Munroe Treadwell died intestate, leaving several next of kin, and the defendant McKay became his administrator, and, together with the other defendants as his sureties, entered into a bond for the due administration of the estate. The present action is debt brought thereon, and the declaration contains three breaches: the first, that the administrator refused to pay the relators, Murphy and his wife, the distributive share of the residue of the estate remaining in his hands after the payment of the debts of the intestate and making all just allowances to the administrator, which belonged to her as one of the next of kin of the estate. The second breach and the third were like the first, except that the one was for not paying the share of the residue belonging to Owen G. Treadwell, who is another of the next of kin and also one of the relators, and the other for not paying the shares of Shadrack Wooten, another of the next of kin and of the relators. The defendants pleaded non est factum, and, to each breach, payment of the sum specified in it to the particular relator. On the trial of the issues the counsel for the defendants objected that the action would not lie at the instance of the three relators for their several distributive shares, and moved the court to *Page 286 nonsuit the plaintiff. The court did so accordingly, and from (398) the judgment the relators appealed. Without regard to the form in which it is presented, the Court supposes the single question to be whether the action is well brought, and, therefore, has considered that alone.
Next of kin take distinct shares, and unequal balances may be due to the several persons who make up that class. The arguments for the defendants is that these three of the next of kin are separate creditors of the administrator, and, therefore, that one action cannot be brought for the benefit of all of them. There is no doubt that each creditor or next of kin may prosecute a separate action "and recover damages for the breach to his prejudice until the penalty of the bond be exhausted." It is the express purpose of the act, Rev. Stat., ch. 46, to give to any "person or persons" the right to prosecute "a suit or suits in the name of the State" on an administration bond, and "recover all damages which he, she, or they may have sustained by reason of the breach of its conditions." But while "suits may be brought on the bond" by several relators, the act, taken literally, allows "any persons" to bring "a suit" on it. The question is, whether the literal reading is the true sense of the act. The defendant's counsel contends that convenience and legal analogy require the interpretation that separate actions must be brought on separate rights, and that two persons cannot unite as relators unless they have a joint interest in all the damages that can be assessed under the declaration.
There is no doubt that in England any number of breaches may be assigned in an action on an administration bond. It is payable to the ordinary, who is authorized to take it as a security for the estate. (399) But there is no statute which provides any particular mode for suing on it, as by an assignee or a person or persons injured; and those matters are regulated by the general law. Therefore, the suit is necessarily to be instituted by the assent and in the name of the ordinary, who is a natural person; and but one suit can be brought on it, as it is merged in a judgment on it. Now, the statute 8 and 9 Wil. III., ch. 11, compels the plaintiff to assign a breach or breaches of the condition, and the jury to assess the damages arising therefrom, and at the same time authorizes him to assign as many breaches as he thinks fit. Although the ordinary really has no interest personally in any breach assigned, yet by force of the contract with him contained in the bond he recovers damages arising from a breach of the condition in not *Page 287 paying a sum, for example, to A, in the same manner as if the condition had required the payment of that sum to the bishop himself. As the declaration might assign any number of breaches of the latter kind, that is, in the nonpayment of different debts to the ordinary, it follows that in like manner it may assign several breaches in relation to several duties to another person or to several persons — the bond, in truth, covering all of them. There is no legal reason why the bishop should recover for a breach in respect of one of the next of kin more than of another; nor why he may not assign two or more breaches of that kind as well as for matters affecting his private interest. No injury can result to any person from it, and but few inconveniences, if any. The suit is by order of the ordinary, at the suggestion of a person or persons injured; and several will not probably unite in the application, nor the bishop grant it, if the investigation of one claim will retard the trial as to another. It is true, the case may be much complicated by embracing many breaches in one declaration; but that is attributable to a statute which is held to be highly remedial, and to have been made for the benefit of defendants peculiarly. Every defense is open to (400) the defendant on each breach that would be if that were the sole breach, or if the action were covenant; for, in answering the declaration, the defendant may put in any number of pleas to each breach — though, indeed, it is otherwise when the breaches are assigned in the replication, as a rejoinder is confined to a single answer. It appears, then, that the suit is in England simply the suit of the obligee, who is the plaintiff of record; and he may, of course, assign any number of breaches on the condition of this, like any other bond.
