Ergenbright v. Ammon's adm'r
Ergenbright v. Ammon's adm'r
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the court.
The controversy in this case is about a bond or note in these words:
“On demand we promise and oblige ourselves, heirs, &c., to pay Jacob Ammon, guardian for legatees of Jacob B. Argenbright, the sum of nine hundred and thirty-six dollars and sixty-three cents for value received, as witness my hand this 1st January 1853.
Henry Miller, [Seal.]
Jas. H. Kite, [Seal.]”
The controversy is between the wards, or late wards, of said Jacob Ammon, five in number, to wit: Christina J. Ergenbright, alias Argenbright, and others, children, described in said bond or note as “legatees of Jacob B. Argenbright,” and the said guardian’s representatives, he being dead; and the question is, whether the loss of the money due upon the bond or note should fall on the said wards, or on the estate or representative of the said guardian; the debtors in said bond or note having become insolvent, without having paid the same.
The commissioner by his report charged the guardian with the debt; but made an alternative statement
In the petition for the appeal three errors are assigned :
“ 1st. Because the other statement of commissioner A. M. fiewman, which charges said Jacob Ammon’s estate with the Miller and Kite debt of $936.65, should have been confirmed, and not the said alternate statement, which was confirmed.
2nd. Because, had suit been instituted within a reasonable time, the said Miller and Kite debt might have been secured and made; and that by reason of gross negligence on the part of said guardian and his personal representatives, said debt has been lost.
3rd. Because, before any suit was instituted, said note of Miller and Kite was barred by the statute of ■limitations.”
The third assignment of error is immaterial, in the view we propose to take of the case, and no further notice will therefore be taken of it.
Three witnesses were examined in the case. Two of them in behalf of the representatives of the guardian, and one in behalf of the wards. First, Henry Miller, the principal debtor, was examined in behalf of the guardian’s representatives. He testified
On cross-examination, the witness said that if the guardian had instituted suit and obtained judgment previous to the war, the debt could have been secured. If he or his personal representative had instituted suit, and obtained judgment since the war, and previous to September 1870, witness thought the debt would have been secured. In October, or November of that year, Kite’s property was sold under execution, and produced some $600 or $700. Y. C. Ammon, one of the representatives of Jacob Ammon, called on witness during the war, in 1862 or 1863, witness thought, before he lost his property, and said that he, Y. C. Ammon, had gotten in his hands, after the death of his father, the bond witness owed Jacob Ergenbright’s
2nd. Joseph A. Hammon, sheriff, or deputy sheriff of Rockingham county, was examined in behalf of the wards. He testified that he had an execution in the name of John Argabright’s adm’or v. Henry Miller and Joseph H. Kite, for $670.80 and interest and costs, and made on said execution $715.07, at a sale of property levied on October 28, 1869. His acquaintance with their pecuniary condition commenced in 1867; he collected all the executions he had against said Kite up to the present one; had several against Miller, but could make nothing out of him from his personal estate; considered Kite good, but Miller insolvent.
3d. Hr. S. R. H. Miller was examined in behalf of the guardian’s representatives: testified that he had been acquainted with the pecuniary condition of Miller and Kite since 1857 or 1858: looked upon them at that time, and up to the disasters of the war as solvent': at the time of giving his testimony he did not think either of them solvent: thought the prime cause of their insolvency was their losses during the war. They owed debts previous to the war; during the war they made nothing, and their debts accumulated by in-terest. This accumulation of interest, and the loss of •slaves, &e., by Henry Miller, were the causes of his insolvency. The same causes apply to Kite; and, in ■addition, he lost heavily by the flood. "Witness considered that a judgment obtained against these parties, •at November court 1869, for about $1,000, could have been made of Mr.. Kite. His real estate, in 1869, was
In the answer of John B. Ammon, surviving administrator of Jacob Ammon, he says that after the war, by the results of which the aforesaid debtors, Miller and Kite, were reduced in their financial condition, and when it was doubtful whether or not they would be able to pay their debts, he “ offered the above mentioned bond to the wards of Jacob Ammon, but they declined to receive it, and thereupon this respondent brought suit upon it, obtained a judgment, upon which execution issued, and was returned ‘no property,5 as will appear from exhibit 2, herewith filed.55 That exhibit is a part of the record, and is a copy of said execution and return, the execution bearing date the 3d day of December 1869.
