Court Opinion

ID: 3645891
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-06 06:02:06.125037+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T12:04:58.079771
License: Public Domain

H. Sullivan died in the county of Duplin, and David Reid administered on his estate, and filed his administration bond, dated 19 April, 1852, with the defendant Murphy as one of the sureties. The inventory showed assets to the amount of $3,600. Two justice's judgments in *Page 189 
favor of Carroll and Kenan against H. Sullivan were introduced, which had been assigned to the relator. Defendant objected to the receiving the judgments in evidence.
The court held that they were competent, and the defendant appealed.
This case presents the interesting question whether a person claiming to be a creditor of a decedent's estate can bring an action of debt upon an administration bond against the administrator and his sureties until he has established his debt by a judgment against the administrator alone, fixing him with assets. The precise question has never yet, so far as we are aware, been brought before this Court for adjudication, but we think the principles upon which it should be decided have been, on several occasions, incidentally laid down by our predecessors.
In Washington v. Hunt, 12 N.C. 475, the counsel for the defendant made a very able and elaborate argument to prove that the bond which an administrator is compelled to give upon taking out letters of administration upon an estate was not intended for the benefit of creditors, but only for the next of kin, and that, therefore, a suit could not be sustained upon it at the instance of a creditor; but the Court felt itself constrained, for the reasons given in the opinion of JudgeHenderson, to decide otherwise; and the propriety of the decision has never been questioned. In that case, however, and the subsequent one of Smith v.Fagan, 13 N.C. 298, the creditor had previously to the suit upon the administration bond obtained a judgment against the administrator, in which it was found or admitted that he had assets. In the latter case it was said expressly that the suit on the administration bond might be brought without a previous judgment against the administrator in debt for a devastavit; but the case did not require an expression of opinion upon the point now before us. These decisions, however, establish beyond doubt that an administration bond is given as much for the security of creditors as of the next of kin. We may well suppose, therefore, the same rules by which proceedings may be had upon them by the latter class of persons will prevail in favor of the former.
In Williams v. Hicks, 5 N.C. 437, and also in Chairman v.       (244)Moore, ib., 22, it was decided that the next of kin of an intestate may bring suit upon the administration bond against the sureties thereto, without any previous proceeding against the administrator, although he has made no settlement of his administration with the court, nor *Page 190 
filed an account current; and we believe such has been the uniform practice ever since. If, then, a suit can be brought upon the administration bond by the next of kin, without a previous proceeding against the administrator himself, why not permit a creditor to do so? The duties and liabilities of the administrator with respect to the creditors are quite as great as they are with regard to the next of kin, and the inconveniences to the sureties will be as annoying in the one case as in the other. Indeed, in one particular it will be better for the sureties that a creditor should sue upon the bond at once, without obtaining a previous judgment against the administrator, because they would be at liberty to contest the validity of the debt as well as the amount of assets; whereas, if a judgment had been obtained against the administrator, they would be concluded as to the debt, though not as to the assets. Armistead v. Harriamond, 11 N.C. 339. The difficulties imposed upon the defendants in suits upon administration bonds have been much diminished ever since the passing of an act in the Revised Statutes which authorized the courts, where such suits were brought, to refer them to the clerk or some other person, as a commissioner, to state an account of the administration, under the same rules and regulations which prevail in stating accounts in courts of equity. See 1 Rev. Stat., ch. 31, sec. 119; Rev. Code, ch. 31, sec. 114.
In opposition to the conclusion at which we have arrived, the counsel for the defendant has cited and relied upon Ferebee v. Baxter, 34 N.C. 64. That case, however, will be found to establish nothing more than that where the administrator has died before the estate has been fully and finally settled there must be an administrator de bonis non appointed, who alone can collect what may still be due the estate, (245) and upon whom alone the creditors and next of kin can call for the payment of their debts or distributive shares. S. v. Johnston,30 N.C. 397; Williams v. Britton, 33 N.C. 110; S. v. Moore, ibid., 160, and Duke v. Ferebee, ante, 10.
In the case now before us it was not proved at the trial, nor does it appear to us in any way, that the administrator was dead, and we cannot, therefore, perceive any good reason, consistent with the well established principles of former decisions, why the creditor should not sustain his action upon the administration bond, though he had not obtained a previous judgment against the administrator.
PER CURIAM.                                                Affirmed.
Cited: Bond v. Billups, 53 N.C. 424; Brown v. Pike, 74 N.C. 534;Badger v. Daniel, 79 N.C. 387; Speer v. James, 94 N.C. 424; Morgan v.Smith, 95 N.C. 400; Leak v. Covington, 99 N.C. 562. *Page 191