But the counsel for the defendants argued that as our statute, Rev. Stat., ch. 81, sec. 2, requires the relator or relators to state in the declaration matter of inducement, showing at whose instance and on whose behalf the suit is brought, a relator is not only regarded as a person interested, but as really and legally the plaintiff; and, consequently, that none can sue as relators in the same action but such as have a joint and equal interest in the whole subject of controversy. The provision referred to is confined to suits on bonds of a sheriff, clerk, and other officers; and there is none such in the act of 1791, which relates to administrations bonds, and merely directs that they shall be put in suit at the instance of any person or persons injured, in the name of the chairman of the county court, to whom they were then made payable. But admit that the form of the declaration is to be the same in both instances, and that it must show that particular persons have put the bond in suit, and the interest of those persons in the breaches, the Court cannot agree, as an inference therefrom, that several breaches may not be assigned in respect of persons severally entitled. It is not like the *Page 288 case supposed of several creditors joining in an action on several securities. Here there is a single security for each and all the duties, namely, a bond payable to a trustee for all persons interested; and (401) the recovery ought to be coextensive with the security and the several rights of the respective persons interested. No reason was ever opposed to it but a technical one, as to a rule of pleading which prevented the assignment of more than one breach, and was, therefore, found to impede the administration of speedy and exact justice between the parties, and was abrogated by a statute which gives a remedy at once more enlarged and more precise and less expensive. And suits brought in the name of the State under a general provision of law by persons injured seem to stand on the same footing, as to this point, with those brought by the particular order of the obligee at the instance of such injured person or persons. We find, indeed, that an action was early brought and maintained on an administration bond for the distributive shares of two next of kin; and we believe that has since been the general practice. Williamsv. Hicks, 5 N.C. 437. There is but one ground upon which it could be held that the law is different in England and here, which is, that there the costs of the trial go according to the results of the several issues, whereas here the party in whose favor judgment is given is by statute entitled to "full costs." It might then happen, if two or more persons have the absolute right of joining sundry demands in the same declaration, in the shape of several breaches of the conditions of a bond, that the defendant might have all the costs to pay, though the issues on the breach on which the controversy chiefly turned and the costs were incurred were found for him, which would, certainly, be very mischievous. But the danger that it might sometimes so happen is not sufficient to authorize a construction of the act of 1793 not required by its words, but, rather, contrary to them, which would prevent the wholesome reform enacted in the statute of William from applying at all to bonds of this character; for that is the point here — whether in any case one action can be maintained for the several demands of two or more. Instead of (402) holding that these suits are not within the statute because, in a particular instance it might produce an inconvenience, it is the rather our duty to devise means for avoiding the particular inconvenience, while the act is left to its salutary general operation. This, we think, may be readily and properly done by an exercise of that control over suitors, as to the manner of their using the process of the law, which every court must occasionally find necessary to guard against its abuse. As, on the one hand, a plaintiff who has brought several suits for matters which might have been joined in one has been often compelled to consolidate, so, on the other, if several persons artfully combine to make a defendant liable for all the costs of *Page 289 a suit, because upon a breach in respect of one of them there must be a verdict against the defendant, though for him upon the other issues, there must be a similar power to prevent the evil by compelling the relators, in substance, to sever. That may be done by the common expedient of staying the proceedings in the joint suit, if it may be so called, at the instance of the defendant, upon equitable terms as to costs, and his accepting separate declarations from each of the relators or so much of them as he might prefer to contend with singly, and pleading to issue thereon. We think, indeed, that the court clearly has the power to order breaches to be struck from a declaration where it appears plainly that the right to put the bond in suit has been abused. Suppose, for instance, a relator, for the purpose of saving the costs, were to insert as one of the breaches a failure of the administrator to return an inventory within the ninety days; under the provision that the bond may be put in suit by any person injured, it must be competent for the court, upon its appearing that the relator had no interest in that provision or had not suffered from the omission for that period, to reform the declaration so as to confine the relator to matters out of which damages had been incurred by him. In the same manner, if it appear that it may be to the prejudice of the defendant, in respect to (403) the costs, or his evidence, or other matter, to be obliged to plead to all the breaches in one action, and go to trial on them together, there ought to be a power to modify the proceedings so as to effect justice in those respects. If both sides choose to litigate all the matters together, as, in this case, they did by an union between the relators in bringing suit, and by the defendants pleading to issue on the merits, there is no reason for the interposition of the Court to prevent them. The relators must submit to any inconvenience that may arise to themselves from having brought one action; but they ought not to have the right conclusively to bind the defendants to go to trial upon all at once. If, therefore, the defendants had, before pleading to the several breaches in this declaration, moved to have the breaches in respect to each relator made the subjects of separate declarations, we should have thought the court would have acted properly in allowing it. It might be also right in a later stage of the cause to allow it, upon a proper case shown and upon just terms as to the prior costs. But it was too late to make any motion of the sort when the case was before the jury; and as an objection to the action itself it seems to the Court not to be well founded.
The judgment must, therefore, be reversed, and the issues tried upon a
PER CURIAM. Venire de novo.
Cited: Hoover v. Berryhill. 84 N.C. 137 *Page 290
(404)