Court Opinion

ID: 3529155
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-05 22:41:37.312007+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T13:55:31.720454
License: Public Domain

This case first appeared in Division No. One, wherein an opinion was written by ELDER, J., reversing the judgment and remanding the cause. As a member of that division, I dissented, and the votes of other judges were such as to leave no opinion, and the case was transferred to this court, and the divisional opinion having been rejected, the case has been lodged with me for final disposition. Judge ELDER has fairly outlined the facts, and I adopt his statement of facts, reserving the right to suggest other facts, if such there be. I quote his statement of facts in full, for the reason that he may desire to dissent by opinion in the case, and can shorten his dissent by reason of the stated facts being to all practicable purposes the same. In fact there is no disagreement as to facts, unless such arise from mere conclusions in pleadings. It is purely a paper case. Judge ELDER'S statement follows: *Page 575 
"This is an action to recover $269,288.17 commissions received by defendant from the estate of James Campbell, deceased, to which commissions plaintiff claims he is entitled. The case is here on appeal from an order of the Circuit Court of the City of St. Louis overruling a motion by plaintiff for judgment on the pleadings and sustaining a like motion of defendant.
"The petition is in two counts, the first count being for damages alleged to have been sustained by reason of defendant's refusal to turn over to plaintiff the assets of the estate of the said James Campbell, whereby plaintiff was wrongfully deprived of the commissions he would have earned, and the second count being an action for money had and received, to the amount of such commissions.
"The first count alleges that James Campbell, then domiciled in the city of St. Louis, departed this life at Greenwitch, Connecticut, on June 12, 1914; that on June 16, 1914, a paper purporting to be the last will of said Campbell was presented by defendant to the Probate Court of the City of St. Louis for probate, defendant then alleging that said Campbell was possessed of an estate of the approximate value of $20,000,000; that upon the filing of said will defendant obtained letters testamentary as the executor of the said purported will, and thereupon took possession and assumed control of all the real and personal estate of said Campbell; that on or about September 19, 1914, one Margaret C. Harrison and others, as plaintiffs, instituted a proceeding in the Circuit Court of the City of St. Louis against the Mercantile Trust Company (defendant herein), Florence A. Campbell and others, in the nature of a will contest, wherein they drew into question the validity of the said purported will; that on October 9, 1914, the said Margaret C. Harrison and others, plaintiffs as aforesaid, filed in the Probate Court of the city of St. Louis their motion for the appointment of an administrator pendente lite to take charge of the assets of the estate *Page 576 
of said James Campbell and to administer the same according to law during the pendency of said will contest; that on October 22, 1914, the said probate court sustained said motion and appointed plaintiff as administrator pendente lite of said estate and fixed his bond for the time being at the sum of $10,000, to be increased upon receiving the assets of said estate to the sum of $10,000,000; that thereupon, on the same day, plaintiff, as such administrator pendente lite, tendered his bond for $10,000, which was accepted, approved and filed; that thereafter, on October 23, 1914 plaintiff having arranged for, and being then ready, willing and able to give the increased bond of $10,000,000, and having so advised defendant, made demand upon defendant for the delivery to him of the personal property belonging to the estate of the said Campbell and the surrender to him of the possession of the real property owned by said Campbell, but that defendant, without warrant or authority of law, refused to surrender either the said personal property or the possession of the real estate, and wrongfully and against the right of plaintiff withheld the delivery of the same from him; that by reason of the premises and the wrongful acts of defendant aforesaid, plaintiff has suffered damage in the sum of $269,288.17, for which he prays judgment and costs.
"The second count of the petition alleges that between October 22, 1914, and April 30, 1917, plaintiff was the duly and legally appointed administrator pendente lite of the estate of James Campbell, deceased, under and by appointment of the Probate Court of the City of St. Louis, and as such was entitled to the possession of the property and assets of the said estate and to the compensation provided by law for such administrators for their services in administering upon the estates of deceased persons; that between the said mentioned dates defendant came into possession of the sum of $269,288.17, the same being the compensation provided by law for administration upon the estate of said James Campbell, *Page 577 
which sum defendant withheld, and still withholds from plaintiff, although he has many times demanded it; that by reason of the matters and things aforesaid defendant has received to plaintiff's use the sum of $269,288.17, which in justness and fairness it was not entitled to receive, and which in truth and fact belonged to plaintiff. Judgment is prayed in the sum of $269,288.17, with interest and costs.