On whom should the loss of this debt of Miller and Kite fall? on the wards or on the guardian? The court below thought, and so decreed, on the wards. Whether that decree is correct or erroneous is the question we now have to solve.
We are of opinion that the decree is erroneous, and that the loss ought to fall not on the wards, but on the said guardian or his estate.
We think it extremely doubtful from the record, to say the least, whether the debt of Miller and Kite ever was regarded or intended by the guardian as a debt due to his wards. The debt of Miller, which was the consideration of the debt of Miller and Kite, was due to the father of the wards, Jacob Ergenbright, of whom.
But if it be considered as a debt still due to the wards, and as never having been intended by the
We are of opinion that this question must be answered in the affirmative. When Jacob Ammon died, in 1867 or ’8, he ceased of course to be guardian of the Ergenbrights, and the estate of his wards should then, at least, have been delivered to them if of age; and if not, to another and succeeding guardian; and if none, should have been brought into court and invested under the order of the court for them. Instead of that, the bond or note never was brought into court, nor reported to the commissioner as part of the estate of the wards, and never was offered to them, nor were they ever informed of it, so far as the record shows, until 1869; but remained in the possession of the guardian and his representatives, without any suit being brought upon it until that time. Whereas, in the mean time, both the debtors, who were perfectly solvent when the debt was created, became perfectly insolvent—the principal, Miller, having been ruined by the war, and the surety, Kite, having been ruined by the war and by a flood, which happened several years thereafter. If suit had been brought for the debt at any time before 1869 it might have been made. Such suit ought to have been brought by the guardian or his representatives long before that time, supposing the debt to be still due to the wards. Certainly it was the duty of Jacob Ammon’s administrator to put the debt in suit; if not sooner, at least when Miller, the principal debtor, had become insolvent by the results of the war. There was then but one solvent debtor remaining, and he was a surety,
"We are therefore of opinion that the decree of the coui’t below ought to be reversed; that the estate of Jacob Ammon ought to be held responsible for the said debt; that the report of commissioner Kewman, charging the said estate with the said debt, and not his alternate statement charging each of the said wards with one-fifth of the said debt, ought to be confirmed, and that the cause ought to be remanded to the court below for further proceedings to .be had therein in conformity with the foregoing opinion. And that liberty ought to be reserved to the representatives of said Jacob Ammon to apply, by further proceedings in this suit, for any relief to which they may be entitled against the administrators of said Jacob Ammon, or either of them, or the estates of them, or either of them, on account of the default of them, or either of them, in regard to the collection of the said debt.
The decree was as follows:
This day came again the parties by their counsel, and the court having maturely considered the tran
And it is further decreed and ordered that this cause be remanded to the court below for further proceedings to be had therein in conformity with the foregoing opinion; and that liberty be reserved to the representatives of said Jacob Ammon to apply by« further proceedings in this suit in the said court for any relief to which they may be entitled against Yelverton C. Ammon and John B. Ammon, administrators of said Jacob Ammon, or either of them, or the estates of them, or either of them, on account of the default of them, or either of them, in regard to the collection of the said debt: which is ordered to be certified to the said Circuit court of Rockingham county.
Decree reversed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Ergenbright & als. v. Ammon's adm'r & als.
- Cited By
- 1 case
- Status
- Published
- Syllabus
- About 1849 M executed his bond to E for a debt he owed him, without security. E died in 1852, and A qualified as his administrator, and as guardian of his children. On the 1st of January 1853, M and IÍ,. as his surety, executed to A, guardian of the legatees of E, a paper, intended to be a bond, payable on demand for $936.63, for the debt of M to E. A settled his accounts as guardian, charging himself with this bond. He died in 1867 or 1868, when the bond went into the-hands of his administrators, one of whom offered it to the wards, but they declined to receive it, when he brought suit upon it against M and K, recovered judgment, and issued execution in December 1869, which was unproductive. From the date of the bond to the end of the war M and K were in independent circumstances. At the end of the war M was very much injured, but still owned valuable land. K was injured by the war, but he was able to pay his' debts until' 1869, when his land was greatly injured by a flood. Held : The estate of A is liable to the wards for the debt.