60 Wash. 655 | Wash. | 1910
The question in this case is whether the surety on the guardian’s bond may offset the keep of the ward by the guardian against the liability upon the bond, where there is no evidence that the guardian intended to charge such keep against the estate of the ward. The question arises upon the following facts, which are stipulated in the case: That A. R. Mackall, father of Murray Mackall, died in July, 1898, and
“Your petitioner further reports that the money belonging to Murray Mackall amounting to $1,850 is fully and securely invested by your petitioner as guardian in first-class improved property in the city of East St. Louis, state of Illinois, a security with a present market value of $3,400, from which investment your petitioner is receiving a net annual profit of ten per cent per annum upon the amount so invested;”
that on the 6th day of September, 1904, W. O. Chapman, one of the judges of the superior court of the state of Washington in and for the county of Pierce, entered an order approving said report, which among other things provides as follows:
“And it further appearing to the court that all of the acts of said guardian in the management of her trust herein have been regular and in accordance with law, and the court being fully satisfied in the premises: Therefore it is by the court ordered, that all of the acts and transactions of the guardian herein be, and the same are hereby, approved and ratified;”
that no further report has been filed in this cause by said guardian Rosa E. Mackall, and during the month of September, 1906, said Rosa E. Mackall left the state of Washington, and departed for parts unknown; that the real property in East St. Louis referred to in the last report of said guardian was described as follows, which said property was purchased
It is claimed by the petitioner that no allowance should be made for maintenance and support of the minor prior to August 29, 1904, while it is claimed by the surety that she should be allowed for the entire period from death of the father up to September, 1906, subject to the credits herein-before stated; and it is agreed that this may be considered by the court as evidence offered by the surety and excepted to-by the petitioner, and that the decisions of the court may be reviewed on appeal by either party as to the period for which the allowance should be made; that it appears from the evidence that the said Rosa K. Mackall had lost by endorsement for her brother in 1903 the sum she received from her husband’s estate, and that it does not appear that she had any other property or estate; that no attorney’s fees or fees to the guardian Rosa K. Mackall have been paid.
The court below allowed an offset for the keep of the ward after the date of the report of the guardian at $20 per month, amounting to the sum of $500, but refused to allow for such keep prior to the date of the report, for the reason that the report made no claim for such keep, and was therefore con
In Hanford v. Prouty, 133 Ill. 339, 24 N. E. 565, the court said:
. “But it is urged that, as they received from her their maintenance and education during their minority, they should be charged with moneys thus expended in their behalf. . . . but their mother chose, as she had an undoubted right to do, and as perhaps was her legal duty, to maintain them at her own expense, without charging the cost of doing so to their separate estates, and there is no rule which would now permit, and certainly none which would require her, to charge them with such expenditures, in rendering an account of her trusteeship, . . . since it is clearly proper for her, if she sees fit to do so, to voluntarily take it upon herself, and having done so, she cannot be compelled, even in the interest of creditors, to charge her children with the expense of that which she has thus elected to do for them gratuitously.”
In Hutson v. Jensen, 110 Wis. 26, 85 N. W. 689, it was said:
“But it is contended by the appellants that credit should be given for support furnished these minor children by their mother and guardian during the year and a half of her life after her husband’s death, . . . The propriety of the allowance to a widowed mother, whether she be or be not guardian, for reasonable expenses incurred by her in the support of her minor children, out of their estate, need not be impugned or questioned. She has the unquestioned right, if she chooses, to support those children voluntarily and out of her own means; and, if she so elects, it lies not in the mouth of any one else to complain.”
It is no doubt true, as contended by the appellant, that the surety upon the guardian’s bond is entitled to make the
We are of the opinion that the judgment is right, and it is therefore affirmed.
Rudkin, C. J., Parker, Gose, and Fullerton, JJ., concur.