"Defendant's answer to the first count of the petition admits that James Campbell died on June 17, 1914, possessed of a large estate; that his will was probated and defendant appointed executor thereof as alleged; that Margaret C. Harrison and others instituted the proceeding in the Circuit Court of the City of St. Louis, and filed their motion in the Probate Court for the appointment of an administrator pendente lite; that the said probate court entered an order purporting to appoint plaintiff as such administrator pendente lite, and that plaintiff gave a $10,000 bond, which the probate court purported to accept and approve. The answer denies all other allegations of the first count of the petition.
"The answer further avers that the proceeding brought by Margaret C. Harrison and others was not a will contest for the reason that none of the plaintiffs in said proceedings were heirs at law of James Campbell, and were in no way interested in his estate or in the probate of his will, and that therefore plaintiff herein was never legally appointed administratorpendente lite of the estate of said Campbell; that in the said proceeding brought by Margaret C. Harrison and others it was pleaded by the defendants that James Campbell left as his sole surviving heir at law his only child, a daughter, Lois Ann Burkham, nee Campbell, and an issue was framed in said suit whether said Lois Ann Burkham was the child of said Campbell, upon which issue a judgment was entered on May 6, 1915, adjudging that the said Lois Ann Burkham was the child and *Page 578 
only heir at law of said Campbell, and that the suit be dismissed; that the plaintiffs in said suit took an appeal to the Supreme Court of Missouri, but on April 30, 1917, said appeal was dismissed, and the judgment of the circuit court thereupon became final; that said judgment, establishing the status of Lois Ann Burkham, is binding and conclusive upon the world, and defendant herein now pleads the same as res adjudicata of the question as to whether Margaret C. Harrison and others had any right to institute suit to contest the said will, and as to whether or not said proceeding was in fact a will contest proceeding.
"The answer further alleges that the appointment of plaintiff herein as administrator pendente lite was void for the further reason that the court fixed plaintiff's bond at only $10,000, to be increased to $10,000,000 upon his receiving the assets, and plaintiff only gave bond for $10,000, and never gave bond for $10,000,000 to entitle him to receive the assets, and that therefore the appointment of plaintiff and the bond for $10,000 were null and void, because bond was not given for an amount "not less than double the amount of the estate," as required by law, and therefore plaintiff never qualified as administratorpendente lite and never acquired any rights under said order of appointment; that within ten days after the order appointing plaintiff administrator pendente lite, defendant herein as executor, Florence A. Campbell, Lois Ann Burkham and the St. Louis University, the persons interested in said estate, filed their affidavits and prayed for an appeal and filed theirsupersedeas bonds for appeal, which was duly allowed to the circuit court; that said appeal coming on to be heard and the parties, including plaintiff herein, appearing, the court after having fully considered the same entered judgment denying the application to suspend the letters testamentary granted to defendant herein, and ordered said judgment certified to the probate court; that thereafter plaintiff herein was allowed an appeal to the Supreme *Page 579 
Court from the judgment of the circuit court, but that the parties who filed said motion, said Harrison and others, did not appeal from said judgment; that subsequently, on April 27, 1918, the Supreme Court entered its order dismissing plaintiff's appeal, and the judgment of the circuit court became final; that in the opinion of the Supreme Court it was decided, first, that plaintiff was not a party to the proceeding to procure the suspension and revocation of the letters testamentary of defendant herein, and that he had no right to appeal from the judgment of the circuit court denying such application, and, second, that his appeal should also be dismissed for the reason that the suit theretofore brought by said Harrison and others had been previously dismissed; that the Supreme Court denied the claim of plaintiff wherein he claimed that the appeal should be entertained, notwithstanding the dismissal of the Harrison suit, for the reason that he was entitled to compensation for his services as administrator pendente lite, and the court decided that he was not entitled to any compensation and that an appeal did lie; that defendant herein therefore pleads said judgment of the Supreme Court as res adjudicata.
