Case ID: va_63/html/0121-01.html
Source: Caselaw Access Project
Author: {"author": "\n      CHRISTIAN, J.", "license": "Public Domain", "url": "https://static.case.law/"}
Date Created: 2024-08-24T03:29:51.129683

*Jennings v. Jennings.
    June Term, 1872,
    Wytheville.
    s. Guardians—Confederate Money.—J is appointed guardian of infants in September 1857, and then receives from the administrator of their father $791 in money, which he does not invest for his wards, bnt purchases a slave for himself. In February 1863, ou the motion of one of his sureties, he is required to give a new bond as guardian, which he declines to do; and he is thereupon removed, and H is appointed guardian in his stead. J never having settled his account as guardian, directly H is appointed, pays to him $690 in Confederate treasury notes, and transfers to him receipts for moneys he had paid for the wards; it not appearing that H knew what kind of money J had received. Held:
    
      1. Same—Same—Scaling.—J not having' invested the money he received, for the benefit of his wards, hut having used it for his own purposes, and not having settled his account as guardian, he is to he charged with the amount received in good money, with compound interest, and to he credited with the payments made for the wards, and to H at the scaled value thereof at the time of payment. And he is not to he allowed compensation for his services as guardian.
    2. Same—Same—Same.—H is to he charged with the scaled value of the money received from J, at the time he received it, with interest.
    2. Statute.—What contracts are embraced in the act of March 3, 1866, called the adjustment act, see opinion of Christian, J.
    This was a suit in equity in- the Circuit court of Carroll county, brought in April 1866, by Creed R. Jennings and five others ■—these last infants, by their next friend—■ against Jefferson Jennings, Fielding U. Hale and others, to compel the said Jennings and Hale to settle their accounts as guardians of the plaintiffs, and to pay what was found to be in their hands.
    The facts stated in the bill are, that Peter Jennings, the father of the plaintiffs, died some years before, and *his administrator settled up his estate. That in September 1857, Jonathan Jennings was appointed guardian of the plaintiffs and two other children, and received from the administrator the balance in his hands. That he acted as such guardian up to January 1863, when he prevailed oh one of his sureties on his guardian’s bond to require him to give other security, which he declined to do, and was thereupon removed by the court, and Fielding 3J. Hale was appointed guardian of the plaintiffs and their sister. That Jennings had never settled his accounts as guardian, nor did he invest the money he had received for their benefit, but kept it and used it for his own purposes. That after the appointment of Hale, Jefferson Jennings paid Hale a small amount in Confederate treasury notes, worth little then, and utterly worthless afterwards..
    The prayer of the bill is for an account, that Hale might be removed from his guardianship, and for payment of what the guardians have received.
    Jennings, in his answer, admits the administrator paid to him $791.18; which sum, with the interest upon it, he paid to Hale on the 2d of February 1863. He denies he used the money for his own purposes; and for the amount of his disbursements for his wards, he refers to the settlement made with Hale, which he exhibits as a part of his answer.
    Hale says, in his answer, that about the 2d of February 1863, he received from Jennings $500 in Confederate States treasury notes, and a check on the bank at Christiansburg for $300, which was paid in the same kind of money, and other claims paid by the former guardian, which made up the amount for which he gave his receipt to the former guardian. That he was unable to loan out the money, of which he informed his wards and their mother, and advised them to take it and use it, giving him refunding bonds.
    In August 1866, there was a decree for an account, *and the commissioner made his report, showing that two of the wards had been paid, or nearly so; and that there was due to the other five wards, on the 2d of February 1863, $704.88%. That Jennings had paid Hale at that date, in Confederate currency, $690, lehving a balance due them of $14.88%, which was, in 1867, paid with interest to Hale. And the commissioner reported that the money received by Jonathan Jennings, as guardian, was invested by him in a negro for his own benefit. The commissioner, therefore, charged him with compound interest on this amount; and as he had failed, from the date of his appointment until the date of the report, to settle his account, he was not allowed any compensation for his services as guardian.
    Jennings excepted to the report of the commissioner—1st. Because he was charged with interest on the amount he had received in March 1858, without proof that he had any opportunity to invest it. 2d. That the commissioner had charged him with compound interest on the sum received in March 1858, upon the ground that Jennings had invested it in a negro for his own benefit, and yet had not reported the evidence on which he acted, so that the court might judge of the propriety of his action. Upon this last exception the commissioner made a supplemental report, in which he said that the statement in the report, as to the investment of the money in a negro, was made upon the admission of Jennings to the commissioner at the time of making up the report.
    The commissioner also reported the account of Hale, the second guardian, and stated the amount due from him to his wards, reduced to specie, at $159.16 of principal and $17.81 of interest, no interest having been charged prior to May 1st, 1865, on the ground that the guardian could not invest the money he received from Jennings.
    The cause came on to be heard on the 31st of October *1868, when the court held that Jennings was to be credited in his account for the amount he paid to Hale, the second guardian, dollar for dollar; and he having since paid the balance, the court dismissed the bill as to him. And the court held that Hale was to be charged with the gold value of the money he received, with interest from May 1st, 1865, as reported by the commissioner. And the report as to Hale was recommitted to the commissioner for him to make a further statement upon the basis of his report. From this decree the ¡plaintiffs obtained an appeal to the District court of Appeals at Abingdon; and it was transferred from thence to this court.
    Tipton, for the appellants.
    Walker, Terry and Pierce, for the appellees.
    
