78 Mo. 100 | Mo. | 1883
On the 13th bay of December, 1876, John H. Ware, administrator de bonis non of the estate of Mathew Massengale, was removed, and the public administrator was directed to take charge of said estate. Thereupon said public administrator filed a petition in the probate court under section 67,1 Wagner’s Statutes, page 82, praying the court to ascertain the amount of money, the quantity and kind of real estate, personal property and all the rights, credits, deeds, evidences of debt and papers of every kind of said estate in the hands of the said John H. Ware, as such administrator, at the time of the revocation of his letters aforesaid, and to order and' adjudge the rendition of the same to the petitioner, and for judgment against said John H. Ware and against Hansen II. Ware and James Eurnett, his sureties, for the amount of money found to be in the possession of said John II. Ware at the time of the revocation of his letters of administration, and for all other
It appears from the record that the administrator made three annual settlements, and gave notide, the sufficiency of which is questioned, that he would, at the February term, 1866, make final settlement of said estate, and on the 13th day of Eebruary, 1866, he filed a statement of his accounts as administrator, neither signed by himself nor by any one for him, upon which no action appears to have been taken by the court, and no order made discharging him. In 1863 the probate court ordered the defendant to make distribution of the funds in his hands among the heirs of the deceased, without ascertaining who they were, or what were their respective shares. In 1864 a similar order was made. The testimony is conflicting as to whether payment was made by the administrator in pursuance of said order. It is conceded that the debts have all been paid. Eive of the eleven children of the intestate died after his decease, leaving as their descendants seventeen children, and to these grand-children of the intestate, the
In the case of the State v. Campbell, 10 Mo. 24, it was held that an heir or distributee might sue the administrator for a failure to account for money received by him, as soon as the failure occurred, although no order of distribution or final settlement had ever been made. The case of the State v. Morton, 18 Mo. 53, is to the same effect. In the case of the State to use, etc., v. Fulton, 35 Mo. 305, it was held that when an administrator dies or is removed before final settlement, the administrator de bonis non can alone sue for the assets unadministered; and that although the debts be paid, the heirs have no right of action until distribution is ordered. The case of Vastine v. Finan, 42 Mo. 269, decides that the heirs have a right of action when the debts have been paid and distribution ordered. In the State ex rel. Midgett v. Watson, 44 Mo. 305, it was held that the heirs can sue, although no order of distribution has been made, if the debts have all been paid and there has been a final settlement. In the State to use of Kelley v. Thornton, 56 Mo. 325, it was held that when the debts have been paid, the distributees may sue, although there has been no order of distribution and no final settlement, and that there is no necessity for the appointment of an administrator de bonis non. It had been previously held in the State v. Farmer, 54 Mo. 439, that an administrator de bonis
In Scott v. Crews, 72 Mo. 261, it was expressly decided that notwithstanding the previous decisions of this court giving a right of action to the distributees when the debts have all been paid, the probate court may in such case appoint an administrator de bonis non, and such administrator may institute a proceeding, under section '67, supra, against ah administrator whose letters have been revoked, or he may maintain an action upon the bond of such removed administrator. Nor does the fact that an order of distribution has been made oust the jurisdiction of the probate court to appoint an administrator de bonis non. Until such order has been complied with and the heirs have been paid? the estate is not fully administered. So that, if we concede the orders directing the defendant to pay the money in his hands to the heirs to be sufficient as orders of distribution, the present proceeding maybe maintained. The circuit court found in-the case before us, that there were assets in the hands of the administrator, "Ware, at the time of his removal, which had not been distributed, and there was testimony to support this finding. The evidence shows clearly that no final settlement had ever in fact been made by Ware. The filing of an account cannot, of itself, constitute a settlement. A settlement is the act and judgment of the court, of which there must be some record. Benson v. Harrison, 39 Mo. 302.
The instructions presented by counsel to the court after its decision was announced, cannot be reviewed by us. 2. instructions. They were not presented in time. It is fairly inferable from the record that counsel were present in court when the judge announced his opinion and rendered judgment in the cause, and they-should have presented their declarations of law before the cause was decided. N o surprise of counsel, or refusal of the court to hear them appears in the record.
The judgment is affirmed.