Emmons v. Gordon

125 Mo. 636 | Mo. | 1894

Black, C. J.

This was a proceeding commenced in the probate court of Audrain county, under section 48, Revised Statutes, 1889, to compel defendant Gordon as late executor of the will of J. J. West to account with the plaintiff administrator de lonis non. The probate court gave judgment for the defendant Gordon and the sureties on his bond, who had entered their appearance. On appeal, the circuit court gave a like judgment, and the plaintiff appealed to this court. The case has been argued in division one, and also in lane. A question made in the ease and as to which there is a division of opinion, is whether the record before us presents anything for review. It, therefore, •becomes important to state the facts in detail.

The record consists of a copy of the transcript certified to the circuit court by the probate court, *642a copy of the entries made by the circuit court, and the bill of exceptions allowed in that court. The transcript certified to the circuit court discloses nothing but the final judgment of the probate court and the order allowing the appeal. The transcript of entries made by the circuit court discloses the final judgment in that court, the filing and overruling of the motion for new trial and the order allowing the appeal to this court. All the other matters disclosed by the record appear in the bill of exceptions, and that, too, without any regard whatever to system or order.

According to the bill of exceptions the plaintiff produced the following evidence: An order of the probate court made on the twentieth day of September, 1887, showing that Gordon made proof of “notice of final settlement” and that the settlement was continued. An order of the probate court made on the twenty-eighth day of November, 1887, stating that Gordon “presents his accounts for his final settlement and resignation with a balance due the estate of $87.78 in money and one note on Jack Allen for $60, which said executor is ordered to pay over to his successor,” and it is also ordered that he deliver to his successor all title deeds. The paper itself has indorsed thereon: “Examined and approved and filed the twenty-eighth of November, 1887,” signed by the probate judge. An order of the probate court made on the twelfth of December, 1887, stating that Gordon filed receipt of Emmons, administrator, for the money and property mentioned in the last order.

The letters to the plaintiff as administrator de bonis non were issued on the eighth of December, 1887, and the order appointing him as such administrator was made on that day. The plaintiff, it will be seen, had not been appointed administrator de bonis non when Gordon made his so-called “final settlement.”

*643On the ninth of September, 1890, the plaintiff filed his motion in the probate court asking that court to make an order on Gordon to appear and make final settlement, and that he be required to turn over all money and property in his hands to the plaintiff, and that the order be enforced by execution and attachment against Gordon and the sureties on his bond, whose names are set out in the motion.

From a record entry made by the probate court on the fifteenth of December, 1890, it appears Clark, one of the sureties, filed a separate answer. At that time other of the sureties entered their appearance. Gordon appeared and filed his “supplemental settlement,” and the plaintiff filed exceptions thereto, claiming that Gordon was still indebted to the 'West estate in an amount exceeding $6,000. On the same day Gordon filed what is called a “separate answer.” The plaintiff read in evidence this “supplemental settlement.” It seems to be the same paper filed by Gordon, as, and for, his former alleged final settlement. The plaintiff also read in evidence the separate, answer filed by Gordon, in which he says: “He hath already, long before this date, made a final settlement of said estate, according to law, which was approved by the judgment of the court, and hath never been appealed from, and that he hath fully complied with the said judgment by paying over to said plaintiff the balance found due, and that the plaintiff ought not to maintain this suit against him, and he prays for his discharge. He further says that by mistake, he failed heretofore to account for $681.70 received by him about the twenty-ninth of March, 1880, from Henry Baker, for land sold, and also, by mistake, he failed heretofore to charge said estate with the following sums” (amountingto $125.25), “and, notwithstanding he is not liable in this action, he now tenders plaintiff *644a judgment for $556.45 as an offer of compromise, and lie prays for his discharge.”

The plaintiff rested his case on the foregoing evidence.

The defendant then put in evidence the notice of * 'final settlement” before mentioned which was put in evidence by the plaintiff. Defendant also read in evidence the settlement of the twenty-eighth of November, 1887, with the indorsement thereon before mentioned. G-ordon testified that he thought all the heirs of "West were present when that settlement was made. To this evidence plaintiff objected, and excepted to the ruling of the court in admitting it. Plaintiff produced evidence to the effect that many of the heirs of West were not present at that settlement. The one who was present says he was advised by the attorney for Gordon, and others, that the settlement was not a final one.

