Kirsch v. Derby

De Haven, J.

Motion to dismiss an appeal from a judgment rendered in favor of plaintiff and against defendant. The ground of the motion is, that no undertaking on appeal has been filed.

In the complaint it is averred that the defendant is the duly appointed, qualified, and acting executor of the estate of Julia Kirsch, deceased, and also, “ that on or about the 22d of May, 1890, the defendant, as such executor as aforesaid, received the sum of $3,725 from the German Savings and Loan Society,«a corporation, to and for the use and belonging to plaintiff.” The complaint further alleges plaintiff’s demand upon defendant for the money, and his refusal to pay, and asks for a personal judgment against him for the amount named. The defendant did not answer, and judgment by default was rendered against him personalty, as prayed for in the complaint.

The court below, upon motion of defendant’s attorneys, *575made an order under section 946 of the Code of Civil Procedure dispensing with the undertaking on appeal, which order also recites that it appeared that the defendant was an executor, and about to appeal from the judgment.' We cannot say from the record that this order was made in a case to which section 946 of the Code of Civil Procedure does not apply. That section provides that when the appellant is an executor, or other person acting in another’s right, the court may, in its discretion, dispense with the security required by the chapter of the code in which that section is found. It is not indispensably necessary, in order to bring a case within this section, that a judgment should have been rendered against the appellant in his representative capacity. It is sufficient if it is made to appear to the court that the matter in litigation really involves the rights of the estate, and that if the judgment is unreversed the property rights of such estate will be affected and its assets diminished. Thus in this case, if the defendant had answered, and claimed the right to retain as funds of the estate of which he is executor the money sued for in this action, and this issue had been found against him, and judgment thereupon rendered against him personally as here, it would seem clear that in appealing from such judgment he would be really acting for the estate. Such appeal would be a continued assertion by him of the right of the estate to the fund in controversy. And it makes no difference that in this case no such answer has been filed by the appellant. As we construe the complaint, it, in effect, charges that the defendant collected the money sued for in his capacity as executor, and claims the right as such executor to retain it, and not otherwise. If this be'so, and he is allowed to retain it, he would be compelled to charge himself with such money in his account as executor, and the same would be subject to distribution as assets of the estate. If, however, the money sued for rightfully belongs to plaintiff, and not to the estate of which defendant is executor, and this is what the judgment appealed from determines, then, if already charged *576with it, the defendant would be entitled to a credit therefor upon showing this fact, and that he had been compelled, without fault on his part, to pay it to plaintiff under such judgment.

Whether a personal judgment against the defendant was propér, under the complaint, is a question which involves the merits of the appeal, and upon which we express no opinion at this time.

Motion to dismiss appeal denied.

McFarland, J., Harrison, J., Sharpstein, J., and Beatty, C. J., concurred.