Tyler v. Priest
Tyler v. Priest
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the court.
The plaintiff recovered a judgment against John Q-. Priest, administrator de bonis non, cum testamento annexo, of the estate of Isaac Walker, deceased, in the circuit court of the city of St. Louis, on the twenty-eighth of October, 1885, for the sum of $1,389.02. The action which resulted in the recovery of this judgment was commenced on the twelfth of August, 1884. It was brought under section 191, Revised Statutes, to establish in the circuit court a demand against the estate of Isaac Walker, deceased. This demand consisted of the payment by the plaintiff of two instalments of money to a dowress, the same being instalments of an annuity charged by a judgment of the St. Louis land court, in 1864, upon land conveyed by the defendant’s testator, Isaac Walker, deceased, to the plaintiff, in the year 1857, with covenants of warranty. In other words, it was an action for damages for the breach of a covenant of warranty against incumbrances. Prom the judgment of the circuit court, rendered in that action, an appeal was prosecuted to this court, where the judgment of the circuit court was affirmed on the twentieth of April, 1886. Tyler v. Priest, 21 Mo. App. 685, erroneously reported as Taylor v. Priest. In the concluding part of our opinion in that case, we held ' that the question of the classification and payment of the judgment, including the question whether there were any assets available
After the judgment of the circuit court had been thus affirmed, it was presented to the probate court, and that court entered an order directing that it should be paid in due course of administration. The administrator declined to pay it, claiming that there were no funds in his hands available for that purpose. Thereupon the plaintiff filed her motion in the probate court, praying for an order upon the administrator to pay it. This motion was overruled by the probate court, after a most careful examination of the questions involved and after the filing of a very learned and able opinion upon those questions, which we have had the advantage of reading, but with which we have not been able entirely to agree. The plaintiff appealed to the circuit court where the motion was heard de nono, as required by the statute.
In support of her motion in the circuit court, the plaintiff showed that, according, to the last annual settlement, filed by the administrator on the twenty-third of April, 1887, he had in his hands a balance of $4,679.75, to which the probate court had added the amount of $5,733.03, for error in settlement, thus making the total amount charged against him to be $10,412.78.
This surcharge of $5,733.03, made by the probate court, arose under the following circumstances: Thomas A. Walker, executor of Isaac Walker, deceased, was removed by the probate court on account of his being a nonresident of the state, and John G. Priest, the present administrator, was appointed administrator de bonis non, cum testamento annexo, in his place. Walker appealed from this judgment of removal, and it was reversed by this court. In re Walker, 1 Mo. App. 404. Thereupon Walker was reinstated as executor, where
‘' Gash paid sundry items for costs, attorney’s fees, and other disbursements specified in the account and ordered filed as an exhibit marked ‘ O ’ herewith, as per authorization...............$5,733 03”
*278 ‘ RECAPITULATION.
“ Disbursed on acc. blk. 808 and other propertyinCabanne & Walker’s sub-division, being blocks 796
and 838 per statement........... $2,314 97
The “ exhibit O ” thus referred to was as follows:
“The undersigned, legatees under the will of Isaac Walker and distributees of said estate, by this instrument, consent and authorize John Gr. Priest, administrator de bonis non of said estate, to credit himself in his settlement account with said estate, in and before the St. Louis probate court, with the annexed statement and account, amounting in the aggregate to fifty-seven hundred and thirty-three 3-100 dollars, and we waive all objection thereto, and authorize the said St. Louis probate court to allow the same in the settlement of said administrator’s accounts.
“["Signed] Wm. M. GIawtrt, Trustee,
“Peter I. Nevius, Trustee,
“S. P. Jenkins, Trustee,
“Archibald Maclat, Trustee.
“Gf. W. Bull,
“ R. Maclat Bull.
“New York, Jan. 6, 1882.”
“Disbursed, items disallowed by St. Louis probate court:
Krum & Patrick..;...................$ 250 00
Hall, reporter ...................... 10 00
Clinton, Hall & Brewer, for depositions. 38 50
Other small items..................... 57 80
Disbursed, accounts of heirs, per statement........................... 2891 91
Total............................$5733 03
“ Piled April 1, 1882.”
