This was an action of debt brought in the Circuit Court of Ritchie county to May rules, 1885, upon the administrator’s bond of W. E. Hudkins and L. B. Collins, as administrators of William Collins, deceased, and J. A. Mason and B. S. Collins as their sureties. The plaintiff was the State of West Virginia at the relation of the Merchants’ National Bank of West Virginia at Clarksburg.
After reciting the qualification of the administrators and the execution of their bond, the plaintiffs set out as a breach of the condition that the said bank in February, 1884, recovered judgment for five hundred dollars and eighty five cents against the said administrators, and that execution issued thereon against them as such, and was returned: — “No effects in tlieir hands to bo administered;” — and the declaration avers that there were effects which, had been wasted and converted by said administrators. In a. second count it is suggested that they had sufficient effects to have paid a f ro rata dividend on said judgment, and that the administrators had full notice before distributing the assets, and nevertheless neglected and refused to pay said judgment or any part of it.
When the case came first to trial, certain proceedings ■were had, embraced in a bill of exceptions taken by the plaintiff’, but which it is now unnecessary to notice, further, *372as nothing therein contained can affect the final result of the litigation.
After several terms had intervened, the case again came to trial before another jury, of course, and a verdict was rendered for the plaintiff. To sustain the issue on its part the plaintiff- gave in evidence the summons in the former case, the judgment therein, the qualification of the administrators and the bonds sued on, and the appraisement of the estate, but omitted to give in evidence the execution on the former judgment together with the return of the sheriff" thereon. The defendant gave in evidence two settlements by the administrators, each of which had been confirmed by the County Court, and both of which clearly showed that the administrators had proceeded to distribute and pay out the funds in their hands to other creditors in total disregard of the debt due the bank, after they had been served with the summons, and indeed after judgment had been obtained, which was at the February term, 1884; while the last report of the commissioner, which was confirmed June 6, 1886, showed that the administrators had not commenced paying out the fund found in their hands on a previous settlement until August, 1884.
The first error assigued in the petition is that the demurrer to the declaration was overruled. "We could perhaps by a liberal construction of the declaration find enough upon which to support a judgment according to law and the very right of the case; but since the case must go back, we dismiss the assignment suggesting that the plaintiff, should he so desire, be permitted to amend the declaration so as to describe the judgment (a failure to pay which is the basis of this action) in the same language in which he substantially describes the execution, viz., as against IV". F. ITudkins and L. B. Collins, as administrators of William Collins. "Without the use of the particle “ as,” simply placing his office in opposition to the name of the individual has been held to be merely deseriptio persones. Rand v. Hale, 3 W. Va. 495; Bank v. County of Lewis, 28 W. Va. 273, 292; Early v. Wilkinson, 9 Gratt. 71.
The second assignment of error is that the court erred in not rejecting the testimony of the plaintiff' by which he *373soiiglit to establish a devastavit. The testimony, so far as it went, was all admissible; the trouble was that, as we shall see, it did not go far enough.
The third assignment is that the court pemiitted the plaintiff to introduce, after he had closed his case, a judgment in the name of Mary B. ’Wilkinson against W. F. Iiudkins and L. 33. Collins, administrators etc. Why the plaintiff should have desired to introduce testimony so totally irrelevant, or why the defendants should have objected to it, is one of those mysteries which, at this distance from the scene of action, it is impossible to solve. The judgment, as appears by the evidence of the defendants themselves, had been paid fro raía with the other debts audited by the commissioner; and if the defendants had sought to introduce it and the plaintiff’ objected, we could have better understood the points of view from which they respectively viewed the case. Suffice it to say that the whole matter was totally unimportant.
The fourth assignment is that the court erred in giving an instruction for the plaintiff, which is as follows: “If the jury believe from the evidence in this cause that at the time of the settlement, made January 25, 1884, there was a balance in the hands of the administrators of William Collins, deceased, sufficient to pay off and discharge the claim of the plaintiff, and that the defendants had notice of the existence of said claim, then it was their duty to have paid the said claim fro rata with other claims of the same dignity. And the j my are further instructed that the service of the process on the defendants on the 3d day of January, 1884, is notice of the existence of the debt set up in the declaration in this cause, and that the judgment is conclusive evidence of said uotice to the said administrators of Win. Collins, deceased, and conclusive evidence against the said administrators aforesaid of the existence of the said demand. The jury are instructed that the plaintiffs are entitled to recover from the defendants, as administrators of William Collins, deceased, out of the money in their hands collected by them, due the estate of William Collins, deceased, a pro rata share of the aggregate amount of the money that came into their hands after deducting administration fees and funeral ex*374penses, taxes due tlie United States, and taxes due tlie State of W. Va., as sliown by Commissioner II. C. Sliowaiter’s report filed in the office of tlie cleric of tbe County Court of Ritchie county on the 25th day of January, 1884.”
This instruction was perhaps intended to propound a correct proxiosition of law, hut it is so punctuated and worded as to lose in good measure its hypothetical character, and the average juryman would perhaps have been misled by it, and have construed it into a direction to find for the plai ntiff.
The fifth assignment is that the court erred in refusing to give the following instruction asked for by the defendants: “The jury are instructed if they believe from the evidence that the plaintiff failed to present and prove its claim here sued on before the commissioner of accounts after the said commissioner had given the notice provided by chapter 68, s. 13, Acts Legislature of West Virginia for the year 1882, it is barred from recovery in this action.” It is obvious that there was no error in refusing this instruction.
The sixth assignment is that the plaintiffs failed to prove that any execution had issued upon the judgment for five hundred dollars and eighty five cents, rendered February 29, 1884. The counsel for defendant in error cite us to page 16 of the record to show that this assignment is based on a misapprehension of fact; but counsel overlooked the fact that the execution to be found on that page was offered at the first trial, and, as clearly appears by the defendants’ fifth bill of exceptions, it was not adduced on the second trial at all. The provision of the Code is as follows: “Where an execution on a judgment or decree against a personal representative is returned without being satisfied, there may be forthwith brought and prosecuted an action against the obligator in any bond given by such personal representative for the faithful discharge of his duties.” Code 1887, c. 85, s. 23. Under this provision, I regard it as essential to the maintenance of his action that the plaintiff' should prove both the issuing of the execution and the return of — “Ho effects” — by the sheriff. In the absence of this evidence, there is not sufficient in the record to sustain the *375judgment and verdict, and the Circuit Court should have set aside the verdict, and granted a new trial.
The judgment must he reversed, and the case remanded, with instructions to the lower court to set aside the verdict and grant a new trial etc.
E.eveRSbd. Remanded.