Purslow v. Brune
Purslow v. Brune
Opinion of the Court
The opinion of the court was delivered by
On May 1, 1863, Henry Bruñe was married to the widow of Richard Key, deceased. She was the mother of five children. The plaintiff, Jane C. Purslow, née Key, was her daughter. At the second marriage of her mother she was about four years of age. Her father had died in the military service of the United States, and his children were entitled to a pension. On August 29, 1866, Henry Bruñe was appointed her guardian. The amount of pension-money which he received for the plaintiff was $834.95. She became of age on April 29, 1877. On May 28, 1877, Henry Bruñe made and filed his final settlement with the probate court, showing a balance in his hands belonging to his ward of $926. This settlement was confirmed by the court. The defendant took a receipt from the plaintiff, and was discharged as guardian. On the 9th day of April, 1886, the plaintiff brought this action, to recover $265.86 of pension-money which she alleged that the defendant, with the intention of defrauding
“The defendant is a German, not well versed in the English language, and all of said settlements, except the last two, appear to be in the handwriting of the incumbents of the office of the probate court. But the settlement of March 27,1877, is in the handwriting of S. H. Glenn, an attorney at law, and that of May 28,1877, is in the handwriting of John M. Price, an attorney at law. The defendant kept a memorandum-book — now lost — of his receipts and expenditures, and he had the book present when the settlements were made; the persons making out the settlements had the use of the book to aid them in making them out; that the testimony does not show the shortage of $90 in the pension-money in the settlement on January 6, 1875, was the result of a design on the part of the defendant to cheat or defraud his wards, nor any of them, but the evidence tends rather to show that the item of September, 1873, $60, and March, 1874, $30, were omitted by mistake or inadvertence; and the testimony does not show any fraudulent misrepresentations of the defendant to the plaintiff, nor to the probate court, outside of the omission of the defendant to charge himself with said sum of $90.”
The court further found that $10 of the pension-money was probably paid to John M. Price for legal services, and that there were also two little discrepancies in the accounts, amounting to twenty-six cents, and three cents. Judgment was rendered in favor of the plaintiff and against the defendant; and of this, complaint is made.
The petition shows upon its face that plaintifffs claim is barred by the statute of limitations, unless the defendant was guilty of fraud. The final settlement in the probate court, as before stated, was on May 28, 1877, and this action was not brought until the 9th of April, 1886, nearly nine years after the plaintiff became of age. The findings show, however, that the plaintiff did not know of any omission or error in the accounts of her guardian until about the commencement of this action. The statute of limitations bars her claim, unless the defendant was guilty of actual, constructive, or some other
The findings of the court show that the omission of the $90 and the other little sums was wholly unintentional; and as nine years have elapsed since the final settlement was made with the probate court, and no fraud established or actual wrong done, the plaintiff cannot recover. If there were any mere
The judgment of the district court will be affirmed.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.