72 Ind. 120 | Ind. | 1880
— This was an action to set aside the final settlement of an estate. The complaint stated that Thomas A. McFarland was appointed guardian of Charlotte Spicer, one of the plaintiffs; that personal estate came into his hands as such guardian, of the value of $1,000 ; thatin'1861 the said Charlotte intermarried with Reuben Spicer, her ■co-plaintiff; that in 1864 McFarland died without making settlement of such guardianship; that soon afterward one Montgomery became administrator of McFarland’s estate; that afterward Montgomery made a report to the proper court, showing a balance in the hands of McFarland, as such guardian, of $1,000, which report, and all the papers pertaining to such guardianship, had been destroyed by fire; that Montgomery afterward died without accounting to said Charlotte, and without settling the estate; that afterward James T. Hockman was appointed administrator of the estate of McFarland remaining unadmihistered; that the said Hockman failed and refused to pay the claim due to the said Charlotte from said estate, and colluded and ■conspired with one William C. Miller, who had become the purchaser of the real estate of which McFarland died seized, to cheat and defraud the said Charlotte and other creditors, by making a false report as to the amount of money expended in paying off the debts and charges against the estate ; that the said Hockman had made a pretended final report of the condition of said estate in his hands, and had obtained an order of court declaring the estate finally settled and dis
The defendant answered:
1. In general denial;
2. That the cause of action did not accrue within six years before the commencement of the suit.
The plaintiffs demurred to the second paragraph of the answer, but their demurrer was overruled, and they replied in denial. At the request of the defendant, the court made a special finding of the facts. The material facts found by the court may, in ¿eneral terms, be stated as follows :
That the said Thomas A. McFarland was appointed guardian of the person and estate of the plaintiff Charlotte Spicer,, who was at the time a minor; that the said Charlotte in 1861 intermarried with her co-plaintiff, Reuben Spicer, who was still her husband ; that in July, 1864, McFarland died without having finally settled his trust as such guardian ; that afterward, in the same year, John L. Montgomery was appointed administrator of his estate; that, while Montgomery was acting as such administrator, he filed in the clerk’s office of Shelby county an account of the condition of the fund in the hands of the said McFarland, as the guardian of the said Charlotte Spicer, showing a balance due to the said Charlotte, which- report was afterward approved, and a record of such approval was made, but the report was not entered of record ; that afterward all the papers pertaining to said guardianship were destroyed by fire; that on the 1st day of January, 1868, the said Montgomery, as such administrator, and the said Charlotte, made a canvass of the amount due her, the said Charlotte, and found that the estate of McFarland owed her the sum of $300.00, which, with interest, amounted to $485.00 at the time of the trial; that the said Montgomeiy died in March, 1871, without having settled said estate, and without having paid any part of
From these facts, the court came to the conclusion that the* plaintiffs had not shown such- an interest in the estate of McFarland as was necessary to entitle them to prosecute-this action, and rendered judgment in favor, of the defendant.
Errors are assigned upon the overruling of the demurrer to the second paragraph of the answer, and upon the conclusion of law at which the court arrived from the facts as above set forth.
The second paragraph of the answer was evidently inap
The’complaint, in legal effect, asked to have the final settlement of McFarland’s estate set aside for fraud, which, it was charged, had entered into and vitiated such final settlement, without any reference to the time at which the plaintiffs’ claim against the estate may have matui-ed.
Such actions are limited to three years after the final settlement is made, by the section of the statute which authorizes them to be prosecuted, and hence do not fall within any of the provisions of the general statute of limitations. 2 R. S. 1876, p. 537, sec. 116; Potter v. Smith, 36 Ind. 231.
The court, therefore, erred in overruling the demurrer to the second paragraph of the answer.
Section 116, supra, provides that any person interested in an estate may have the final settlement of such estate set aside, for mistake or fraud, at any time within three years. It is not enough, therefore, that there was mistake or fraud in the final settlement, in order to have it set aside. The plaintiff must also be shown to have had such an interest in the estate as caused him to be injured by the mistake or fraud complained of. The Pennsylvania Company v. Hensil, 70 Ind. 569. As has been seen, the court, in this case, found that the plaintiffs never filed their claim against the estate of McFarland; that no such record of the claim had been made as was necessaiy to charge Hockman with constructive notice of its existence, and that Hockman had no actual knowledge of such claim, prior to his final settlement of the estate.
Upon the facts thus found, we think the court did not err in coming to the conclusion, that the plaintiffs had failed to show such an interest in the estate as entitled them to have the final settlement set aside, however mistaken or fraudulent, in the abstract sense, or as against the rights of others, such settlement may have been.
As it was made to .appear affirmatively, that the plaintiffs
But the appellants contend that as McFarland was, by reason of his guardianship, the trustee .of the said Charlotte, it became the duty of the appellee, Hockman, to account to her for what McFarland owed her without the necessity of filing a formal claim against the estate. We are, unable, however, to see any good reason for the distinction contended for. After the marriage of the said Charlotte, and the maturity of her claim for a settlement which followed her marriage, the fiduciary relation of McFarland ceased, and he became thereafter a debtor simply for the balance remaining in his hands not previously accounted for. Angelí on Limitations, sec. 178..
The judgment is affirmed, with costs.