A creditor of the estate, whose claim had been allowed and approved by the court, filed several exceptions to the first annual account of the administrator. Several of these exceptions were confessed by the administrator, and after a hearing the court made the following record (omitting formal preliminary matter): “Now, after having considered said account and report, the objections to the same, and the evidence, the court finds that the amount of money received by said administrator during the time covered by said account and report to be the sum of $2,623.50, and the amount properly paid out and expended by him as such administrator, and for which he should receive credit against said estate, to be $2,207.59, leaving a balance in his hands in favor of said estate of $415.91, and with all property of said estate that has come into his hands and remaining undisposed of. It is therefore ordered that said account, after making the corrections and reductions proper to be made, shows a balance in his hands, of cash, $415.91, and the same is hereby settled, allowed, and approved.” From this order the administrator appeals.
The amount received by the administrator, as shown by his account, was not changed by the order. Items excepted to, amounting to $75.75, were admitted by the administrator upon the hearing to be erroneous or unauthorized. His account as filed showed a balance due him from the estate of $148.10. Adding to this the amount found by the court to be in his hands, namely $415.91, showed a total reduction of credits amounting to $564.01. Deducting from this sum the items admitted by the appellant to be erroneous or unauthorized, namely $75.75, leaves the sum of $488.26 taken from his credits by the court. The order made by the court does not show what items amounting to this sum were disallowed, but the bill of exceptions and the briefs of counsel make it reasonably clear that that sum was deducted from the item of $950 claimed by the administrator as a payment on account of “family allowances.”
On June 16, 1893, the court made an order that the administrator pay the widow of decedent the sum of $50 per month as a family allowance, “commencing on the twenty-fourth day of November, 1891.” The voucher for said item of $950,
I think the full amount of said voucher, viz., $950, should have been allowed the administrator as a credit upon his account, and that the order appealed from should be modified accordingly, but without costs to either party.
We concur: Yanclief, C.; Searls, C.
For the reasons given in the foregoing opinion, the order appealed from is reversed, with directions to modify the same in accordance with the foregoing opinion, and as so modified that it be affirmed.