Plaintiff filed a motion for new trial in due time, . which appears in the bill of exceptions, and which was overruled, but the record fails to show that the plaintiff excepted to this ruling.

1. The, first thing to be considered is the force and effect to be given- to the settlement made by Gordon on the twenty-eighth of November, 1887, after having given notice of an intention to make final settlement. The law does not require a notice of final settlement to be given where an executor or administrator intends to resign or has resigned. RoBards v. Lamb, 89 Mo. 303; State ex rel. v. Gray, 106 Mo. 533. When an executor or administrator resigns, he must account in the probate court with his successor, for his successor in office represents .the heirs, devisees, creditors, and others interested in the estate, and the money due from him to the estate and the remaining assets in his hands must be turned over to the successor. Such *645is the. plain meaning of sections 47 and 48 of the statute relating to executors and administrators. As the settlement of an executor or administrator who- has resigned his letters must be made in the probate court with his successor, it follows that he can make no final settlement until a successor is appointed. Until then there is no one with whom the settlement can be made. 2 Woerner’s Am. Law of Administration, p. 1183. In this ease Gordon made the alleged final settlement before the plaintiff had been appointed administrator de honis non. That settlement, no doubt, amounted to a resignation of Gordon, as between him and the plaintiff, but it was not a final settlement. It has no greater force or effect than an annual settlement. Gordon was still bound to settle with the administrator de honis non, and that, too, in the probate court.

2. The court ought to have rendered judgment against Gordon for at least $556.45 on the admissions made by him in his so-called answer. But it is said this error can not be reviewed because t,he plaintiff failed to save any exception to the action of the court in overruling the motion for new trial. If any one thing ought to be taken as settled it is this, that this court will reverse for error appearing on the face of the record proper. It needs no bill of exceptions nor motion for new trial to reach such errors. The record proper is the petition, summons, -subsequent pleadings, the verdict and judgment. If an administrator resigns, then by section 47 it is his duty to make settlement with his successor. If he fails to make such settlement, it is the duty of the succeeding administrator to move the court to compel him to make final settlement, and it is the duty of the court to ascertain the amount of money, etc., in his hands and order the same paid.over, and to enforce such order. The settlement mentioned in the sections means a statement of *646the accounts reduced to writing and filed in the probate court. It takes the place of a petition in an action in the circuit court. It is as much a part of the record proper as is a petition. The so-called answer of Gordon was simply a part and parcel of his statement of the accounts, and it and the so-called supplemental settlement, taken together, constituted his proposed settlement with plaintiff. Both are a part of the record proper, so that the error in failing to give judgment for plaintiff may be corrected here, though no exception was saved to the order overruling the motion for new trial.

Another objection is that this answer and supplemental settlement, as they are called, and which we treat as a statement of the accounts made by defendant, are found in the bill of exceptions and at no other place in the record. Though found in the bill of exceptions and at no other place, they are none the less a part of the record proper. As said in Douglas v. Orr, 58 Mo. 573, “the pleadings and the judgment in this case also appear in the bill of exceptions, and not elsewhere. All this is informal and improper, but we do not think it would justify us in refusing to pass upon the merits of the controversy.” Nor was it necessary to read these papers in evidence. The admission of indebtedness stated in them stood as an admission in the cause and called for no proof. Nor can this so-called answer be taken as an offer of compromise under section 2191, Revised Statutes, 1889. That section has nothing to do with settlements of an outgoing administrator. Besides this, there is here an unequivocal admission of Gordon that he owed the estate $556.45, not made by way of an offer of compromise under the statute, but made in the statement of the accounts, a statement required by law to be filed, and which we have seen is a part of the record in the case.

*647There is not a thing in this case from which it can be inferred that Gordon ever made settlement in the probate court with his successor. Indeed, he does not, even in his so-called answer, claim that the administrator de bonis'non was a party to any settlement made by him. The defendant ought to be required to come to an accounting, and we see no reason why he should be relieved from doing so. The judgment is reversed and the cause remanded for further proceedings.

All concur, except Barclay, J., who dissents. Macfaklane, J., not sitting.