163 Mo. 510 | Mo. | 1901
At the general election in November, 1888, the defendant, L. N. Kennedy, was elected public administrator and ex-officio public guardian and curator, of Vernon county, duly qualified and entered upon the discharge of his duties as such. On January 30, 1890, under an order of the probate court of said county he took charge of the estate of Morton E. Torbert, a minor. By his second annual settlement of that estate, made at the October term, 1892, of said court, it appeared that there was a balance due from him to the estate of said ward of $876.29. At the ensuing general election in November, 1892, he was re-elected and duly commissioned and thereupon, with his co-defendants as his sureties, entered into bond in the sum of $15,000, conditioned for the faithful discharge of his duties as public administrator according to law. By his next settlement made in April, 1894, in the probate court, it appeared that a balance of $1,652.82, was due from him to the estate of said ward.
In July, 1896, the said Kennedy resigned his office and the relator, ¡Frederick E. Gordon, was duly appointed his successor and qualified as such.
Afterwards, on the eighth of October, 1896, the said Ken
“Tbe State of Missouri, as plaintiff, suing at tbe relation and to tbe use of Frederick E. Gordon, public administrator of Vernon county, Missouri, and ex-officio public guardian and curator of said county and State, for cause of action states that said Frederick E. Gordon is tbe duly appointed, qualified and acting public administrator of said county; that on or about the eighth day of November, 1892, defendant L. N. Kennedy, was duly elected public administrator of tbe county and qualified as such; that on tbe twelfth day of November, 1892, said L. N. Kennedy as such public administrator with himself as principal, and defendants, Joseph Nipp, B. S. M. Clack and A. E. Forderbase as sureties, entered into a bond to tbe State of Missouri in tbe penal sum of fifteen thousand dollars (a certified copy of which said bond is herewith filed) conditioned as follows: That whereas, tbe said L. N. Kennedy was duly elected on tbe eighth day of November, 1892, public administrator of said Vernon county, Missouri, and commissioned by the Governor of the State of Missouri as such public administrator on tbe twelfth day of November, 1892. Now, if the said L. N. Kennedy shall well and faithfully discharge bis duties as such public administrator according to law, then this bond is to be void; otherwise to remain in full force and effect. That by virtue of bis office aforesaid, said L. N. Kennedy became curator of tbe estate of Morton E. Torbert, a minor, and received into bis possession and charge tbe money and property of said minor; that on or about tbe-day of July, 1896,
The answer of the defendants was a general denial. The ease was tried by the court without a jury, the judgment was for the plaintiff for the penalty of the bond, with award of execution for the sum of $1,745.95, the amount of the damages found against the said Kennedy and defendants Nipp and Eorderhase, two of the sureties on said bond, the same- having been dismissed as to Clack, the other surety thereon. From this judgment the said defendants, Nipp and Eorderhase, appeal.
(1) On the trial the appellants objected to the introduction in evidence of the final settlement of the probate court with Kennedy and its order thereupon, and at the close of the evidence renewed their objection thereto by asking the court to declare the law to be “that sections 305, 5329, 5330 and 5331 of the Revised Statutes of 1889, are, as to the defendants sure
By section 5336, Revised Statutes 1889, it is provided that “the public administrator shall be ex-officio public guardian and shall have charge of all estates of minors that may, by order of the probate court, be placed in his charge.” ' And by section 300, lb., it is provided that “he and his sureties shall have the same powers as are conferred upon, and be subject to the same duties, penalties, provisions and proceedings as are enjoined upon or authorized against executors, administrators, guardians and curators by this chapter, so far as the same may be applicable.” Now, while by section 305, it is provided that “the probate court may at any time, for good cause shown, order the public administrator to account for and deliver all money, property or papers belonging to any estate in his hands to his successor in office, or to the heirs of said estate, or to any executor or administrator regularly appointed, as provided by law,” and by section 5329, it is provided “that guardians and curators shall make final settlement of their guardianship or curatorship upon cessation of their, authority, whether by revocation, resignation or the majority of their wards, or the marriage of female wards,”.... and prescribes the manner in which such settlements shall be made, yet neither of these sections provide for notice of such settlements to the sureties on the bonds of such public administrator, guardian and curator. Neither do they undertake in any manner to fix or determine the liability of the sureties upon such bond, and it is not possible that they can be obnoxious to the constitutional provision cited. And while by section 5330 and 5331, summary pro
(2) The appellants’ next contention is that the relator can not maintain this action for the reason that Kennedy never resigned as guardian of this estate; that “his resignation of his office as public administrator did not work a resignation as guardian of this estate, nor deprive him of the management of the same.”
This contention is based on section 301, Eevised Statutes 1889, which provides that “when a public administrator has been appointed to take charge of an estate, he shall continue the administration until finally settled, unless he resigns, dies, is removed for cause, or is discharged in the ordinary course of law as the administrator.”
This section is, of course, to be read in connection with section 305, supra, and was properly construed by the Kansas City Court of Appeals in an action between these parties upon this same bond (State ex rel. v. Kennedy, 73 Mo. App. 384), in which it was held that “a public administrator continues to administer the estate in his hands even after the expiration of his term of office, unless he dies, resigns his office, is removed, or is otherwise discharged according to law. In this case, as before stated, Kennedy resigned the office, his resignation was accepted by the Governor and his successor appointed. He thereby became incapacitated to further administer estates in his hands and his duties devolved upon his successor. His
(3) On the trial, the appellants introduced Kennedy as a witness, whose evidence tended to prove that at the time of his re-election, and the execution of the bond sued on, he had in his hands only about $200 of the moneys belonging to the estate of his ward Torbert. That the remainder of the $876.29 shown to be due that estate by his settlement made at the October term, 1892, of the probate court had been wasted by him before the execution of the second bond sued on. On motion of plaintiff, this evidence was stricken out, and at the close of all the evidence the court refused the following declaration of law, asked for by appellants: “The court declares the law to be that the defendants sureties are only liable for such sums as came into Kennedy’s hands in said Torbert estate and by him wasted after the execution of the second bond, for his second term of office.”
The action of the court in this behalf is assigned as error. There is but one answer in the case, in which all the defendants joined, and it is simply a general denial of the allegations of the petition. The appellant sureties by this evidence and instruction sought to set up a separate and independent defense not within the issues of the pleadings, and the court committed no error in refusing to entertain it, under the well-settled rule that a defendant can not introduce evidence in support of a defense not set up in the answer, and resting upon facts not
(4) By virtue of his re-election and qualification in pursuance thereof, Kennedy became his own successor, not only as public guardian and curator, but as guardian and curator of the estate of the minor Torbert, and there was no necessity of a special order of the probate court, after his re-election, to take charge of that estate in order to charge him and the sureties- on his bond as such successor.
We find no error in the rulings of the circuit court for which the judgment should be reversed. It is therefore affirmed.