1. An action against a consul general upon his official bond
(Rev.Stats., § 1697, as amended) for damage caused by his failure
to perform his official duties touching the personal property of a
decedent cannot be maintained by one who is not the personal
representative, but merely a possible owner of a share of the
decedent's estate. P.
257 U. S.
468.
2. A declaration alleging that an American citizen, dying in
China, left valuable real estate standing in his name in the land
records of the United States Consulate at Shanghai, and that the
consul general there, despite his duly to conserve the decedent's
estate, caused one to whom he had illegally granted alleged letters
testamentary to convey it to a third party without consideration,
although the deceased had not devised it, and that such assumption
of jurisdiction on the part of the said consul general, though
illegal and void, had the effect of dissipating a valuable part of
the estate to the consequent loss of the decedent's brother, the
plaintiff, states no cause of action against the consul general on
his official bond. P.
257 U. S.
468.
50 App.D.C. 51, 267 F. 609, affirmed.
Error to a judgment of the court below affirming a judgment of
the Supreme Court of the District of Columbia sustaining a demurrer
to the declaration in an action for debt and dismissing the
action.
Page 257 U. S. 467
MR. JUSTICE McREYNOLDS delivered the opinion of the court.
Section 1697, Revised Statutes, as amended by Act of December
21, 1898, c. 36, 30 Stat. 770, requires every consul general,
before receiving his commission, to execute a bond conditioned for
the true and faithful performance of duties lawfully imposed upon
him as such officer. It is copied in the margin.
*
Purporting to proceed under this section, plaintiff in error
brought an action in the Supreme Court, District of Columbia
against James Linn Rodgers, once consul
Page 257 U. S. 468
general at Shanghai, China, and the sureties upon his official
bond. Process was served upon him, but the sureties were not
summoned, and did not appear. The declaration alleges execution of
the bond, its breach by Rodgers' failure to discharge his official
duties concerning property left by plaintiff's brother, who died in
China, June 10, 1905, and asks a recovery upon the bond for damages
suffered. The trial court sustained a demurrer to the declaration,
and, upon appeal, this action was affirmed.
The Court of Appeals held that, if the consul general's failure
to perform his official duties concerning the personal property
caused loss, the damage was to the estate, and plaintiff, being a
mere possible owner of a distributive share, could not recover in
his own right -- any possible right of action was in the
administrator. This we think was clearly right.
The second count of the painfully prolix declaration
alleges:
"That there was left by said decedent certain valuable real
property in the Pao Shan district in Shanghai, China, of the value
of, to-wit, $5,000, which, outstanding in decedent's name in the
land records of said United States consulate at Shanghai, China, it
was the duty of the said defendant James Linn Rodgers to conserve
to said decedent's estate; but, notwithstanding his said duty in
this respect, and in utter violation thereof, and in breach of the
condition of his said bond and writing obligatory, he, the said
defendant James Linn Rodgers, instructed one E. H. Dunning to
convey and transfer the same over to a certain Mrs. Green
gratuitously, and without any consideration passing therefor, four
days after he had illegally and improperly granted alleged letters
testamentary to the said E. H. Dunning, . . . that no such real
estate was devised or sought to be devised under the paper writing
hereinbefore referred to as the pretended last will and testament
of the said Henry H. Cunningham, deceased, . . . and said
Page 257 U. S. 469
assumption of a jurisdiction and power to so instruct the said
E. H. Dunning was wholly illegal and void, although having the
effect of dissipating a valuable part of plaintiff's deceased
brother's estate, to the consequent loss of plaintiff by this said
defendant James Linn Rodgers' violation and breach of the condition
of his bond and writing obligatory, so as aforesaid given to insure
plaintiff all legal and proper protection of his said interests in
and to his deceased brother's estate as aforesaid."
The plaintiff's whole cause is presented upon the theory that
Rodgers had no power to administer the estate of the deceased
brother or to do aught in reference thereto but what the statutes
authorized, "namely, conserve and transmit to the United States for
proper and legal distribution according to the laws of decedent's
domicile." No statute is cited which imposes any duty in respect of
real estate upon a consul in China. Under such circumstances, mere
allegation that defendant unlawfully assumed to instruct one
holding void letters testamentary to transfer such property without
consideration is wholly insufficient to show an actionable breach
of official duty, or adequately to point out personal damage
suffered by plaintiff in error. Real estate cannot be dissipated by
mere direction gratuitously to convey it issued without semblance
of authority. The judgment below is
Affirmed.
*
"Sec 1697. Every consul general, consul, and commercial agent,
before he receives his commission or enters upon the duties of his
office, shall give a bond to the United States, with such sureties,
who shall be permanent residents of the United States, as the
Secretary of State shall approve, in a penal sum not less than one
thousand dollars, and in no case less than the annual compensation
allowed to such officer, and not more than ten thousand dollars,
and in such form as the President shall prescribe, conditioned for
the true and faithful accounting for, paying over, and delivering
up of all fees, moneys, goods, effects, books, records, papers, and
other property which shall come to his hands or to the hands of any
other person, to his use as such consul general, consul, or
commercial agent under any law now or hereafter enacted, or by
virtue of his office, and for the true and faithful performance of
all other duties, now or hereafter lawfully imposed upon him as
such consul general, consul, or commercial agent. The bond herein
mentioned shall be deposited with the Secretary of the Treasury. In
case of a breach of any such bond, any person thereby injured may
institute, in his own name and for his sole use, a suit on said
bond, and thereupon recover such damages as shall be legally
assessed, with costs of suit, for which execution may issue for him
in due form, but if such party fails to recover in the suit,
judgment shall be rendered and execution may issue against him for
costs in favor of the defendant, and the United States shall in no
case be liable for the same. The said bond shall remain, after any
judgment rendered thereon, as a security for the benefit of any
person injured by a breach of the condition of the same until the
whole penalty has been recovered, and the proceeding shall always
be as directed in this section."