This suit was originally commenced in the county court to review the probate decree of that court approving the final account of T. J. Lacy as guardian of the estate of Ellen Gray, a minor, and ordering a distribution of the estate. The petition was dismissed in the county court, and an appeal to the district court was again dismissed in both courts for want of jurisdiction. The judgment of the latter court was reversed on appeal to this court. 60 Tex., 541. It was then held that the order for final distribution was void, and the bill of review, in so far as as it sought a correction of that order, was properly dismissed ; but as a revision of the decree approving the final account of the guardian was embraced in the petition, the judgment of dismissal was reversed, and the cause remanded for hearing on this branch of the case. Afterward the plaintiffs commenced in the district court an orignal suit for the relief which this court had determined they could not obtain in the proceeding instituted in the county court. At the January term, 1885, on the plaintiff’s motion, this original suit commenced in the district court, and the fragment left by the judgment of this court of the case then pending in the district court on appeal from the county court were consolidated. At the July term the order of consolidation was set aside, and the case appealed from the county court was tried, and a judgment rendered for the defendants. The plaintiffs appealed, and they assign as error the action of the court in setting aside the order by which the case was
It was averred and proved on the trial that appellee, Lacey, succeeded Wm. T. Gray as guardian of the estate of Ellen Gray. Wm. T. Gray filed an inventory and appraisement, but made no report .of his three years administration of the ward’s estate. He and his ward fled together the perils of a criminal prosecution, and Lacy became his successor in the guardianship of the estate. The petition charged that Gray squandered the ward’s estate, and that Lacy, having aright
On the trial the appellants objected to certain vouchers for moneys paid out by Lacy on the ground that the claims paid were not proven up or allowed. In the bill of exception the vouchers are not set forth. If, however, they were improperly admitted, the error was immaterial. The plaintiffs charged that the final account filed by Lacy, which showed the credits evidenced by the vouchers, had been improperly approved by the court. The burden was on the plaintiffs to prove errors in the account, and they offered no proof impeaching the items proved by the vouchers.
It appears from the evidence that Wm; Gray was the first guardian of Ellen Gray’s estate, but the plaintiffs do not complain in their-petition of any maladministration upon his part; indeed, in their pleadings they mention only Wm. T. Gray and Lacy. The court below in the findings of fact did not go further back than Wm. T. Gray’s guardianship. Neither the pleadings nor the court’s view of the evidence authorized any investigation of Wm. Gray’s admin istration. The plaintiffs’ petition proceeds upon the idea that Wm. T. Gray received and inventoried the entire estate of his ward, but failed to properly account for it to his successor. If this theory is disproved by the evidence, the plaintiffs’ case is disproved. On an allegation that Lacy failed to recover all the property received by Wm. T. Gray, they can not make him responsible for property which
The court’s findings of facts are well sustained by the evidence. The small items of interest charged by Lacy upon amounts paid out by him are not complained of in the plaintiff’s petition, and no evidence was offered respecting them, other than the report in which they were contained. On the face of that report we cannot say they were not proper charges.
That a less sum was ordered to be distributed than the final account showed was on hand, it was held on the former appeal of this case, could not be reviewed in this proceeding, as the order of distribution was void.
The estate of the ward, whilst yielding a revenue less than a liberal current provision for her, has yet steadily increased, nearly doubling in ten years. This, in a general way, is certainly an exceptionally good showing. Under the very general allegations contained in the plaintiffs’ petition, all the proof the plaintiffs offered was admitted, and as we find nothing in the facts justifying any other judgment than that rendered in the court below, that judgment is affirmed.
Affirmed.
[Opinion delivered November 24, 1885.]