The subject-matter of the present controversy, which is a fund paid into the appellant bank by the Ft. Smith & Western Railroad Company, as a deposit in a condemnation proceeding, has been before this court on two former occasions. In the year 1901, the Ft. Smith & Western Railroad Company instituted proceedings in the Circuit Court of Sebastian County to condemn a right-of-way over certain lands which, it now appears, were owned by Ella Hare, who was a person of unsound mind. Ella Hare was made defendant in the proceedings, not as a person of unsound mind, but as one who was sui juris, though as a matter of fact she was under guardianship .at that,time as- a person of unsound mind, and one Matt Grey was curator of her estate. Matt Grey was also administrator of the estate of Mary A. Hare, deceased, who was the mother of Ella Hare, and as such administrator of the Mary A. Hare estate, Matt Grey was made a party defendant to the condemnation proceedings.
At the institution of the proceedings, the circuit court fixed an amount to be deposited so that possession could be taken of the lands sought to be condemned, and pursuant to that order the railroad company deposited with appellant, the First National Bank of Ft. Smith, the sum of $2,000, the amount fixed iby the court. The jury in the condemnation proceedings assessed the damages at the sum of $3,000, and judgment of the court was entered accordingly, but there was no order of the court made concerning the payment of the money over to the proper parties except the order that the sum “deposited in court be paid over to defendants,, or to such one or more of -them as shall establish his or her riaht to receive the same.” The railroad company then paid the, sum of $1,000 over to Matt Grey, as administrator of the estate of Marv A. Hare, deceased, and the present controversy relates to the sum of $2,000 deposited in the bank; which, according to the record now before us, was also paid over by appellant to Matt Grey as such administrator.
The. case first appeared here in an appeal from the .order of the. court refusing to permit Ella Hare to vacate the judgment in the condemnation proceedings without bringing in all other parties to the cause. Hare v. Fort Smith & Western Rd. Co., 104 Ark. 187. Subsequently Ella Hare brought in the other parties, and the court on her application made an order on the railroad company to pay over to her the said sum of $3,000 assessed as damages, but on appeal io this court we reversed the judgment so far as concerned the $2,000 which had been deposited-in appellant’s bank pursuant to the order .of the court. Ft. Smith & W. Rd. Co. v. Hare, 116 Ark. 10. As to that fund we held that when the money was deposited by the railroad company pursuant to the orders of the court, the -company had no further ■control over the money and was not liable even though the bank paid out the money improperly. However, we affirmed the judgment ordering the railroad company to pay over the additional sum of $1,000. After the rendition of the judgment here, reversing and dismissing the case as to the $2,000, Ella Hare, through her guardian, made application to the court for an order on appellant, as the court’s depositary, to pay over sáid sum of $2,000 with interest, and the order was made as prayed for, and an appeal has -been prosecuted to this court. Ella Hare died since then, and the case is proceeding in the name of her administrator.
(1) The case was tried below on an agreed statement of facts, which was merely filed with the clerk and referred to in the judgment of the court, but is not brought in the record by a bill of exceptions. Therefore we cannot .consider it on this appeal. Coonrod v. Anderson, 55 Ark. 354. The mere reference in the judgment entry to the agreed statement of facts does not make it a part of the record when the case is brought here for review, and in order to bring it upon the record it must be in the bill of exceptions or must appear in full in the record entry of the' judgment. We cannot, therefore, consider the agreed statement of facts, but the trial court recited in the judgment entry its findings of fact, and it is our duty to consider that recital in order to determine whether or not the judgment of the court is consistent with the facts found by the court. . A1Í of the facts herein recited are found recited by the trial court in the judgment entry.
