104 Ind. 438 | Ind. | 1885
By this action appellant is seeking to have a claim allowed against, and collected from the estate of Jacob Durham, deceased, of which estate appellee is administrator. She filed an amended complaint in the circuit court, to which a demurrer was sustained. For a review and reversal of that ruling she prosecutes this appeal.
The conclusion we have reached as to the correctness of that ruling renders it unnecessary for us to set out the entire complaint, either at length or in substance. So much of it as presents the controlling question may be summarized as follows: In 1847, Jacob Durham advanced to his son, Benjamin A. Durham, a tract of land, worth about $3,500, and surrendered to him its possession. He did not convey the legal title, but treated the land as the absolute property of Benjamin A. Benjamin A. took possession of the land, and occupied it until 1860, in the meantime having expended upon it $4,000 in the way of valuable and lasting improvements. On the 9th day of January, 1860, Benjamin A. en
It is charged that he failed to inventory the said notes and mortgage as a part of the estate, or in any manner refer to or account for them in the administration of the estate. While administrator, he collected $130 upon the notes, and after-wards $1,200. Jacob Durham died in 1864. His administrator took possession of the .notes and mortgage as a part of his estate, and collected the balance due upon them.
It is further charged in the complaint, and insisted upon an argument, that by reason of the facts above stated, Jacob Durham held the notes and mortgage as the trustee of Benjamin A. '
It will be observed'that all debts against the estate of Benjamin A. Durham were paid, distribution of the surplus was made, a final report was filed, a final accounting was had, the «state was settled and closed, and Jacob Durham, as administrator, was discharged in June, 1862.
No objection is shown to have been made to the final report or discharge of Jacob Durham as such administrator; no effort was made to recover from him the notes and mort
We could not presume, in order to strengthen appellant’s, complaint, that at the time of the final settlement she was under legal disability, because it appears from the complaint that at the time this action was commenced, and for some three years prior thereto, she was a married woman; and if we could,, it would be of no avail to her in this case, because she is not proceeding to have that final settlement set aside, but is proceeding regardless o£ it.
The law in force during the administration of the estate required, as it does now, that the administrator should make a full inventory of the personal estate of the decedent, within his knowledge, including, all demands in favor of the estate, with a particular description thereof, etc., and that he should return such inventory to the county clerk, and take an oath to be endorsed upon, or annexed to it, that the same was a true statement of all the personal estate of the deceased which had come to his knowledge. 2 R. S. 1876, pp. 505, 508; sections 34, 44,46.
From such inventory the widow had the right to select articles to the amount of five hundred dollars. It was the duty of the administrator to collect all claims and demands of every nature due to the estate, and report to the court at stated times. Provision was also made for a final accounting and final settlement of the estate, and distribution to the heirs. All of these matters, and the doings of the administrator, became matters of record, open to the inspection of all interested.
The above mentioned provisions of the statute were followed by section 116, which provided that, “After the debts.
Involved in the administration and final settlement of estates under the above statutes, were the questions, as to whether or not the administrator had made an inventory of, and turned into the estate, all of the personal estate belonging to it, and all claims of every nature due to it, whether evidenced by notes or accounts. ' The inventory, filed under oath, would show upon its face that all such were included, and the reports would necessarily show the collection or proper disposition of them. The approval of the final settlement and account in this case, as in all similar cases, was an adjudication of those questions, and an adjudication that became final and conclusive, unless appealed from, or assailed for mistake or fraud within three years after the final settlement; that adjudication can not be disregarded nor overthrown in a collateral attack by any of the interested parties. It is alleged here, that the notes held by Jacob Durham were not included in the inventory, nor were they accounted for by him, although they belonged to the estate of Benjamin A. Durham. . The approval of the final settlement account, the discharge of the administrator, and the final settlement of the estate, were an adjudication that all of the notes and accounts belonging to Benjamin A. Durham, or in which he had any
It is argued that Jacob Durham, by virtue of the above facts, held the notes as trustee for Benjamin A. before he was appointed administrator. That fact, if conceded, could not possibly change the case. If Jacob Durham, in fact, held the notes as trustee, that did not of course destroy the ownership in Benjamin A.; they were still his, and after his death should have been included in the inventory, and collected as any other notes that might have been due to him. And if, in such case, Jacob Durham, as administrator, neglected to inventory the notes and turn them into the estate, the case is precisely the same as if he had neglected to inventory any other notes and had converted them to his own use.
The holding of our cases is, that the approval of the final settlement account, and the final settlement of the estate by the probate court, are an adj udication of all questions involved and can not be assailed in a collateral attack, and that so lo#ng as such final settlement stands, interested parties are bound by it, and can not maintain an action against the discharged administrator upon the ground that he converted to his own use assets of the estate which he should have included in the inventory and accounted for to the estate, and that such final settlements can not be set aside after three years subsequent thereto. Upon this, it would not be profitable to extend this opinion further than to cite the cases. Pate v. Moore, 79 Ind. 20; Peacocke v. Leffler, 74 Ind. 327; Sanders v. Loy, 61 Ind. 298; Holland v. State, ex rel., 48 Ind. 391; Barnes v. Bartlett, 47 Ind. 98; dandy v. Han-
There may be cases where to apply the doctrine of res adjudicóla, and the limit fixed by the statute within which final settlements may be set aside, may work a hardship, but doubtless such cases will be very few in comparison with the wrongs that would result from an opposite doctrine, and a statute fixing a much longer, or no limit. If the doctrine were not so applied, and the statute fixed no limit, great,, wrongs might, and doubtless would, result from the prosecution of unfounded claims against the estates of deceased administrators and their bondsmen.
Appellant is not in a favorable position to complain of any hardship resulting to her. So far as shown, she in fact knew that the notes were not included in the inventory, nor accounted for by the administrator as belonging to her husband’s estate. So far as shown, she knew of the notes, and all that she now alleges in relation to them, at the time of the final settlement, and before that time, as well as she does now. The way was open to her to have the notes included in and accounted for as a part of the estate. She might have had the final report set aside within three years after its approval. She, however, did nothing, and objected to nothing, until more than twenty years after the approval of the final settlement, and eighteen years after the death of the administrator.
It results from what we have said, that the court below was not in error in sustaining the demurrer to the complaint. Whether or not appellant might, in any event, maintain an action except through an administrator, is a question we need not now decide.
The judgment is affirmed, at appellant’s costs.