      
      Guardian -Confederate Honey.- -In Crawford v. Shover, 29 Gratt. 81, the court, citing the principal case and others, said: “It is not a good defence to the guardian m this case that he did not actually intend to injure the ward by the act complained of. if such injury was the necessary or actual result of such act. nor that he derived no profit from the act complained of.’-
    
   CHRISTIAN, J.

There was no error in the decree of the Circuit court of Carroll county in holding the second guardian responsible only for the scaled value of the Confederate currency paid to him by the first guardian. Nothing came into his hands but Confederate currency, and all that can be required of him, is to pay to his wards, the value of that currency at the time he received it from the first guardian.

But the decree appealed from, releases from all responsibility, the first guardian, and in effect declares, that the payment of Confederate currency, then greatly depreciated, to the second guardian, was in full discharge of the debt which he owed to his wards, although the fund which he received for them was in gold or its equivalent, and although he appropriated the same to his own use, and never invested it, as the law requires, for the benefit of his wards.

The record shows that the appellee, Jonathan Jennings, was appointed guardian of the appellants, in September 1857, by the County court of Carroll county. He ‘^received from the administrator of their father, the sum of $791.18. Instead of investing this fund for the benefit of his wards, he used the money in the purchase of a slave for himself, according to his own admission; and he settled no account of his transactions as guardian until compelled to do so by a decree of the Circuit court of Carroll, entered in this cause in August 1866; nearly ten years after his qualification.

In February 1863, Jonathan Jennings, who, upon the motion of one of his sureties, had been summoned to show cause why he should not be required to give a new bond, appeared in court and admitted that he had received reasonable notice of such motion, and declined to give such bond, whereupon “the court revoked and annulled his power as guardian, and removed him from such trust and appointment”; and declared that “he and his sureties be released from any and all liability on his bond as soon as he shall have settled his guardian account. ’ ’

On the same day, Fielding Iy. Hale was appointed guardian in the place of Jennings. And on -that day (or certainly on the next), Jennings, without having settled before a commissioner of the court, any account of his transactions as guardian, paid over to Hale, the second guardian, the sum of $690 in Confederate money, and $293 in receipts and claims paid by him, making in all $983.63; for which Hale executed Mis receipt. This balance is shown by an ex parte statement which is filed by Jennings with his answer, showing that it was in his possession at the time the bill was filed. Nor is there any evidence to show that it was ever seen and inspected by Hale. This paper shows that the statement is made up to show the balance due on 2d February 1863, the calculations of interest being made to that day. So far as the record shows, Hale knew nothing of the transactions between Jennings and his wards. No one j but Jennings could know anything on the j subject, because he had never settled any account. All that the record *shows on that subject is, that Jennings brought to Hale a certain amount in Confederate money, and claims paid by him, for which Hale executed his receipt; not a receipt in full, but simply a receipt for the aggregate amount. For aught that appears, Hale, the second guardian, knew nothing of the kind of currency which Jennings, the first guardian, had received. So far as he knew, the Confederate currency paid to him had been received by Jennings in the due execution of his trust. There was, therefore, no error in the decree of the Circuit court which held the second guardian responsible for the scaled value of the Confederate currency at the date of the payment to him, charging him with that amount with interest from that date.

Bxxt under the decree entered by the Circuit court of Carroll, the first guardian, who received for his wards the sum of $791, which he, by his oxvn confession, converted to his own use, is released from all liabilitjq and the wards, instead of receiving the sum of $791, with interest from the 5th day of March 1858, to which they are justly entitled, are to receive xxnder this decree, only $177, with interest from the 2d day of February 1863.

This decree, so manifestly ineqxxitable and grossly unjust to the wards, is sought to be maintained upon the ground, that the first guardian is released from all liability, by the second section of the act passed March 3d, 1866, known as the “adjxxstment act. ’ ’ That section is in these words : ‘2. Whenever it shall appear that any such contract was, according to the true understanding and agreement of the parties, to be fulfilled and performed in Confederate States treasxxry notes, or was entered into with reference to said notes as a standard of value, the same shall be liquidated and settled by reducing the nominal amount due or payable under such contract in Confederate States treasury notes, to its’trxxe value at the time they were respectively made and entered into, or at such other time as may to the court seem right in the *particular case; and upon the payment of the value so ascertained, the party bound by such contract shall be forever discharged of and from the same: provided, that in all cases where actual payment has been made of any sum of such Confederate States treasury notes, either in full or in part of the amount payable under such contract, the party by or for whom the same was paid, shall have full credit for the nominal amount so paid, and such payment shall not be reduced. ’ ’

