30 W. Va. 243 | W. Va. | 1887
In March, 1882, Willida M. Haught, a minor, by her next friend, filed her bill in the Circuit Court of Tyler county against William H. Parks and others, to obtain a final settlement of said Parks, -as guardian of the plaintiff, to compel the guardian and his sureties to pay over the amount found to be due to her, and to set aside as fraudulent a deed made by one of the sureties, and subject the land conveyed by it to the payment of the sum so found due to the plaintiff. It appears that Parks duly qualified as guardian of the plaintiff in June, 1866, and continued to act as such until October, 1881, when he was removed by an order of said County Court, and another guardian appointed. By a vacation order, made May 19,1882, the cause was referred to a commissioner “ to take, state, and í’eport a final settlement of the accounts” of the guardian, and further ordering that the “ commissioner, in making said settlement, shall take as a basis therefor the amount shown to be due the ward from her guardian by the settlement of his accounts, as such, made by Gr. B. Stathers, a commissioner of the County Court, as corrected and confirmed by the Circuit Court of Tyler county
The cause was subsequently removed to the Circuit Court of Wood county, and that court on December 21, 1885, decreed that the deed made transferring the land of one of the sureties was fraudulent, and void as to the debt of the plaintiff, and ordered that, unless said sum of $1,536.93 and the costs of the suit should be paid within 30 days, the said land should be sold, etc. The guardian, William H. Parks, and his sureties
The next inquiry, then, is whether the appellants are in a position to ask this Court to reverse the action oí' the Circuit Court refusing to permit them to impeach said settlement. The record shows that they neither answered the plaintiff’s bill, nor excepted to the report of the commissioner, until after the report had been fully completed and returned to the court. The errors of which they complain are not apparent upon the face of the report. It was therefore too late for the appellants to undertake to assail either the facts or the principles upon which the report was founded, unless the order of reference was itself erroneous. Such, we think, was the fact in this cause. As we have already shown, the order-of reference directed the commissioner to take the amount shown to be due the plaintiff from her guardian by said ex parte settlement as the basis of his settlement to be made under said order. The direction was not that the commissioner should regard said settlement and balance as prima facie correct, but that the amount shown by it should be taken as absolutely and conclusively correct. This is not only shown by the language of the order, but it is confirmed by the subsequent action of the court in refusing the appellants the light, to question the said settlement by their answer or exceptions filed thereto. The order of reference entirely precluded and denied the guardian and his sureties the right to surcharge and falsify said settlement. It was unnecessary, and it would therefore have been useless, for them to appear before the commissioner and attempt to do that which the order denied them the right to do. The commissioner could not, under the order, allow them to assail the said settlement, or change its result in any manner. Consequently, the only place for them to seek redress was before the court itself. This they did without effect, before
We hold, therefore, that the Circuit Court erred in directing the commissioner to take as the basis of his settlement, the amount due the plaintiff by the ex parte report filed in the County Court. It should have directed the commissioner to treat said report as only prima facie correct, and subject to the right of either party to surcharge and falsify it in any proper manner. Seabright v. Seabright, 28 W. Va. 412. This conclusion makes it unnecessary to notice any other errors assigned by the appellants. For the error aforesaid all the decrees of the Circuit Court, including the order of reference, must be reversed and set aside, and the cause remanded to said court for further proceedings.
Reversed. Remanded.