(2) In other words, the court finds the facts to be that appellant paid the money over to Matt Grey, as administrator of the estate of Mary A. Hare, deceased, and he accounted for it in his settlement, and that he was at that time also curator of the estate of Ella Hare, who was the owner of the lands and to whom the funds should have been paid. The court then declares the law to be, upon those facts, that the payment did not inure to the benefit of the curator of Ella Hare and did not exonerate appellant from accountability to her for the money on deposit. The question of the correctness of that ruling is therefore presented to us for our decision, regardless of the fact that the agreed statement of facts is not in the record, for if the court’s decision upon the law is inconsistent with the facts found, it calls for a reversal of the judgment.
Appellant contends1 that though the payment was made to Matt Grey, as administrator of the estate of Mary A. flare, deceased, it should be treated as a payment to him as curator of the estate of Ella Hare, upon the principle that where one acts in a dual capacity the exercise of the power is referable to the true authority conferred. It seems to us that that principle is sound and should’be applied here to protect the appellant from further liability. The money was in fact paid to Matt Grey, the person entitled to receive it, but it was received by him in the wrong capacity. It was, however, his duty to account for the money in the right capacity; or, in other words, he was responsible on his bond as guardian, and therefore the payment discharges the bank from further liability. We find the principle laid down that “if a person occupying the dual relation of guardian and executor or administrator or trustee holds funds in the latter capacity which are due'.and payable to the ward, the sureties on the guardian’s bond are chargeable with his failure to account therefore as guardian.” 21 Cyc. 228. The principle is stated in somewhat different language in the same work, as follows: “Where an executor or administrator also occupies some other character with regard to the estate, such as guardian or trustee, it will be presumed that the property in his hands is held in that capacity in which he ought to receive it.”' 18 Cyc. 1258.
Cases are cited which, support that text. Clancy v. Dickey, 2 Hawks (N. Car.) 497; Harris v. Harrison, 78 N. C. 202; Loftin v. Cobb, 126 N. C. 58; Adams v. Gleaves, 78 Tenn. 367; In re McIntosh, 158 Pa. St. 525; Pratt v. Northam, 5 Mason (R. I.) 95; Seegar’s Executors v. State, use Benton, 16 Harr. & J. (Md.) 162, 14 Am. Dec. 265; Kirby v. State, use Pascault, 51 Md. 388. In the Maryland case last cited, we find the following statement of the principle: “The general doctrine is well settled that where a man holds money in several capacities, the law will attach liability to him in that capacity in which of right the money ought to be held.”
(3-4) It is true those are cases where the fund rightfully came into the possession of the party in the capacity in which he received it, and the question decided was the accountability for failing to hold the money in the other capacity, where it has become his duty after having received it to pay it over and account for it in the other capacity. But it seems to us that the principle is the .same where he received the money in one capacity and ■should rightfully have received it in the other, and notwithstanding the fact that he accepts the money in the wrong capacity it operates as a payment to him in the capacity in which he should have received it. It is a familiar principle, as contended by appellant’s counsel, •that -where one acts in a dual capacity, the act done will be referred to the power possessed, and not necessarily to the capacity in which the party 'professes to act. Duckworth v. Ocean Steamship Co. (Ga.) 26 S. E. 736. It follows from the application of the principle announced that where a party acting in two capacities receives money in the wrong capacity, the payment is in law referable to the capacity in which he is authorized to act and constitutes a payment.
There is nothing in the former decisions of this court concerning the subject-matter of the present litigation which conflicts in any wise with the views now expressed. In the last case brought here we held that the railroad company was liable for $1,000 of the sum awarded, notwithstanding the payment to Matt Grey as the administrator of the estate of Mary A. Hare, but it was not shown in that ease that Matt Grey acted in any other 'capacity. We merely decided that the money should have been paid to the guardian of Ella Hare, and that a payment to the administrator of Mary A. Hare, deceased, did not exonerate the railroad company from liability for the funds.
We are of the opinion, therefore, that the judgment of the circuit court is inconsistent with the facts of the ease .as recited in the judgment, and for that reason the judgment is reversed and the cause dismissed.