Perkins v. Stimmel

49 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 520
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 15, 1886
StatusPublished

This text of 49 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 520 (Perkins v. Stimmel) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Perkins v. Stimmel, 49 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 520 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1886).

Opinion

Davis, P. J.:

This case bristles with objections and exceptions bnt they are mostly of a technical and unimportant character and need only the most cursory notice. The action is upon a bond given by a guardian upon his appointment by the Surrogate’s Court, and many of the exceptions relate to its form and to the manner in which it was drawn, and its penalty inserted and its date omitted, etc., on and before the filing of it in the Surrogate’s Court. The omission of the date is of no importance. The time of delivery determines the date, and the delivery and filing of such a bond in the Surrogate’s Court controls the question of date where it is not inserted, and also where it is, when the question of date becomes important. A clerk of the Surrogate’s Court filled out the bond, and, in doing so, inserted the penalty at double the valuation of the infant’s property as stated in the petition. It is insisted for this reason, that the surrogate did not “fix the amount of the bond,” as required by the statute. This objection is a non sequilar. It does not follow because the scrivener filled in the penalty in the blank, that the surrogate did not fix it. The bond was afterwards duly filed, and upon it and the other proceedings in the case, the surrogate in due form ordered and issued the letters of guardianship, in which he recites that “such guardian has duly executed and delivered a bond pursuant to law for the faithful discharge of his duty, and- we being satisfied of the sufficiency of such bond,” etc., do constitute and appoint him such guardian. This sufficiently answers all objections to the bond, so far as they relate to its execution, filing and penalty. Nearly or quite all the other objections touching the bond itself, and the proceedings preliminary to the letters, may be answered in the same way.

There are two questions raised by the exceptions more serious in their nature. The first is whether the suit upon the bond should have been brought in the name of the infant by the plaintiff as her guardian instead of by the plaintiff as guardian of the estate of the infant. There is no doubt, under the authorities, that the action might properly have been brought in the name of the infant by her [522]*522guardian. (Code, §§ 449, 468, 469, 470; Segelken v. Meyer, 94 N. Y., 47; Buerman v. N. Y. Produce Exchange, Daily Reg., 1886, p. 785; Bradley v. Amsdon, 10 Paige, 235.)

Probably that would have been the better practice. But there are authorities which, allow the suit in its present form on such a bond. (Thomas v. Bennett, 56 Barb., 197; Hauenstein v. Kull, 59 How. Pr., 24; Coakley v. Mahar, 36 Hun, 157.) The question has no substantial merit. The cause of action is precisely the same in either case, and the object and result are the same if a recovery be had. The guardian in fact recovers as such in either action, and takes the property as guardian, and is bound to account to the infant for the judgment and its proceeds. The question could have been raised at the beginning of the suit by demurrer as well as at the end of a trial. When raised at the trial it ought not to be fatal. Every element is present by which the formal change can be made by amendment if necessary, and the interests of justice demand it. Nobody has been misled to his prejudice, and no good reason exists why the amendment should not be ordered even now if the plaintifE elects to make it. In such a case as this, although the bond is in form to the infant, it becomes on default an asset of her estate, which her guardian is entitled to possess and control, sue for and recover, and is bound eventually to account for. On recovery as has already been said he takes the proceeds as his in his relation as. guardian, and is entitled to keep and defend possession, and to invest and conti’ol and finally account for the same. There is no sound reason why he may not sue in his capacity of guardian the question being precisely the same and the result the same as when he sues in the infant’s name by himself as guardian. In the conflict of authority, we shall hold the suit properly brought as it is, but with leave however if plaintifE elect to do so, to change the title by a transposition of names, which seems to be all that is necessary.

The other, and still more difficult question is, whether an action will lie on the bond against these defendants, who werp sureties, without an accounting before the surrogate. The guardian, who was the principal in the bond, is dead. He died intestate, and the public, administrator of the city of New York was appointed to administer upon his estate. He was able to find nothing but six dollars and forty-one cents and an old desk containing a quantity of [523]*523stationery and papers. He found none of the assets belonging to the infant. To have called the public administrator to an account would have been an idle expense, and there was no one else to account. The guardian died about the 23d of October, 1884, as the pleadings admit. He filed his sworn account with the surrogate January 3, 1884, showing $12,137.40 then in his hands. It was proved that, in September, 1884, he converted twenty-five shares of the Mercantile Trust Company, valued in his inventory at $3,500, by transferring them from himself, as guardian, to himself as an individual, and selling them afterwards. To require an accounting under such circumsl^inces would be a futile and idle ceremony, a vain thing, and vain things are condemned by legal maxims. Yet, if the language of the bond demands it, the law must respect the demand. An accounting is one of the conditions of the bond, for a breach of which the sureties are liable; but it is not the only condition; the primary condition is that the guardian “will in all things faithfully discharge the trust reposed in him.” This condition was broken in this ease, and so broken that the performance of the other conditions are rendered nugatory by the misconduct of the guardian. Whore such a state of things clearly appears, to require the infant to demand and compel a legal accounting before the surrogate or some other court, which, it plainly appears, will result in no benefit to her or to the sureties, seems not merely unnecessary but unreasonable and unjust. The conditions of the bond are divisible, and unless all must be broken before the sureties can be sued, then it is enough that the primary one is broken in such form as to show that the others are of no value. In Girvin v. Hickman (21 Hun, 316), in a somewhat similar case, it was held that an accounting before suit brought on the bond was not necessary, and the court, after reviewing the cases, said : “ It is obvious, from the cases, that an accounting by the guardian is not always a prerequisite to an action against the sureties upon the bond, and there are many special circumstances in which it may be dispensed with. * * * But, if the case is

such that the extent of the guardian’s liability appears without an' accounting, why should an accounting be required before suit against the sureties ?”

And Chancellor Walworth, in Cuddebach v. Kent (5 Paige, 98), [524]*524said: “ The prosecution of a suit against him alone, in the first instance, would, therefore, be worse than useless as respects the sureties, and would subject them to the expense of a double litigation.”

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Related

Wright v. . Nostrand
94 N.Y. 31 (New York Court of Appeals, 1883)
Thomas v. Bennett
56 Barb. 197 (New York Supreme Court, 1868)
Hauenstein v. Kull
59 How. Pr. 24 (New York Supreme Court, 1880)
Mowry v. Bishop
5 Paige Ch. 98 (New York Court of Chancery, 1835)
Bradley v. Amidon
10 Paige Ch. 235 (New York Court of Chancery, 1843)

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Bluebook (online)
49 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 520, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/perkins-v-stimmel-nysupct-1886.