Hurst v. Commissioners of DeKalb County
Hurst v. Commissioners of DeKalb County
Opinion of the Court
The Board of Commissioners of Roads and Revenues of DeKalb county issued an execution against J. A. Mason, county treasurer, and Smith, Medlock, and Steele, securities on his bond, for a given amount. This execution was levied on certain land in DeKalb county, and a claim was interposed by W. R. Hurst, trustee for W. R. Hurst Jr., a minor. The execution was issued for a default of the county treasurer, in making settlement for the county money which came into his hands during the years 1893 and 1894. On the trial of the issue joined, the claimant introduced a deed from the defendants J. A. Mason and M. A. Steele to W. R. Hurst, trustee, which was executed on the 26th day of October, 1898. It was recited in the deed that in the year 1883 the grantors, Mason and Steele, became sureties on the bond of Hurst as trustee, on the condition that the trustee would surrender to them exclusive control and management of the funds belonging to his minor cestui que trust, and that in pursuance of said agreement the Trustee did, in said year, turn over to them two thousand dollars, being the property of the minor, and that Mason and Steele in said year did invest that money in the property levied on; they therefore, in consideration of the premises, conveyed the same to the trustee for the benefit of the minor. The claimant also introduced in evidence a petition, returnable to the August term, 1898, of the superior court of DeKalb county, filed by W. R. Hurst, and a verdict and decree rendered thereon. In the petition it was alleged that W. R. Hurst Jr. is the grandson of the petitioner, and is an orphan; that his mother died from natural causes, and his father was killed in a railroad accident; that after the death of his father, which succeeded that of his mother, the' petitioner instituted an action, as next friend of the minor, against the railroad company, and recovered for him two thousand dollars on account of the negligent homicide of the father of said minor; that after the judgment or recovery was had, he was required to execute a bond with sureties, in order to receive the money for the minor; that he applied to Steele and Mason to become his sureties on said bond, and they agreed
It is conténded by counsel for the defendant in error that at the time Mason, county treasurer, executed his bond, and also at the date of the levy of the execution, the legal title to the property claimed was in Mason and Steele, and, inasmuch as the property of the defendants in execution was bound from the time of the execution of the official bond, and, as there was no evidence showing that the county had notice or knowledge that any one had an equitable right in the land, or that it was only held in trust by the grantees, that the verdict was right; and it is further contended, inasmuch as the claimant received the money belonging to the minor only upon the execution of a bond to account for the money to the minor, that no trust existed, but that the minor must look to the bond on arriving at majority. In our judgment neither of these contentions is sound. The facts have been adjudicated between Hurst, trustee, and Mason and Steele, by a decree of the court, and there can be no question that the .grantees in the year 1883 received two thousand dollars of money belonging to the minor, Hurst Jr. It does not make any difference from whom they received it, nor how they received it; it was money in which they had no interest.. "Being the
But it is further said that the verdict was right, because the relation of debtor and creditor existed between the defendants in execution and the county, and that the property would not be discharged unless the county had notice of the equity of the minor therein. We do not so understand the rule of law. Until a breach of such a bond, there ivas no debt, and no relation of debtor and creditor. Besides, this is not a case where the
Reference
- Full Case Name
- HURST v. COMMISSIONERS OF DeKALB COUNTY
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- Published