Wilhite v. Ferry

66 Mo. App. 453, 1896 Mo. App. LEXIS 86
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 4, 1896
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 66 Mo. App. 453 (Wilhite v. Ferry) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wilhite v. Ferry, 66 Mo. App. 453, 1896 Mo. App. LEXIS 86 (Mo. Ct. App. 1896).

Opinion

Gill, J.

This is a suit in equity, to enjoin the defendants from enforcing a certain judgment which they obtained against plaintiffs, May 18, 1891. The allegations of the petition were admitted at .the trial, save and except the clause, “that said judgment was rendered and procured without any fault or negligence of these plaintiffs,” etc. Plaintiffs’ counsel have, in a condensed form, set out the conceded facts which we adopt as a fair statement of the case.

It appears that several years ago one Mr. Jordan was appointed curator of the estates of the Blue heirs, and that his bondsmen were R. J. McGowan, C. W. Conrad, and C. H. Eddleman. That when Jordan [456]*456died in April, 1892, his estate was insolvent and his securities were also insolvent. That McGowan was appointed his successor as curator and gave as his bondsmen, the present plaintiffs, Wilhite, Duck, and Edwards. That McGowan filed an inventory of the estate of said minors, and instead of charging himself with a claim of $1,902.76 (the amount which Jordan owed the estate) against the estate of Jordan and the securities on his bond, falsely charged himself with that amount of money, when, as a matter of fact, he had not, could not, and never did collect it, except the sum of $390, which sum he collected from the estate of Jordan. The remainder, owing to the admitted insolvency of Jordan’s estate, and McGowan, Conrad, and Eddleman, was not and could not be collected.

In August, 1893, McGowan made a settlement in which he still continued to charge himself with this money. In October, 1893, McGowan resigned and W. F. Ferry was appointed his successor, and at the October term of court made a final or turnover settlement in which he sought to correct the false and erroneous charges he had made against himself, in charging himself with the money he had never received. In other words, he sought to get credit for all the moneys he had charged himself with except the $390 he had collected from the Jordan estate, which sum he had fully accounted for. But the probate court refused his request and entered a judgment against him for the full amount of all the moneys he had charged himself with in his inventory, less the amount he had actually collected and paid over to his successor, Ferry. McGowan’s securities, the present plaintiffs, were all of this time in total ignorance of all of these facts heretofore mentioned, having no knowledge that he had charged himself with money he had never collected and could not collect, until after he had made his turnover set[457]*457tlement and the probate court had rendered its judgment. The probate court rendered this judgment at its October term, 1893, which did not adjourn till the twelfth day of December, 1893.

On the twenty-fourth day of January, 1894, Ferry, as curator of the Blue heirs, brought a suit in the circuit court against McGowan, and these plaintiffs as his securities, and on the eighteenth day of May, 1894, recovered a judgment against McGowan and these plaintiffs for the full amount of the judgment of the probate court and interest thereon.

On the twenty-eighth day of May, 1894, and within six months from the final adjournment of the October term of the probate court, McGowan filed his affidavit and bond for appeal from the judgment of the probate court, which appeal was on the same day granted by the said probate court to the circuit court. At the November term, 1894, of the circuit court, the case was tried de novo and judgment was rendered in favor of McGowan, reversing the judgment of the probate court and finding that said McGowan was not indebted in any way to the estate of said heirs, but that he had paid out more money as such curator than he had received.

As a matter of further history of the litigation, it may be well to state that after entering the judgment of May 18, 1894, the trial court sustained a motion for new trial and the cause was brought to this court on the appeal of the plaintiff in that case; and we reversed and remanded the cause, with directions to reinstate .the judgment, for the reason that the motion for new trial was not filed within the four days required by the statute. 62 Mo. App. 625.

At the trial below, the plaintiffs had a decree in their favor and were awarded a perpetual injunction against the enforcement of the judgment of May 18, 1894, and defendants appealed.

[458]*458A review of the facts of this case, a synopsis of which we have given, can but convince the candid mind that plaintiffs have just cause to complain of the threatened enforcement against them of a judgment, the basis of which was a wrongful charge against the former curator, McGowan, for whom they stood as security. Back of both the judgments in question, this fact stands admitted, to wit: McGowan (the curator who succeeded Jordan) wrongfully, if not fraudulently, charged himself with receiving from his predecessor the sum of $1,900, which, with the exception of $390 gotten from dividends out of Jordan’s estate, was never .received. Jordan died insolvent, and in like financial condition were his bondsmen, McGowan and others. So, then, it would seem that McGowan, either through ignorance, or from a fraudulent intent, set about to have his sureties stand good for the delinquency of Jordan, his predecessor. This was clearly a wrong and an outrage upon the plaintiffs in this suit. They had bound themselves to stand good for McGowan’s faithful accounting of all moneys he, as curator, might in fact receive. But they never undertook to make good the default of Jordan or his sureties. But it seems McGowan relented, or at least got his eyes open to the wrong he had committed; and about a year after taking charge of the estate of the Blue heirs, he resigned his curatorship, and at final settlement sought to have the probate court correct this error in his accounts and credit him back with the $1,900 wrongfully charged to him. The probate court refused so to do, and entered a judgment against the retiring curator for the full amount, less only the $390 which he had collected from Jordan’s estate and paid over to Perry, his (McGowan’s) successor. However, within the time required by law (section 5335, Revised Statutes, 1889) McGowan appealed from this judgment [459]*459on final settlement and the cause was taken up to be tried de novo in the circuit court, and on a trial there had, in November, 1894, the judgment of the probate court was reversed and McGowan’s account was credited with the $1,900 so erroneously and wrongfully charged to it and it was found and declared that McGowan did not fail to account for any money he received, but, in fact, had paid oiit more than he should.

It is clear, then, on this state of things, that these plaintiffs (who were McGowan’s sureties) ought not, in justice, to be called on to pay McGowan’s successor anything, for the very good and sufficient reason that McGowan turned over everything he received as curator and the final judgment of the circuit court had acquitted him of any further liability. But shortly after a rendition of this judgment in the probate court, and before McGowan had appealed therefrom, Ferry (who, as already stated, was McGowan’s successor) instituted a suit in the circuit court against McGowan’s sureties, basing the action on the judgment which had been rendered in the probate court; and this suit went to judgment in May following, a few days before McGowan had appealed from the probate judgment. This action was brought to enjoin an execution on this latter judgment.

In the leading case of Marine Ins. Co. v.

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Related

Sullivan v. Kirkpatrick
156 S.W. 492 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1913)
Engler v. Knoblaugh
110 S.W. 16 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1908)
Ferry v. McGowan
68 Mo. App. 612 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1897)

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Bluebook (online)
66 Mo. App. 453, 1896 Mo. App. LEXIS 86, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wilhite-v-ferry-moctapp-1896.