State ex rel. Wyant v. Wyant

67 Ind. 25
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedMay 15, 1879
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 67 Ind. 25 (State ex rel. Wyant v. Wyant) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State ex rel. Wyant v. Wyant, 67 Ind. 25 (Ind. 1879).

Opinions

Howk, J.

This was a suit by and in the name of the State of Indiana, on the relation of Maria Wyant, administratrix of the estate of Jacob Wyant, deceased, as plaintiff, against the appellees, as defendants, in a complaint of a single paragraph.

The complaint counted upon an administrators’ bond in the penal sum of three thousand dollars, bearing date on the 28th day of February, 1870, and executed by the appellant's relatrix, Maria Wyant, and by each and all of the appellees. The bond was in the ordinary form prescribed by the statute, for administrators’ bonds ; and by its terms the said obligors therein jointly and severally bound themselves, their heirs, executors and administrators, for the payment of the aforesaid penal sum. The condition of this bond was as follows:

“ The condition of the above obligation is, that if the above bound Benjamin Wyant and Maria Wyant shall faithfully discharge the duties of his [their ?] trust as administrator of the estate of Jacob Wyant, deceased, according to law, the above obligation is to be void, else to remain in full force.”

[27]*27In her complaint on this bond, the appellant’s relatrix^ Maria Wyant, alleged, among other things, that, on the day of its date, she and the appellees executed and delivered the said bond to the then clerk of the court of common pleas of Hamilton county; that the said bond was then and there approved and accepted, and on the same day letters of administration on the estate of said Jacob Wyant, deceased, were granted to the relatrix, Maria Wyant, and the appellee Benjamin Wyant, by the clerk of said court of common pleas, which letters were afterward approved and confirmed by said court; that the relatrix, Maria Wyant, and the appellee Benjamin Wyant, accepted said trust and qualified as such administrators, and continued to act as such until the — day of December, 1875, at which time the appellee Benjamin Wyant resigned his said trust as such administrator, without making final settlement of said estate, and his resignation was then and there accepted by the circuit court of said county. In assigning a breach of said bond, the appellant’s relatrix said that the appellee Benjamin Wyant did not faithfully discharge the duties of his trust as such administrator, in this, that, immediately after taking out such letters of administration and qualifying as such administrators, by agreement of the relatrix and said Benjamin Wyant, the relatrix was relieved entirely from all responsibility as such administratrix, and the said Benjamin Wyant, by virtue of his said trust and said agreement, took upon himself the burthen of settling said estate, and then and there took possession of all the assets of said estate, amounting in all to the sum of five thousand dollars ; that the said Benjamin Wyant, as such administrator, failed to file and return an inventory of such assets within sixty days, as required by law ;■ that, on the 25th day of March, 1870, the said Benjamin Wyant sold the goods and chattels belonging to said estate, hut failed to file an account thereof in the proper office, as required by law, for more than thirty [28]*28days after said sale ; that the said Benjamin Wyant failed to file any report of his administration of said estate for more than five years after liis said appointment as such administrator; that the said Benjamin Wyant embezzled, concealed and converted to his own use assets of said estate to the amount of three thousand dollars, and that he committed waste on the decedent’s real estate, while the same was in his possession and under his control, by destroying the growing timber thereon, to the amount of five hundred dollars. And, for a further breach of said bond, the relatrix said, that the said Benjamin Wyant, on the-day of-, 1871, collected, received and came into the possession of a large sum of money, to wit, one thousand dollars, and that he had since retained and kept the same in his own possession, and the interest thereon had amounted to three hundred dollars, and that he had failed to pay over or account for either the principal or interest of said sum of money, but had converted the same to his own use. Wherefore, etc.

To this complaint, the appellee Benjamin Wyant separately, and the appellees Silas Helms and John Rambo jointly and separately, demurred, which demurrers were sustained by the court, and to these decisions the appellant’s relatrix excepted. The relatrix failing to plead further, judgment was rendered against her, on the demurrers, for the costs of suit, from which judgment she has appealed to this court, and has here assigned, as errors, the decisions of the court below in sustaining the appellees’ demurrers to the complaint.

In each of the demurrers to the complaint, the same grounds of objection thereto were stated by the appellees, in substance as follows :

1. That the complaint did not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action ;

2. That the relatrix had not the legal capacity to sue, [29]*29for the reason that she executed the bond in suit as a co-principal therein with the appellee Benjamin Wyant, the other appellees, Helms and Ramho, being the sureties of both the relatrix and said Benjamin Wyant, in said bond ; and,

3. That there was a defect of parties defendants in the action, in this, that the relatrix, Mai’ia Wyant, executed the bond in suit as a co-principal with the appellee Benjamin Wyant, the other appellees, Helms and Rambo, being the sureties of both the relatrix and said Benjamin Wyant in said bond, and that, therefore, the relatrix was a necessary party defendant.

Erom the record of this cause, and the error assigned thereon, it seems to us that the question -presented thereby for our decision may be thus stated : Can the appellant’s relatrix, upon the facts stated, in her complaint, maintain an action on the bond in suit, in which bond she was a principal obligor, against her co-obligors therein ? After the resignation of his trust by her co-administrator, Benjamin Wyant, can the relatrix, as the remaining administrator, bring suit on the bond given by him and her for the faithful discharge of the duties of their said trust, against him and the sureties in such bond, to recover damages for a breach committed by him alone of the condition of the bond ?

It seems to us, that the proper answers to' these questions are wholly dependent upon the construction which must be given to the different statutory provisions authorizing and requiring the execution of bonds by the executors and administrators of decedents’ estates, declaring the liabilities of the 'obligors, principals and sureties, in such bonds, and specifying the causes for which, and the persons by whom, suits maybe brought on any such bond. The bond in suit was of statutory origin; and even its form was provided for, in form Ho. 10 of section 194 of [30]*30the act providing for the settlement of decedents’ estates, etc., approved June 17th, 1852. In section 19 of the same act, it is provided as follows :

“ Sec. 19.

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Bluebook (online)
67 Ind. 25, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-wyant-v-wyant-ind-1879.