Court Opinion

ID: 8007861
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-09-09 01:55:02.81746+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:35:57.266538
License: Public Domain

Martin, C.
The only question presented by the appeal in this case is, whether on an application by a creditor of an estate for an order on the administrator to pay his demand, which has been duly exhibited and placed in the fifth class of claims, the answer of the administrator, that he has paid over the funds of the estate to the distributees, and, for that reason, has no funds on hand, constitutes a valid defense to the application. The St. Louis probate court. *563St. Louis circuit court and St. Louis court of appeals all held, in concurring opinions, that such payment was no discharge of the funds on hand, and would constitute no defense to the application. A similar conclusion was announced in the case of Bassett v. Slater, ante, p. 75.
It is claimed by the administrator in this case, that inasmuch as he entered the payments to the distributees in his first settlement, which was formally passed and approved by the probate court, the legality of such discharge of the funds cannot he questioned by any one interested in the estate, except on a direct proceeding to set aside the order approving the settlement. This position is assumed under a misconception of the nature and effect of an annual settlement. Such settlements are only interlocutory steps in the proceeding in rem, which terminates with the final settlement and order of discharge. The binding effect of the final settlement rests upon the notice and proclamation to all persons interested in the estate to come forward and make known their objections to the administration before it is closed. Fenix v. Fenix, 80 Mo. 27. The preceding settlements do not have the effect of judgments. Picot v. Biddle, 35 Mo. 29. In Baker v. Runkle, 41 Mo. 391, the court remarks in the opinion of Eagg, J. “ It has been the uniform practice of the courts having probate jurisdiction, and we think correctly so, to treat these annual settlements of accounts as mere exhibits of the condition of estates, and upon which orders for the payments of debts or distribution might be made according to the circumstances of the case.” No appeal can be taken from an order approving them. They are only consecutive steps leading to the final settlement, which necessarily includes them. At the final settlement the court can go back and review all the annual settlements. In re Davis, 62 Mo. 450. And proceedings to surcharge and falsify the final settlement, need not ask to have the annual settlements set aside. They are merged in the final settlement, and when that is opened, they are all open for examination and correction *564Sheetz v. Kirtley, 62 Mo. 417. It is not necessary, during the administration, that a person interested in the estate should file formal exceptions to them in order to contradict their import in any proceeding in which they are submitted as evidence. Like any other settlements of the administrator, they may be regarded as prima fade as against him. When they are invoked as evidence against him, he is, undoubtedly, entitled to any evidence they may contain in his favor, like any other paper asserted against a party. But no such evidence can be accepted as conclusive either for or against him.
For the purpose of argument in this case, it may ■ be conceded that, when the petitioners for the order submitted the annual settlement in evidence, the administrator was entitled to the presumption that his payment of the funds to the distributees, as disclosed in the settlement, was made under circumstances which would protect him against the claims of creditors. But this presumption was thoroughly rebutted before the referee by the recitals in the judgment on their claim given in evidence, from which it appears that it culminated in a final judgment in the court of appeals against the estate as early as May 27th, 1876. As against the claim, thus exhibited, the subsequent payments to the distributees in 1877 and 1878 were in positive violation of the lien of the complaining creditors- which it was the duty of the administrator to protect, as taking precedence of the rights to distributees. His payments were of his own motion and in violation of law. His appeal from the order is without merit, either in substance or form.
The judgment of the court of appeals is therefore affirmed.
All concur.