State Ex Rel. Harris v. Harrison

78 N.C. 202
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedJanuary 5, 1878
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 78 N.C. 202 (State Ex Rel. Harris v. Harrison) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Ex Rel. Harris v. Harrison, 78 N.C. 202 (N.C. 1878).

Opinion

Reade, J.

In 1868, the feme plaintiff, then an infant, recovered judgment against C. B. Harrison, administrator of McKnight her former guardian, for $5,997.23.

In 1871, said Harrison became the guardian of feme -plaintiff, and sold her land for $1,471.00.

The two sums make $7,468.00, no part of which has been paid to her. And this action is brought to recover it of the «defendants, sureties on Harrison’s guardian bond.

'T’he estate of McKnight was solvent; Carter B. Harrison, *211 bow bankrupt, was solvent; bis administrator sureties were and are solvent; and bis guardian sureties are solvent. And yet bis ward tbe feme plaintiff now at majority cannot get ber estate. Tbe administrator sureties say that they are not liable, because tbe administrator Harrison paid over tbe estate to tbe guardian Harrison, wbicb tbe guardian sureties ■deny. And both sets of sureties say that that is not a question for them to settle among themselves, nor is it for them to furnish the plaintiff with any information, but that it is for ber to find out as best she can. And if she sue either set, and fail to make out a cléar case, she must fail.

This does not sound well, to say tbe least.

If this is the law of administrations and guardianships, then the law has been either badly made or badly interpreted.

It would seem that tbe law ought to be that tbe administrator should be required to show precisely what came or -ought to have come to his bauds and what he did -with it; and that the guardian should show precisely what came or ■ought to have come to his hands, and what he did with it. And that all this ought to appear of record; so that the ward, who has all the while been dependent, and whose «state has paid both administrator and guardian for the dis•charge of these duties, should have nothing to do at her majority but to look to the record in order to ascertain her rights.

What it would seem the law ought to be, that we find it is, both by statute and the decisions of the Courts.

The statute requires that a guardian shall endeavor to ■collect, by all lawful means, his ward’s estate, on pain of being himself liable for the same if he neglect; and shall make early and frequent returns thereof on oath; and on failure to do so shall be put in jail until he does ; and shall give bond, with sureties, conditioned that he shall faithfully execute the trust reposed in him. Bat. Rev. ch. 53.

*212 It is difficult to see how anything cíoüld be more binding on his power or on his conscience. And the same is true of his sureties. Whenever therefore anything Has cerne or ought to have come to the guardian’s hands, he and his sureties are liable to the ward. Why then are not'thedé-fendants liable in this ease ?

We have examined with care the elaborate report of th& Referee, and the exceptions thereto, and the learned brief of, the defendants’ counsel, and the principal defences are two' fold:—

1. “ That the sureties on the guardian bond are not liable,, as for money collected and not accounted for, for money received by Harrison administrator and wasted by him before he made it his ward’s money.” And that in order to make it his ward’s money, it must have been separated and set apart or otherwise appropriated by the administrator to the -guardian.

2. “That tliesüretiéson the guardian bond are not liable for the guárdián’s fallare to collect the. judgment in favor of the ward ($5,997.00)'against the administrator, if that judgment is still collectible by the ward-”

In order to make the first proposition fit the case, we must strike out, “ as for money collected and not accounted for because the learned counsel would not ask us to consider the proposition, whether a man is liable as for money had and received, when in fact he never received the moneyand because the question is not whether the guardian sureties are liable in one form or in another, but are they liable in any form for money which Harrison received as administrator and wasted'before he made it his ward’s money? With this correction both propositions are erroneous.

In opposition to the first preposition, the law is, that if the administrator had the fund and wasted it, or vvhether lie wasted it of not, it was the duty of the guardian to collect, — it being collectible. And his failure to collect was a *213 breach of.his-bond, for which .he and his sureties are liable in damages. The amount of damages will b,e considered further on.

In opposition to the second proposition, the law is, that the guardian not having acted in good faith, he and his sureties are liable for the full amount of the debt, to the ward, although she might collect it out of the administration bond-; that she-has her election to sue either set of sureties or both ; and to get judgment against both, collecting only out of one; and leaving 'them to adjust their equities among themselves.

1. The authorities mainly relied on by the defendants to ■support their first proposition, — that the guardian is not liable unless thé administrator separate the fund and turn it over to the guardian, — are Clancy v. Dickey, 2 Hawks 497; Harrison v. Ward, 3 Dev. 417; Clancy v. Carrington, 3 Dev, 529; Winborn v. Gorrell, 3 Ire. Eq. 117.

Only the first one of these cases was upon a guardian bond, and there was a recovery against the guardian, and therefore it could not be an authority in favor of a guardian except in so far as something might be said in the opinion’,’ by the way. But there was not even that. The case was elaborately argued by Gaston and Ruffin and there were •opinions by Taylor and Henderson. The guardian before his appointment had married an executrix, who as such had possession of the slaves in controversy, and by his marriage he became executor in fight of his wife, and of course her possession was hjs possession, and being in possession he was appointed guardian of the ward; and.the question was, whether his possession was as executor or as guardian. HendersoN, J., said, “that having the slaves in possession •as executor in right of his wife, after the time [allowed by. law for the performance of the trusts of the will, by being .appointed guardian to the child, he ipso facto became possessed of the slaves in his capacity as guardian.”

*214 There could be no stronger declaration against the defendant than that case, which is cited in his favor, if the fund in this case were property.

The second case, Harrison v. Ward, was not against a guardian, but the sureties of an administrator, who sought to exonerate themselves, by showing that the administrator had rendered his final account, and was then appointed guardian, and that, like as in Clancy v.

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Bluebook (online)
78 N.C. 202, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-harris-v-harrison-nc-1878.