138 Mo. App. 713 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1909
Samuel F. Canterbury, being administrator of the estate of Thomas Johnson, deceased, his letters were revoked by the probate court of Howell county, August 13, 1906, and the appellant, T. J. Langston, was appointed administrator de bonis non. From the opinion of the Supreme Court in the case of Langston v. Canterbury, 173 Mo. 122, we learn Canterbury filed a final settlement to which Langston, as administrator de bonis non, took exceptions. In said case it appeared judgment had been rendered on the exceptions in the Howell Circuit Court, showing a balance of $12.37 due Canterbury as first administrator. This judgment was reversed by the Supreme Court because Canterbury had been allowed certain credits to which he was not entitled, and the cause was remanded for retrial. From the report of the opinion of this court in the subsequent case of State ex rel. Langston v. Canterbury, 124 Mo. App. 241, we learn that the cause passed on by the Supreme Court, was retried in the Howell circuit court and on January 7, 1904, judgment rendéred on Langston’s exceptions to Canterbury’s settlement as administrator for the sum of $2,399, and costs, which judgment was certified to the probate court of Howell county Avhere it was entered of record. These facts also appear in evidence in the present case, the record of the judgment of the circuit court of Howell county against Canterbury and in favor of Langston, as administrator de bonis non, for said sum, having been put in evidence. After judgment had been obtained against Canterbury for said sum, an action Avas brought April 5, 1904, in the name of the State for Langston against Canterbury and the sureties on his bond as administrator, to recover the amount of the judgment which he had failed to pay, and that is the case reported in 124 Mo. App. 241. From the opinion therein it will be learned the sureties on the bond denied they Avere bound by the judgment of the circuit court of Howell county of date January 7, 1904, and
Canterbury’s letters of administration were revoked nearly twelve years before the present action was begun, but plaintiff’s counsel say as the first action on-the bond (the case reported in 124 Mo. App.), was instituted in April, 1904, or in ten years from the revocation, and was not dismissed until December, 1907, on
“And the succeeding administrator, or surviving or remaining executor or administrator, may proceed at law against the delinquent and his or her securities, or either of them, or against any other person being possessed of any of the estate of the deceased, until the end is fully attained; Provided, that no such suit shall be instituted against any security unless the same be commenced within seven years after the revoking, repealing or surrendering the letters, or the death of his principal, and the whole amount to be recovered against such security, shall not exceed the penalty of the bond.”
From the original legislation, as well as from the statutes as they now are, it clearly appears the incoming administrator may have redress against the sureties on his predecessor’s bond, not only in the probate court, but in any court having civil jurisdiction, for any defaults of the predecessor in respect of accounting for and turning over money or other assets of the estate. The alternative nature of the relief was recognized in State ex rel. Crane v. Heinrichs, 82 Mo. 542, 548. Counsel for plaintiff insist section 276 of the statutes governs the case. Said section is not a limitation statute, but one authorizing the bond of an executor or administrator to be sued on in the name of the State by a party injured by waste, mismanagement or other breaches of the bond. As the two sections relate to different subjects, it is apparent they are not in conflict. The ten years limitation for action on writings, sealed or unsealed, has been held to govern suits on the bond of an