Varga v. United States Fidelity & Guaranty Co.

245 N.W. 765, 215 Iowa 499
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedDecember 13, 1932
DocketNo. 41479.
StatusPublished

This text of 245 N.W. 765 (Varga v. United States Fidelity & Guaranty Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Varga v. United States Fidelity & Guaranty Co., 245 N.W. 765, 215 Iowa 499 (iowa 1932).

Opinion

*501 De Graff, J.

— Fred E. Teale was appointed executor of the will of Almena Elizabeth Gardner, deceased, by the district court of Decatur county, Iowa, on July 6, 1920. On the same date, he qualified and gave bond as executor in the penal sum of $10,000, with the appellees Helen R. Van Werden and L. P. Van Werden as sureties. Thereafter and on October 22, 1920, the said Fred E. Teale executed and filed in the estate a bond denominated as “Bond of Executor on Sale of Real Estate” in the penalty of $200,000 with the appellees Bert Teale, James F: Harvey, Helen R. Van Werden, L. P. Van Werden and Thomas Teale as sureties thereon.

The bond upon which plaintiff’s action was instituted was given by Fred E. Teale as executor and the appellant United States Fidelity & Guaranty Company as surety, under date of January 20, 1926. It was in the penal sum of $10,000.

Fred E. Teale died in the latter part of January, 1930, and on January 30, 1930, Francis Varga was appointed executor of the Gardner estate to succeed him and qualified the next day. The appellee Bert Teale was appointed administrator of the estate of Fred E. Teale. At the time this suit was commenced, Thomas Teale, one of the sureties on the $200,000 bond mentioned above, had died, and J. L. Mendenhall was appointed executor and trustee of his estate.

The foregoing facts are admitted, or were established, without dispute, by evidence introduced in the trial court. Shortly after the appointment of Francis Varga as executor, he commenced suit against Bert Teale, administrator of the estate of Fred E. Teale, deceased, and the United States Fidelity &'Guaranty Company upon the- executor’s bond in the penal sum of $10,000, which was given under date of January 20, 1926. It was alleged in the petition, as amended, that the former executor Fred E. Teale was short in his cash account as such executor in the amount of $8,595.84, and that a further shortage in the amount of about $5,400 had occurred in the estate through the making of an unauthorized loan by him, represented by a note secured by a second mortgage on Helen R. Van Werden’s undivided interest in certain real estate in Decatur county, Iowa. The said Helen R. Van Werden was one of the sureties on the original $10,000 executor’s bond given July 6, 1920, and also one of the sureties on the $200,000 bond given October 22, 1920. The appellant filed answer denying liability and pleading certain affirmative defenses.

*502 The appellant surety company also filed a motion in the trial court alleging the execution and filing of the $10,000 executor’s bond by Fred Teale in said estate on July 6, 1920, in which Helen R. Van Werden and L. P. Van Werden were sureties, and the execution and filing of the $200,000 bond on October 22, 1920, upon which the said Helen R. Van Werden and L. P. Van Werden, Bert Teale, James F. Harvey and Thomas Teale were sureties; that the plaintiff Varga had brought suit on its bond; that the other bonds were still in effect; that the said Fred E. Teale and Thomas Teale were deceased, and the names of their respective administrator and executor, and asked that an order be made requiring the individual sureties on the two bonds mentioned, or their representatives, to be brought into the case to respond to its cross-petition.

This motion was sustained, and the United States Fidelity & Guaranty Company filed a cross-petition against the defendant Bert Teale, administrator of the estate of Fred E. Teale, the former executor, and the individual sureties named above and the representatives of those deceased, and for relief asked that, in the event the court found that there was any liability upon the defendant United States Fidelity & Guaranty Company, on the suit of the plaintiff, it be subrogated to the rights of the plaintiff as against the defendants to its cross-petition, and that it have judgment for complete exoneration and indemnity, or that the court decree contribution as between the defendant sureties for their respective shares of the loss, if any, in accordance with the facts and equities of the case, if any judgment was entered in favor of the plaintiff and against the United States Fidelity & Guaranty Company.

The evidence showed that on July 5, 1921, Fred E. Teale filed in the office of the clerk of the district court proper proof of publication of the notice of his appointment. The plaintiff testified that all claims which had been filed against the estate had been paid, as well as all inheritance taxes, income taxes, federal estate taxes and other taxes due from this estate up to the time of the trial. All fees had been paid which were owing to the executor, Fred E. Teale, or his attorneys prior to the death of Fred E. Teale, and no claim had been filed in the estate asking additional compensation in behalf of the executor or his attorneys.

At the time of the trial, the record showed that there were unpaid court costs in connection with the administration of the estate *503 amounting to approximately $30.00, of which a portion thereof had been incurred since the appointment of the present executor.

The will required that all real estate of which the testator died seized be sold as soon as possible after her death and the proceeds used for the purpose of paying certain legacies and bequests and the establishment of certain trust funds. Certain trusts which had been created were set aside, and there was no dispute that the funds in said trusts were intact at the time of the death of Fred E. Teale. All legacies had been paid prior to Fred E. Teale’s death, except a few bequests to charitable and benevolent institutions.

The plaintiff testified that all personal property coming into the hands of the former executor had been converted into cash and distributed during the conduct of the administration of the estate by Fred E. Teale. So that at the time of the appointment of the present executor no personalty came into his hands except $6,732.62, a tax certificate of approximately $1,077, and whatever interest he acquired under the $5,460 note and mortgage given by Helen R. Van Werden. The plaintiff also testified that after the payment in full of the bequests and legacies and the cost of administration there would be no property to pass under the residuary clause of the will.

The trial court held that there was no liability on the part of the appellant as to the second mortgage note signed by Helen R. Van Werden, for the reason that the making of said note had already been approved by order of the court before the execution and filing of the bond upon which the United States Fidelity & Guaranty Company was surety, such order being on file at the time said bond was given; and the trial court held the surety company was not liable upon the claimed shortage and loss to the estate growing out of that transaction.

The trial court, as is hereinbefore set out, entered judgment against the United States Fidelity & Guaranty Company for $8,969.-80, with interest at six per cent from June 2, 1932, and the costs. Upon the cross-petition of the appellant as against the individual sureties L. P. Van Werden and Helen R.

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Bluebook (online)
245 N.W. 765, 215 Iowa 499, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/varga-v-united-states-fidelity-guaranty-co-iowa-1932.