This action was brought against the defendants as sureties on an administration bond, given by Thomas G-. Yan Cott, in November, 1867, upon the granting to him, by the surrogate of the city and county of New York, of letters of administration upon the estate of Gabriel Yan Cott, deceased ; and the alleged breach of the condition was his neglect or refusal to pay, according to the subsequent decree of the surrogate (made on the 24th of February, 1871), out of the assets that had come into his hands, a debt adjudged to be due-the plaintiff", payable from the estate of the intestate, sufficient assets for that purpose being disclosed. The defense offered on the trial, in contradiction to the recital in the bond, and against the prima facie evidence furnished by the letters of. administration and decree of the 24th. of February, 1871, was, “ that at the time of the decease of Gabriel Yan Cott (the intestate), and immediately preceding such decease, he wTas not an inhabitant of the county of New York, but was an inhabitant of the county of Queens, settled there for the purpose of' living there.”
This defense was overruled under exception, and such, ruling is the main subject of consideration on this appeal.
The offer of such a defense was rejected upon the ground of estoppel, upon the consideration that the application for and granting of the letters of administration were upon assumption of the jurisdiction of the surrogate of the city and county of New York; and the bond being tendered to enable the principal to acquire the office of administrator and possession of the property of the intestate, and having effected that object,. both principal and sureties were concluded from questioning the authority of the surrogate to grant such letters, or the liability of the sureties for the acts of the principal in the execution of his duties as such administrator, or the order made by *311the surrogate fixing his liability. The following authorities of the courts of our State support the ruling of the judge on the trial: The People v. Falconer (2 Sand. S. C. 81); Caldwell v. Colgate (7 Barb. 256); The People v. Norton (9 N. Y. 178); The Supervisors of Rensselaer v. Bates (17 N. Y. 245); Fay v. Ames (44 Barb. 327); Fake v. Whipple (39 Barb. 339 ; s. c. 39 N. Y. 394); Coleman v. Bean (3 Keyes, N. Y. 94); The Cumberland Coal Co. v. Hoffman Steam Coal Co. (39 Barb. 19).
• In The People v. Norton (supra), the action was brought upon a bond given by a trustee, substituted by the Court of Chancery upon proceedings by petition without bill of complaint, in a case claimed to have been within the jurisdiction of the court, under the provisions of the statute allowing such substitution upon a summary application, which however was denied, and such want of jurisdiction was presented as a defense to the bond. The Court of Appeals, however, held that as the substituted trustee had got possession of the trust estate under color of such proceeding, he and his surety upon such voluntary bond for the faithful administration of the trust estate were precluded from questioning the authority under which he assumed to have acted. So in The Supervisors of Rensselaer v. Bates, in the same court (supra), the defendant had become surety that his principal should faithfully discharge the duties of the office of treasurer of the board of supervisors, an office not within the province of the board to create; yet he was held liable on such voluntary bond for moneys received by his principal in such assumed capacity as treasurer of the board, although collected under resolutions which that body could not lawfully pass ; and that case decided that both principal and surety were “ precluded from questioning the power of the board as principals to confer upon him the authority (as treasurer) under which he acted.”
In The People v. Falconer (supra), in the Superior Court, Justice Sandford, in a similar case to the present one, sáys : “ It would be strange, indeed, if the sureties in an administration bond, after enabling their principal to possess himself of the personal estate by its execution, should be permitted to avoid its obligations upon the plea that the officer granting the *312letters and receiving the bond had no jurisdiction of the subject-matter. The execution of the bond precludes both principal and sureties from gainsaying the surrogate’s jurisdiction in any proceeding for the assets which the appointment and bond have enabled the principal to receive.”
The distinction is plain between such cases as the present and those arising upon proceedings in invitum against a party, where he is compelled to. give a bond or other obligation to procure the release of his person or estate from process or other claims sought to be enforced against him under proceedings void for want of jurisdiction in the officer who assumes to exercise it, and where the power under which a wrong is attempted to be enforced only originates in such void jurisdiction. The voluntary presentation of such a bond as that sued on in this case, for the purpose of acquiring rights not previously possessed by the party offering it, brings the case within the principle of both legal and equitable estoppel, by which a party is precluded in a court of justice from denying his own acts and admissions, where they were designed to influence the conduct of another, and did so influence it, and when such denial would operate to the injury of the latter (Dezell v. Odell, 3 Hill, 215; Herm. on Estop. §§ 320, 321), or has bound himself by a written instrument for the fidelity or good conduct of another in a private trust , or public duty, for acts done in that capacity (Herm. on Estop. §§ 250, 251). The authorities of our own courts fully sustain the liability of the defendants as sureties upon the bond in suit for the assets that came into the hands of the principal, the administrator, without right of question as to the jurisdiction of the surrogate by whom he was appointed to office.
The decree of the surrogate, made on the 23d of February, ■ 1871, directing the payment to the plaintiff, by the administrator, of the amount for which (with interest) the,recovery has been had, cannot be attacked collaterally (L. 1870, § 826, c. 359), upon the allegation that the plaintiff was awarded more than his just proportion of the assets that came into the hands of the administrator. Any error in that respect was only the subject of appeal from the surrogate’s decree. *313The defense of non-joinder of Thomas Gr. Van Oott, the administrator, upon allegation that he was a joint contractor in the bond in suit, was disposed of by a production of the bond, which, as to the obligor, was joint and several. The suit was against the sureties only, and against only two out of the three obligors; and the motion to dismiss the complaint was on the ground “that two out of three joint and several parties to the bond of the administrator had been sued, and not one or three.” Such was the rule of the common law, but that has been altered by the code (§ 120), allowing “persons severally liable upon the same obligation or instrument to be all or any of them included in the same action, at the option of the plaintiff” (Carman v. Plass, 23 N. Y. 286 ; Brainard v. Jones, 11 How. Pr. 569); but as the allegation in the complaint was solely of a joint obligation, and the proof made without objection was of one joint and several, the plaintiff should be permitted to amend his complaint conformably to the proofs, by inserting the words “jointly and severally” after “bound themselves.”
Judgment should be entered on the verdict for plaintiff.
Daly, Ch. J., and Larremore, J., concurred.
Ordered accordingly.