be so if by executing the bond she became liable as surety for the devastavit of Winant, her co-principal. This question has received attention in numerous reported cases in the different states, in some of which it has been held that one executing a bond is *87 liable for the default of his co-principal. (Brazier v. Clark, 5 Pick. 96; Towns v. Ammidown, 20 id. 535 ; Newton v. Newton, 53 N. H. 537; Ames v. Armstrong, 106 Mass. 15; Boyd v. Boyd, 1 Watts, 365; Bostwick v. Elliott, 3 Head, 507; Babcock v. Hubbard, 2 Conn. 536; Caskie v. Harrison, 76 Va. 85 ; Jeffries v. Lawson, 39 Miss. 791; Braxton v. State, 25 Ind. 82; Moore v. State, 49 id. 558; Eckert v. Myers, 15 N. E. Rep. 862.)

In several of these cases the question appears to have received but slight attention. Some have cited as authority the case of Brazer v. Clark (supra), of which we shall speak later on, whilst others have been overruled by later decisions.

In the case of Boyd v. Boyd, the administrators filed a joint inventory, and it was held that they were jointly and severally liable for the whole amount of the personal property described in the inventory upon the joint and several bond which they had given.

In the case of v. Armstrong, it was held that the bond was binding upon both of the executors as to all the assets included in their inventory which had come into their joint possession.

In the case of Brazer v. Clark, two executors gave a joint and several bond with sureties. One died, and afterward the survivor committed waste which the sureties upon .the bond had to pay. It was held that they had no right of action for indemnity or contribution against the heirs or representatives of the deceased executor; and to the same effect is the.case of Towne v. Ammidown.

It will be observed that these cases have chiefly been disposed of upon questions of liability outside of the bond, .and in the last two cases the decision was in fact against the right to recover.

The Indiana cases to which we have referred have been expressly overruled in the case of the State v. Wycmt (67 Ind. 25), in which ease it was held that where two persons as administrators executed a single bond with sureties, such bond must be construed as if each of the principal obligors therein *88 had executed a separate bond with the same sureties subject to the same conditions; and in such a ease after the resignation of one of the administrators, the other may maintain an action against him and his sureties upon the bond for breaches committed by him alone.

In our own state but one case has been found in which the question appears to have been considered, and that was the case of Kirby v. Taylor, first reported in 6 Johnson’s Chancery, 242-253, wherein Chancellor Kent remarks that “it was probably not the intention of the bond that Thompson should himself be considered as a surety for his co-guardian.” The same case was again reported in Hopkin’s Chancery, 309-331, in which Chancellor Sanfobd considers the question in an elaborate opinion, reaching the conclusion that a principal in a guardian’s bond is not liable to the sureties for the default of his co-principal.

This question was not considered in the case of Tighe v. Morrison (116 N. Y. 263); and in the case of Sperb v. McCowi (110 id. 605), the question was as to whether one administrator could maintain an action upon the bond against the sureties to recover the amount of the devastavit of a co-administrator, and it was held that such action could be maintained even upon its assumption that the plaintiff individually was liable to the sureties upon the bond, but it was expressly stated by the court in its opinion that it did not deem it important to determine the relation which the plaintiff individually, as one of the principals in the bond, bears to the sureties in reference to the default.

The question in reference to the liability of executors and administrators for the default of each other, independent of any bond, is well settled by the 'authorities. Each of several executors or administrators has the power to reduce to possession the assets and collect all the debts due the estate, and is responsible for all that he receives. The payment of money or delivery of assets to a co-executor or co-administrator will not discharge him from liability; for having received the assets in his official capacity, he can discharge himself only 'by *89 a due administration thereof in accordance with the requirements of the law.

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Bluebook (online)
24 N.E. 306, 120 N.Y. 84, 30 N.Y. St. Rep. 885, 75 Sickels 84, 1890 N.Y. LEXIS 1230, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nanz-v-oakley-ny-1890.