75 P. 1010 | Kan. | 1904
The opinion of the court was delivered by
On December 19, 1897, L. A. Williams died intestate, in Brown county, leaving a widow and three minor children. Shortly after his death another ■child was born to his widow, and since the commencement of the present action one child has died. At the time of his death L. A. Williams and his family were
The widow and family moved from the farm, and it was rented by the administrator. The rents were collected and applied to the payment of the interest on the mortgage, taxes, and some slight repairs which were necessary on the farm. The administrator also paid from the receipts of the estate $218.30, the balance due on the purchase-price of the farm.
After the family had removed from the farm, the
Prior to this time the plaintiff had been appointed guardian of the minor children. On the day of the-final settlement the judge entered upon the record the fact that it had come to his knowledge that'some-of the heirs desired to contest some of the charges allowed against the estate. He ordered that the heirs-
"No. 6. After the widow moved from the farm or homestead said G. B. Calnan continued to give the family • medical attention from time to time, when called upon so to do, and when the same was necessary, until his bill for such services amounted to $116.50. These services were reasonable and necessary, and the bill therefor was examined and approved by said widow. The widow purchased food and clothing, fuel and medicine, for the use of and which was necessary for herself and said children, and which was used by them from time to time, and the bills therefor, after she had examined them, were, at her request, paid by said administrator and credited to himself in his account as administrator. He also paid the widow, for the purpose of purchasing necessaries for her use and that of the children, money from time to time, which she used for that purpose, and which the administrator took credit for in his accounts.”
‘‘ No. 18. The. amount paid by said administrator to Mrs. Williams and for her, except that paid to Doctor Pontius, was, with the exception of a small amount of about ten dollars, used by the said widow for the benefit of herself and said minor children, and the amount
Notwithstanding these findings, the court ordered the sum of $586 charged back to the administrator, and also $700, or one-half the amount of cash the administrator reported as having been received from the sale of the land, and remanded the cause to the probate court with instructions to enter such orders. To reverse this order and judgment the administrator prosecutes this proceeding.
The first error of which complaint is made is that the burden of proof was cast upon the administrator. To determine this question, reference must be had to the force given in such proceedings to the order of allowance made by the probate court in the annual settlements made by the administrator. It has been generally held that such annual settlements are judicial in their nature and that the probate court hears, weighs and determines the correctness of such acts as a judicial officer, and the order of allowance is in its nature a judicial determination, not final, but prima facie evidence of the correctness ; and if objections are afterwards made thereto, the burden of showing the incorrectness of such determination is upon the party making the objections. (Musick v. Beebe, Adm’r, 17 Kan. 47 ; Young v. Scott, 59 id. 621, 54 Pac. 670.)
It is contended that, notwithstanding the $586 was paid in good faith and for the support and maintenance of the helpless minor children of the deceased, and actually necessary for their support, the adminis
At the time of the death of the father of these children, the oldest was eight years of age and without means of support except that which came into the hands of the administrator. They had no guardian. It would be very unnatural if, under such circumstances, the administrator would refuse to advance money to these helpless minor children sufficient to clothe, shelter, feed and educate them. If a guardian had been appointed and the money had passed into his hands, what less could he have done ? His duty would have been to advance such money as was necessary. The administrator having performed these duties in good faith, it would be hard to suggest any reason in equity why he should be required to respond again. It would be a very great injustice to charge the administrator with this property as on hand, when he had actually and in good faith expended it for the benefit of these heirs in purchasing for them the necessities of life. In Gilfillen’s Estate, Gilfillen’s Appeal, 170 Pa. St. 185, 32 Atl. 585, 50 Am. St. Rep. 760, it was said :
“Where a grandfather as administrator of his son’s estate receives money belonging to his granddaughter, a minor and deaf-mute, and spends the whole fund in having the child taught to speak and to hear, he cannot be compelled to account for the fund, although he was never appointed guardian of his granddaughter’s estate ; and it is immaterial in such case that the grandfather, as administrator of his son’s estate, could not have been appointed guardian of his son’s daughter.”
“Treating an administrator who has acted as a guardian of such a minor as if he were actually appointed as such, means only holding him to such liability as he would have incurred if he had been really appointed. This judicial treatment of such a person is the most favorable to the interests of the ward, but it certainly does not follow that if such a person makes payments out of the funds which belong to the ward, for the best interests of the ward, such as any court having jurisdiction would allow or direct him to-make, he is to be denied all credit for such payments. ”
In Rogers v. Traphagen, 42 N. J. E. 421, 11 Atl. 336,. the court stated the law applicable to this case as follows :
“An administrator, after settling his final account, held in his hands the distributive shares of two infants for whom (no guardian having been appointed) he had made disbursements from time to time, both before and after the passing of his final account.
“On a bill filed by the children after arriving at their majority against the administrator for an account, it is held that while the payments should regularly have been made only to a guardian, yet, in the absence of bad faith, such disbursements as would have been approved, had they been made by a guardian of the infants, will be allowed to the administrator.”
From what has been said, this cause must be reversed for further proceedings. There are some questions concerning the sale of the farm for which the court below charged the administrator with $700. If, upon a retrial of this cause, it should appear that such money has been, wasted to the heirs by the unauthorized acts of the administrator, the heirs should recover for all such proceeds so lost to them.
The judgment of -the court below is reversed and the cause remanded for retrial.