Williams v. State ex rel. Johnson
Williams v. State ex rel. Johnson
Opinion of the Court
The complaint of the appellee’s relators is upon a bond executed by Bernard B. Daily as principal and the appellant as surety, conditioned for the faithful performance of the duties of commissioner to sell real estate, pursuant to an interlocutory order made in a suit for partition. The complaint shows that Daily is dead, but does not show that any administrator has been appointed.
The first point made in argument is, that there is a defect of parties defendants, in that the representative of the estate of the deceased obligor was not joined as defendant. The demurrer is not so framed as to present this question, for the reason that it does not point out the defect by naming the omitted party. Works Prac., see. 483. If, however, it were so framed as to properly present the question, we could not hold it well taken, for two reasons: 1st. The obligation sued on is joint and several, and the obligee had a right to sue one alone of the obligors. 2d. The complaint discloses the fact that one of the obligors is dead, and the obligee was not bound to make his representative a party, even if the obligation were' treated as a joint one.
It may be true that the commissioner had no right to sell or pledge the notes executed to him, but whether this be true or not can not here affect the rights of the relator, for he was not bound to hunt up and take from the assignees or endorsees the notes wrongfully transferred to them; he had an undoubted right to call the commissioner to an account, and if it appeared that he had wrongfully converted any money that came into his hands as commissioner, hold the sureties on the bond liable for the amount so converted. We need not and do not decide what lights the surety may have against the persons purchasing the notes from the commissioner, but we do decide that the obligees can not be driven to the expense and hazard of a controversy with them, but may maintain an action upon the bond executed by the commissioner.
The money which the commissioner received for the notes sold by him belongs to the beneficiaries in the bond executed by the commissioner to secure the faithful performance of his duties, and neither the representative of the commissioner nor his surety can set up that officer’s wrong to defeat a recovery by the persons entitled to the money received from the sale of the notes.
Judgment affirmed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Williams v. The State, ex rel. Johnson
- Cited By
- 3 cases
- Status
- Published