It is insisted by the learned counsel for the appellees, that the payment of Confederate. States treasury notes by the first guardian, to the second gxxardian in February 1863, was such a paj^ment, as under the proviso above recited, entitled him to have full credit for the nominal amount so paid. It is clear that the act of March 3d, 1866, can 'have no application, and never was intended to apply, to a case like the one under consideration, but was enacted to give relief in a class of cases totally different. The title of the act and all its provisions show this. It is entitled “an act for the adjustment of liaoilities accruing under contracts and wills made between the 1st of January 1862, and the 10th daj- of April 1865.” It is only to such contracts as were made and entered into between the times referred to, that the statute is to be applied. But in addition to this, it must appear that it was the true understanding and agreement of the parties to the contract, that it was to be fulfilled and performed in Confederate States treasury notes, or was entered into with reference to said notes as a standard of value. Where under “such a contract” there has been an actual payment, the party shall have “full credit for the nominal amount so paid.”

To bring a case within the operation of this statute, three things must concur. First. There must be parties capable of making a contract. Second. It must be a contract made and entered into between the 1st day of January 1862, and the 10th day of April 1865; and *Third. That the contract according to the true understanding and agreement of the parties was to be performed or fulfilled in Confederate States treasury notes, or was entered into with reference to said notes as a standard of value. After giving this as the true construction of the statute (which can admit of but one construction), it is sufficient to say that, in the case before us, the'debt was contracted in the year 1858, and was due to infants.

Nor do the cases relied upon by the counsel for the appellees furnish any authority for sustaining the decree of the court below. The cases cited (Sallee v. Yeates, 1 Wash.; Walker v. Walke, 2 Wash., and other similar cases) arose under the act of 1781.

The terms and provisions of that act are very different, and far more comprehensive than the act of March 3d, 1866. While under the last named act full credit for the nominal amount actually paid is restricted and cautiously limited to a certain class of contracts, the act of 1781, in the broadest and most unlimited terms, provided “that in all cases where actual payments have been made by any person or persons, of any sum or sums of the aforesaid paper currency, at any time or times, either to the full amount or in part payment of.any debt, contract or obligation whatsoever, the party paying the same, or upon whose account such sum or sums have been actually paid, shall have full credit for the nominal amount of such payments; and such payments shall not be reduced, anything in this act, or any other act or acts, to the contrary in any manner notwithstanding. ’ ’

The decisions construing this act, so entirely different in its provisions, and embracing in its very terms “every debt, contract and obligation whatsoever,” can have no controlling effect upon the construction of the act of 1866, which is cautiously restricted in its operation to a certain class of contracts.

*But it is further insisted that there is no evidence in the record of a fraudulent purpose on the part of Jennings, the first guardian, but that he acted in good faith, and though he paid the amount due to his wards in a depreciated currency, it was the only currency in circulation at the time, and was at that time generally received in payment of debts. The fact that parties meeting upon equal terms adjusted their debts by paying and receiving Confederate treasury notes, when depreciated, can be no justification to a guardian to pay his own debt due to infants, for which he had received gold five years before. His debt was due to his wards. It is true, the second guardian was the hand which the law appointed to receive it, but the debt was due to the wards. There is nothing in the record to show that the second guardian knew that the Confederate currency paid to him had not been received in the due execution of his trust, and that Jennings was paying his own debt of $791, due in gold, with interest from March 1858, with a currency depreciated to nearly one-fifth of its nominal value. The fact that the second guardian gave his receipt for so much in Confederate notes, and a check which could only be collected in the same currency, certainly cannot be held to be a discharge of his debt. There is no evidence that the ex parte statement made by Jennings, and filed with his answer, showing the balance due his wards, was ever exhibited to him, and that paper is not evidence for any purpose.

It is not for this court to speculate as to the motives and purposes of the first guardian. We take' the facts as we find them in the record. At February term of the County court of Carroll, Jennings appears in court and acknowledges service of a rule upon him by one of his securities, refuses to give a new bond, and as soon as a new guardian is appointed, on the very day—or certainly the next day.—without settling his account before a commissioner, but upon an ex parte statement *made by himself, showing the balance due his wards, settles with the second guardian by paying one-fifth of what was justly due his wards. Now he knew that he had received $791 in sound currency. He knew that he had never invested that amount, as the law requires, for the benefit of his wards, but had used it in purchasing property for himself. He knew he was seeking to dischax'ge this debt in a currency depreciated to nearly one-fifth of its nominal value. And then he comes into a court of equity to ask its aid in shielding him fi'om the payment of an honest debt, due to infants, and to seek a full discharge from all liability, by throwing the loss upon those parties who are the special objects of the protection of a court of equity.

I am of opinion that the decree of the court below ought to be reversed, and that an account should be taken of the transactions of the first guardian, in which he shall be charged with the whole amount received for his wards in a sound currency, and to be credited by the scaled value of the Confederate currency at the time it was paid to the second guardian; and that he shall be charged with compound interest, and shall receive no commissions.

The other judges concurred in the opinion of Christian, J.

Decree reversed.