State ex rel. Clark v. McClelland
State ex rel. Clark v. McClelland
Opinion of the Court
It appears by the record herein that on March 16, 1893, the defendant in error, James McClelland, was duly appointed guardian of the persons and estates of the relators, George W. Clark and Bertha Clark, minors, by the probate court of Tuscarawas county, Ohio; that a bond in the sum of $150 was then given by the said McClelland as such guardian with the defendants in error. David Whitmire and Henry Centavin as sureties thereon, and that an additional bond in the sum of $500 was given by him as such guardian in the year 1895, by order of said probate court,
“This defendant further says that the older of said wards, ■Bertha Clark, became of full age on May 5, 1899, and that the younger of said wards, George W. Clark, became of full age on October 3, 1904, and that as the time for filing the said application for a writ of citation did not accrue within ten years next preceding the date of filing the same, the. said application is therefore barred by the lapse of time and the statute of limitations in such case made and provided.”
And that upon a hearing had upon said application to issue said writ of citation said probate court held:
“That the said application and motion on the part of relators to procure an accounting at this late date is barred by lapse of time and the statute of limitations in such case made and provided, and it is further ordered and decreed that the several applications and motions heretofore filed in this court by the said relators requiring and demanding an accounting of said guardianship be and the same are hereby dismissed at the cost of said relators.”
Error was prosecuted to the common pleas court of said
The facts in the case are not disputed. If the action here was an action to compel the sureties on a guardian’s bond to account for a default made in the payment of trust funds by a guardian, the law is well settled that before such action could be maintained there must be a finding and adjudication by the probate court of the amount due on final account to be filed by the guardian. Newton v. Hammond, 38 Ohio St. 430.
But the view we take of the question made by the record before us does not involve the preliminary steps necessary to be taken for suit against the sureties on this bond, but relates solely to the legal right of the relators to,file an application for a writ of citation to issue against the sureties on said bond to account for the default of said guardian. Failing to get service of process on the guardian, resort was had to proceedings instituted against the sureties, and it was upon the commencement of such proceedings, namely, the application filed for a citation to issue against the sureties that the right of the relators is challenged — challenged by an answer filed by one of the bondsmen wherein he pleads the statute of limitations as a bar against the right of the relators to have such writ issued.
As already indicated, the probate and common pleas courts appear to have entertained widely divergent views of this case, the former holding that the statute of limitations operates as a bar, the latter holding that it does not, but rests its affirmance of the judgment by the former on other grounds. Under the general powers incident to the jurisdiction conferred on probate courts in the matter of guardian accounts and the duty enjoined upon such courts by law to guard and protect the interests of minors, we do not incline to the opinion that a case where such interests are endangered by a long continued violation of duty
“All these considerations show the wisdom and propriety of the rule which requires the settlement of guardians’ accounts by the probate court, which, for that purpose, possesses all the powers of a court of equity, instead of a jury, which does not possess such facilities.”
Here it appears that the guardian never filed any account since his appointment and it was not known to the relators, nor had they any means of knowing at the time said application was filed of the amount of pension money collected by him for his said wards. In the application made for the appointment as such guardian by said McClelland, who made oath to the same, the statement therein shows that the property of said wards “consisted of an interest in a pension claim, the value of which is indeterminate. ’ ’ Hence in view of what the record shows they were not then advised of the status of said guardian of said trust in respect to the amount of pension moneys collected by him and with which he was chargeable as such guardian.
We think that said probate court was also in error in dismissing said application. Section 11226 G. C., provides that,
“An action on an official bond, or undertaking of an officer, assignee, trustee, executor, administrator, or guardian, or on a bond or undertaking given in pursuance of statute, shall be brought within ten years after the cause thereof accrued. ’ ’
In the case of Newton v. Hammond, Supra, it was held that,
“A right of action on a guardian’s bond to recover from the sureties the amount remaining in the hands of the guardian, first accrues to the ward when such amount is ascertained by the probate court on the settlement of the guardian’s final account.”
‘ ‘ The court by which a guardian is appointed, shall enforce the return, at the prescribed times of all inventories and accounts required to be filed therein by him, and enforce the per*427 formance of all other duties devolving upon guardians appointed by it, either with or without complaint first made; and thereupon make and enter such judgments and orders as are reqrdsite in any ease to promote the faithful and correct discharge of such duties, or to preserve the estates of minors for whom guardians were appointed.”
“With or without complaint first made.” Charged by the law with the supervision of estates as he is, and “to preserve the estates of minors for whom guardians weré appointed, ’ ’ it would seem that a duty rests upon the probate judge in cases like the one under consideration, and' if such view is correct, ought minors of tender years pay the penalty of such failure of duty in later years? The above statute is cited simply to illustrate the solicitude shown by the law and the care required by it in the administration of estates of minors. The statute is both a humane and just one, and when such estates are taken over and given into the charge and control of others, the latter should be held to a strict account in performing a “faithful and correct” discharge of duty, and the sureties of such person or persons pledging, as they do, their property for such discharge of duty, should be held to the letter of their suretyship contract.
Counsel for defendants in error argued and cited in his brief cases wherein it is held that the limitation of suit on an administrator’s bond is fixed at ten years from the time action accrues, which under the application of the rule laid down by the Supreme Court in this state, as we interpret it, is ten years af ter a final account is filed when the statute of limitations begins to run, and not till then. While it is unnecessary to here state that the statutes in all jurisdictions pertaining to the administration of estates, including the limitation of time in which suits may be had on bonds of administrators and guardians are not the same, and while the statutes of this state have undergone change in this respect by amendment from time to time and the powers of probate courts enlarged, we are of the opinion that the proceeding instituted in the probate court to compel an accounting by these sureties was a proper exercise of the powers incident to the jurisdiction conferred by law on probate courts, and that said court erred in dismissing said proceedings for the reasons hereinbefore stated.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.