Wilkinson v. Conley

66 S.E. 372, 133 Ga. 518
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedNovember 20, 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 66 S.E. 372 (Wilkinson v. Conley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wilkinson v. Conley, 66 S.E. 372, 133 Ga. 518 (Ga. 1909).

Opinion

Lumpkin, J.

John L. Conley was appointed administrator of John Broad, deceased. On July 26, 1881, he gave an administrator’s bond with several sureties, among them being Benjamin Conley, John C. Hendrix, and Bufus B. Bullock. The bond stated that the principal and sureties bound themselves jointly and severally. In 188’4 E. S. McCandless was appointed administrator de bonis non of the estate of Broad, in lieu of Conley. He brought suit against Conley to recover the amount due by the latter to the estate for sums received by him as administrator and unaccounted for. On March 15, 1898, John L. Conley died, and James Banks was appointed administrator. He was made a party defendant to the suit, and on December 20, 1899, the plaintiff recovered judgment against him quando acciderint for $19,790.70 principal and $22,156 interest. Benjamin Conley, one of the sureties on the administrator’s bond of John L. Conley, died on January 10, 1886, leaving John L. Conley as his executor. The latter having died, as stated above, on March 15, 1906, Morris Conley was appointed adminstrator. On June 12, 1906, the present suit was brought in the name of John R. Wilkinson, ordinary, for the use of E. S. McCandless, administrator de bonis non, against Morris Conley, administrator of Benjamin Conley, deceased, being .a suit on the bond to recover of the estate of Benjamin Conley as one of the sureties the amount of the judgment against Banks, administrator of John L. Conley. It was alleged that J. C. Hendrix, another surety on the bond, was a non-resident of the State, and that the other sureties beside him and Benjamin Conley, deceased, were insolvent, one of them was [520]*520dead, and two others were non-residents. The defendants pleaded, among other things, that McCandless, administrator, settled with Hendrix, one of the sureties on the bond, for $2,000 and discharged him from further liability thereon, and thereby discharged the estate of Benjamin Conley, another one of the sureties. On the trial the suit against John L. Conley and the recovery against his administrator, with the execution based thereon, were introduced in evidence; also the bond of Conley as administrator; and the history of the administration and the deaths above stated were proved. It was shown that a former suit had been brought on the bond against B. B. Bullock and others. All of the defendants therein were not stated in the evidence, except that Hendrix was one of them. An instrument was executed and given to Hendrix, in the following terms: “Georgia, Fulton County. For and in consideration of the sum of $2,000.00 Two Thousand Dollars, paid by J. C. Hendrix to pay his portion of any and all liability of the sureties on the bond of John L. Conley as administrator of the estate of John Broad, deceased, the suit instituted against said Conley and his surety on said bond is hereby dismissed .as to said Hendrix, who, while named as a party, was never served, and waived no right. And we hereby covenant and agree to look to said Conley and the other sureties on his bond to pay the balance that may be recovered on said bond, or against the said Conley, by reason of his being administrator as aforesaid, without further cost or detriment to said Hendrix. [■Signed] Burton Smith, Attorney of record for E. S. McCandless, Temporary Administrator de bonis non of the Estate of John Broad, deceased, Jonathan Broad, Elizabeth Maynard, Nellah Newman, Marion Pascoe, and Philip A. Broad, for all heirs of the Broad estate. This May 5th, 1896.” Pending that suit Bullock obtained possession of this paper and set it up as operating as a release to him. That suit was then dismissed, and in 1906 the present one was brought against the administrator of Benjamin Conley. At the close of the evidence, the presiding judge directed a verdict for the defendant, and the plaintiff excepted.

If the paper executed and delivered to Hendrix, one of the sureties on the bond of John L. Conley, administrator, was a release or discharge of liability on his part, it undoubtedly operated to discharge Benjamin Conley, another surety. All of the authorities agree to this principle; but there has been some diversity of views [521]*521as to the difference between a discharge and a covenant of indemnity or an agreement not to sue one who is liable along with others, and as to whether a particular instrument operated as one or the other. The case of Kendrick v. O’Neil, Foster & Co., 48 Ga. 631, was strongly relied on by counsel for plaintiff in error. It was decided by a divided court, two Justices holding that the instrument then under consideration did not operate as a discharge, but as a covenant of indemnity or one not to sue. Chief Justice Warner dissented. He contended that, under the provisions of the code (then §§2810, 2811, now §§3714, 3715 of the Civil Code of 1895), the paper operated as a release to one of the defendants jointly liable, and therefore released the other. We need not determine whether the construction placed by the majority of the court upon the instrument, or that of the dissenting Chief Justice, was correct. See, on this subject, Powell v. Davis, 60 Ga. 70; Marietta Savings Bank v. James, 66 Ga. 286; Martin v. Monroe, 107 Ga. 330. The case before us presents some features which clearly differentiate it from the Kendrick case. The latter involved the liability of a partnership, where the firm had to be sued in order to enforce it. The question was asked, whether it was the intent of the parties, in reserving the right to enforce the liability of the firm, to destroy the ability to do so. Here the case is one on a bond expressed to be joint and several. The parties evidently did not contemplate that it would be necessary to sue all the sureties at once as a means of enforcing liability on the bond, because the plaintiff dismissed Hendrix from the former suit, and in bringing the present action no defendant is made except the administrator of Benjamin Conley, one of the sureties. Moreover, the paper under consideration in that case was materially different from the one now involved. There it was stated, “Received of John J. Thrasher $300.00, paid by him, to be credited on a certain written obligation of O’Neil, Foster & Company to Lemuel Kendrick,” thus recognizing the entire liability as that of a partnership, and providing a credit upon it of the amount paid by Thrasher. Here it was recited that $2,000 was paid by Hendrix “to pay his proportion of any and all liability of the sureties on the bond of John L. Conley,” thus acknowledging full payment of his proportion of the liability. There the paper continued (referring to the obligation above mentioned), “and now in the hands of Hillyer & Brother for collection,” thus indicating [522]*522the intention to collect the obligation of the firm, of which Thrasher was a member. Here, in consideration of .the $2,000 paid by Hendrix as his proportion of all liability on the bond, “the suit instituted against said Conley and his surety on said bond is hereby dismissed as to said Hendrix,” thus declaring the intent to terminate the suit as to Hendrix. It is true that it was stated that, while he was named as a party, he had not been served and had waived no right; but there is nothing to show that he might not have been served and retained in the suit, if the parties had intended to permit him to be sued.

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Bluebook (online)
66 S.E. 372, 133 Ga. 518, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wilkinson-v-conley-ga-1909.