24 Kan. 528 | Kan. | 1880
The opinion of the court was delivered by
This was an action on the bond of an executrix. The following are the important facts: On the 28th day of January, 1872, W. 0. Waybright died, testate, leaving a widow, now Sarah Ann Smith, the above plaintiff in error, to whom by the provisions of his last will and testament his entire property was given, subject to the payment of his debts. On the 26th day of February, 1872, the will was
Where suit is brought upon an executor’s or administrator’s bond for malfeasance or misfeasance, and a final settlement is set up as a defense, the inquiry involves a collateral attack upon such final settlement, and mere irregularities, such even as would be sufficient for reversal in proceedings in error, will not avoid its force. It is like any other judgment when thus attacked. If the court had jurisdiction, it will be sustained, errors in the proceedings notwithstanding. Though a court of limited and special jurisdiction, the judgments of a probate court are as authoritative and conclusive as those of the district or any other court of general jurisdiction. The probate court of Greenwood county was the court in which this estate was properly administered, the one in which a final settlement was properly to be made. The court had a general jurisdiction and control of the estate; and if the final settlement had been made and approved at the term named in the notice, there would be little or no question but that such settlement would have been a bar to this action. But the contention is, that because not made at that term, nor at the term to which the consideration of the matter was continued, and not till more than a year thereafter, the court lost jurisdiction, and that no final settlement could then be made without a new notice. Plaintiffs in error offered to show by parol, that the settle- . ment was not approved at the term to which it was continued
It follows from these considerations, that the probate court had not lost jurisdiction of the matter of the final settlement of the estate by its failure to act at the term named in the notice, or at that to which a final continuance of the proceeding. was had; and if it had jurisdiction, then such final settlement is a bar to this action. The question of malfeasance or misfeasance is res adjudicata. .
The judgment of the district court will be reversed, and the case remanded for a new trial.