Whitridge v. Durkee's Ex's

2 Md. Ch. 442
CourtHigh Court of Chancery of Maryland
DecidedSeptember 15, 1850
StatusPublished

This text of 2 Md. Ch. 442 (Whitridge v. Durkee's Ex's) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering High Court of Chancery of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Whitridge v. Durkee's Ex's, 2 Md. Ch. 442 (Md. Ct. App. 1850).

Opinion

The Chancellor:

It appears by the proceedings in this case, that a bill was filed in Baltimore County Court, as a court of equity, on the 14th of June, 1844, for the sale of certain parcels of real estate, formerly the property of Joseph Alemeida, deceased, for partition among his children, or their heirs, and, that a decree for that purpose passed on the 1st of January, 1845, appointing the testator of the defendants, trustee to make the sale. That in pursuance of said decree, he gave bond as trustee, with condition in the usual form for the faithful performance of. the trust thereby reposed in him, and, that shortly thereafter, in the same year, he made reports of his sales, amounting to the sum of $1925, which were finally ratified, the first, on the 22d of February, 1845, and the last sale, on the 24th of April thereafter. The record in that case discloses no farther proceedings, until the 19th of November, in the year 1849, when a petition was filed by the party in whose name the original bill was exhibited, in which it was alleged, that the trustee, Durkee, after making the sale, departed this life before he had completed his trust by paying over all the proceeds of sales, and praying that another trustee might be appointed for the purpose of completing the trust thus left incomplete by the former trustee, and upon this petition the court, on the same day passed an order appointing other trustees as prayed. It is admitted, however, in the present case, that the trustees thus appointed have not bonded, nor have they taken upon themselves, in any way, the execution of the trust.

Under these circumstances, a bill quia timet was filed by the complainant, the surety of Durkee, in his bond as trustee, on the equity side of Baltimore County Court, which was subsequently transferred to this court upon the suggestion of the defendants, in which, after stating and referring to the proceedings in the former cause, it is alleged, that Durkee failed to bring into court for distribution, the proceeds of the sales made by him, but appropriated the same to his own use. That Durkee is dead, and the defendants, his executors, are proceeding to settle up and close his estate, and that the complainant appre[444]*444hends his assets will be distributed among irresponsible representatives, before those entitled to the proceeds of the property sold by him as trustee, shall claim or sue therefor, and that the complainant as his surety, will thus be exposed to great peril of loss. Upon this statement of facts, the bill prays, that the executors may account, and that they be decreed to pay over to the trustees subsequently appointed, the amount received by their testator, as trustee under the aforesaid decree, and for further relief. That portion of the prayer for relief, which calls upon the defendants to pay the-money to the new trustees, is, however, abandoned, in consequence of the admission already adverted to, that they had not given bond or taken upon themselves the execution of the trust. If, therefore, the complainants are entitled to any relief, they must get it under the general prayer.

The answer to this bill, after admitting the proceedings in the former cause, and the receipt of the money by the trustee, Durkee, avers, that he did account for and pay over the same to the parties entitled, and the defendants deny that he did appropriate the proceeds of sale, or any part thereof, except his commissions, to his own use. They aver, that no claim has been presented on account of said trust by any of the parties entitled to the proceeds of the sale made by their testator, and that they have paid all his debts, and are ready to close and settle their trust in the Orphans’ Court, as required by their duty as executors.

There can be no doubt of the right of a surety, after a debt has become due, to file a bill to compel the principal debtor to pay, whether the surety has himself been sued or not, upon the principle established at a very early period “that it is unreasonable that a man should always have such a cloud hanging over him.” Ranelaugh vs. Hays, 1 Vernon, 190. And as remarked by Chancellor Kent, in Hays vs. Ward, 4 Johns. Ch. Rep., 132, “it is now considered as a settled rule, that a party may resort to chancery if he apprehends danger from the creditor’s delay, and compel the creditor to sue the principal debtor, though probably he must indemnify the creditor against the consequences [445]*445of risk, delay and expense.” The same principle has been affirmed by the Court of Appeals of this state, in the case of Sasscer vs. Young & Kemp, 6 Gill & Johns., 243, and has been sanctioned by the Court of Errors of New York in 17 Johns„ Rep., 384. See also 1 Story’s Equity, section 327, and 2 Story’s Equity, section 849, and King vs. Baldwin, 2 Johns. Ch. Rep., 561, 562.

In the case of Sasscer vs. Young & Kemp, the Court of Appeals, in speaking of the privileges of sureties, and the mode by which they may protect themselves from loss, say, that after they become chargeable by a forfeiture of the contract or its non-performance by the principal, in the manner and at the time agreed upon, may ensure a prompt prosecution, either by discharging the obligation and becoming by substitution entitled to all the remedies possessed by the creditor, or they may cause the creditor to proceed by an application to a court of equity. But the bond upon which the surety in this case rests his right to the interposition of the court in his favor by compelling the principal debtor to pay the debt, is not a bond for the payment of money at all. It is a bond with a collateral condition, and until the condition is shown to be broken, and the damages by the breach ascertained, nothing can be said to be due upon it. It is very true that the record in the case in which Durkee was appointed trustee does not show a compliance on his part with his duty as such, but it may, nevertheless, be, that he has paid the money received by him to the persons who were entitled to it, and the fact that they have never complained, although five years have elapsed since the sale, is a circumstance not without weight in speculating upon the subject. It cannot readily be supposed, that these parties would have waited for five years if they had received nothing from the trustee for the property sold by him. That a part of the money, at least, has been paid, is fairly inferrible from the petition filed in 1849, for the appointment of trustees to complete the trust, it being in that petition stated, that Durkee had died without paying over all the money received by him as trustee.

[446]*446It can, in fact, scarcely be insisted, that the complainant is entitled to a decree, directing these defendants, as executors of Durkee, to bring into court the whole amount of the proceeds of the sales made by him. Before any order could be passed, an account would have to be taken, not only of the assets in the hands of the executors, but to ascertain how much is due from the former trustee. But how can such an account be taken in this cause, and between these parties. The case for the sale of the estate in question, is still depending on the equity side of Baltimore County Court.

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Related

King v. Baldwin
2 Johns. Ch. 554 (New York Court of Chancery, 1817)
Hayes v. Ward
4 Johns. Ch. 123 (New York Court of Chancery, 1819)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2 Md. Ch. 442, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/whitridge-v-durkees-exs-mdch-1850.