When this credit and so-called “authorization”
It is now claimed by the plaintiff that this item of $5,733.03, consisting, according to the settlement of Mr. Priest, of moneys disbursed by him for the expenses of litigation, on account of real estate, and to the legatees, should be treated as so much money in his hands subject to the payment of debts, and that the act of the probate court in disallowing the credit and surcharging him with it in each of his annual settlements, should be conclusive upon the question of his obligation to pay this judgment. In his opinion, to which we have already alluded, the learned judge of the probate court took a different view of this question, in the following language: ££The court refused to allow this credit, first, because the authorization did not come from all the legatees, and next, and principally, because there was no proof that all the debts had been paid, and because, on an annual settlement, the court could not conclusively adjudge the question. In every subsequent settlement the administrator asked, and the court refused, the allowance of this sum as a credit, deferring a decision of the question to the final settlement. There is, therefore, a difference between the account as stated by the administrator, and as sanctioned by the court, of the sum of $5,733.03. This item, it is claimed by the creditor [meaning this plaintiff], does not constitute a proper credit, resting, as it does, upon a private arrangement
We incline to agree with the views of the learned judge of the probate court touching the matter, so far as this item is concerned. This surcharge which the probate court has made against the administrator may or may not be assets subject to the payment of debts, accordingly as the propriety of it shall be determined upon a final settlement, where all the interested parties are before the court. While the annual settlements of an administrator are not evidence in his own favor (State to use v. Roeper, 82 Mo. 57), it is equally true that the orders of the probate court approving or disapproving the same are provisional merely ; they are not a judgment; they conclusively establish nothing for or against .him. Ibid. No appeal may be taken from such an
It is argued on behalf of the plaintiff that, as Priest knew of the existence of this item and recognized it by making annual 'payments of this annuity to Mrs. Houghan, the case stands on the same footing, except in respect of classification, as though it had been formally presented to him, or he had waived a formal presentation, in writing, under the statute, prior to the making of such disbursements. We do not think that this view is tenable, for the reason that no part of this demand existed at all until long after the time when Priest made these disbursements. This follows from what we held in Tyler v. Priest, 21 Mo. App. 685, in which we affirmed the judgment establishing this demand. We there held that the statute of limitations of two years in the administration law did not apply to this demand, because it could not have been so presented as to save the bar of the statute. “ It did not arise until the payments of the annual instalments had actually been made to the dowress by the plaintiff. Until that time, no demand could have arisen from the nature of the case. It was not a case of debitum in praesenti solrenxdum in futuro, because the liability to pay the successive instalments was contingent-upon the survival of the
If we lay this disputed item out of view, it nevertheless appears that, independently of it, there was, according to the last annual settlement of Mr. Priest, in his hands the sum of $4,679.75, which was a part of a larger sum collected by him as administrator, on the third of November, 1886, upon a judgment recovered by him as administrator in a suit brought in behalf of the-estate against James A. Beaver and others for damages sustained by the estate of Walker by a breach of warranty on the part of the ancestor of the Beavers. The nature of this judgment will appear from the case of Priest v. Deaver, 22 Mo. App. 276, where the judgment of the circuit court was affirmed after directing a remittitur. See also another similar case in 5 Mo. App. 139, and 79 Mo. 664. This judgment was nothing more than a recovery over by Priest, as the personal representative
The theory on which it is claimed that the money collected upon this judgment,- so recovered by' Priest, is not assets belonging to the estate, is that this money has been really collected from rents of the real estate of two of the devisees, previously set apart to them in partition, but who voluntarily left their .estate in the hands of the administrator. The theory is that, having the right to take possession and collect the rents for themselves, they nevertheless allowed the administrator to remain in possession and collect the rents; that these rents were disbursed in the payment of Mrs. Houghan’s annuity; that this judgment in the case of Priest v. Deaver was simply a recovery back by Priest of the money so disbursed, from the heirs of Deaver upon their ancestor’s covenant of warranty; that, although Priest collected these rents as administrator and charged himself with them in his annual settlements, and disbursed them in payment of a demand which was undoubtedly a liability of the estate of his testator, yet, it is nevertheless to be regarded that he held these rents as trustee for the two devisees of his testator, and not as administrator, and that, although he paid them out in his character of administrator, in satisfaction of a demand against the estate of his testator, they did not lose their character of a trust fund; and that, when he recovered the judgment over against the heirs of Deaver,
Here is an annual settlement of the administrator, which admits that he has this amount of assets in his hands belonging to the estate. Here is a creditor of the1 estate holding a judgment for a much smaller amount
But who is it that is setting up this defence % The distributees are not before the court. It may well be that cases might arise where the administrator would be bound to assert the rights of the distributees of the estate. But how can he, after collecting this amount of assets in his character of administrator, and charging himself with it as such, turn around and face a creditor and say: “This was all a myth ; although I sued for it as administrator, and recovered it as administrator, and possibly levied it by execution as administrator, and charged myself with it as administrator, and when it is disbursed will undoubtedly receive my commissions for disbursing it as administrator—yet, notwithstanding all this, the appearance of my holding it as administrator is merely an appearance. It is a fiction—I really hold it as trustee for these legatees, and they are to be preferred to you, and if you want to collect your judgment, you can go into the probate court with a petition to sell land to pay it, provided you have that right at all. The partition proceedings interpose no bar. It is true that, when you get there, they may oppose you with the records of the probate court, showing that there are sufficient personal assets to satisfy your demand; but what have I to do with that ? ” This process of reasoning, by which a trust fund is one thing for one purpose and another thing for another purpose, does not commend itself to our approval.
the iud-rment of the circuit court is affirmed.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.