"The answer also avers that even if the probate court had jurisdiction to suspend and revoke defendant's letters testamentary, nevertheless, defendant herein and others interested having appealed from said order and givensupersedeas bonds, and the circuit court having entered its judgment denying the application to suspend the letters testamentary, defendant was not guilty of any wrong in declining and refusing to surrender to plaintiff the personal property of the estate or the possession of the real estate; that plaintiff was never entitled to any compensation as administrator pendentelite, because he never administered upon the estate or rendered any service as administrator; that if plaintiff had any right to demand the delivery to him of the personal property and the surrender to him of the possession *Page 580 
of the real estate, such right was vested in him solely as administrator pendente lite; that if plaintiff was ever legally appointed administrator pendente lite, nevertheless his right as such administrator ceased upon the dismissal of the Harrison suit, if not earlier, whereupon the letters testamentary of defendant were reinstated, and plaintiff cannot now bring any action in his individual name, either for the recovery of the estate or for compensation to which he would have been entitled if he had legally qualified as administrator pendente lite;
that under the law plaintiff could only receive such compensation as might be allowed to him by the probate court for services actually rendered by him in administering upon the estate, and that court alone had jurisdiction to make such allowance; that on December 14, 1918, defendant, as executor, filed its final settlement in the probate court, which settlement was approved and an order entered discharging defendant as executor, and that said estate is now finally closed; that if plaintiff had any right to compensation he lost the same because such compensation was not fixed before final settlement of the estate and discharge of defendant as executor, which order is now final; that if plaintiff was entitled to any compensation, such claim would have been against the estate and not against the former executor, and he was entitled either to the whole estate or to nothing, and his cause of action could only be for the recovery of the property of the estate; that he can have no right of action for damages equivalent to such compensation as he might have earned if he had rendered services to the estate, as such claim for compensation could only be urged against the estate and could only be fixed and allowed by the probate court; that defendant, as executor, could not pay plaintiff damages or compensation when the property was demanded, because defendant would have no right to do so, and therefore plaintiff cannot recover; that the damage sustained by plaintiff, if any, was not caused by defendant's *Page 581 
refusal to deliver possession of the estate, as alleged, but because plaintiff failed in due time to make application to the probate court for an allowance of compensation, which that court could have allowed if his claim were meritorious.
"The answer to the second count of the petition denies that plaintiff was the legally appointed administrator pendentelite, that he was entitled to the property and assets of the estate, and that he was entitled to the compensation provided by law for such administrators. The answer then admits that between October 23, 1914, and April 30, 1917, defendant received for its services in administering upon the said estate as executor, the sum of $269,288.17, being five per cent of the amounts disbursed or distributed by it as such executor; that the amount earned and received by it between October 23, 1914, and March 29, 1915, was only $4,629.15, but that the amount earned and received between October 23, 1914, and April 30, 1917, was $269,288.17, and that defendant has refused to pay said sum to plaintiff, although he has demanded the same. The answer then denies that defendant received said sum or any part thereof as compensation due plaintiff or for the use of plaintiff, or that it was not justly and fairly entitled to the sum so received.
"After a general denial of all allegations of the second count of the petition, the answer then pleads specifically the various defenses urged against the first count, all as hereinbefore set forth.
"After the filing of defendant's answer plaintiff moved for judgment on the pleadings alleging that the answer `does not state facts sufficient to constitute a defense against the claim of plaintiff,' and that `plaintiff is entitled, as a matter of law, to the judgment claimed.'
"Thereafter, defendant filed a motion for judgment on the pleadings, as follows:
"`Now comes defendant and states that the plaintiff has declined to make reply to the answer heretofore *Page 582 
filed by defendant, but instead of making reply has filed a motion for judgment on the pleadings.
"`The defendant therefore prays that the answer of defendant be taken as confessed and moves the court to render judgment in favor of defendant upon each count of the petition.'
"The cause was submitted upon the above-mentioned motions. The court overruled plaintiff's motion, and on the same day sustained defendant's motion and entered final judgment for defendant. From this judgment plaintiff has appealed."
I. As suggested in the first part of our statement, this is purely a paper case. There can be no difference as to the facts, unless they arise by virtue of mere statements of conclusions in the pleadings rather than statements of fact. The cause was submitted upon the pleadings under the twoMotions Tantamount  respective motions for judgment upon theto Demurrer.        pleadings. Suggestion is made that those motions for judgments are in law and fact demurrers, and a right to plaintiff to plead over might exist. We do not so view them.
Neither the appellant's abstract of record nor the respondent's supplementary abstract of record shows any request by plaintiff (appellant) to plead over, but on the other hand the whole course of the trial indicates that both parties intended to submit the case — the plaintiff on the theory that defendant's answer did not state any good defense, among the number pleaded, and the defendant on the theory that such answer (1) did contain at least one or more absolute defenses to all matters pleaded in the petition, or (2) that the petition stated no cause of action. Of course the motion of plaintiff also covered the view that his petition did state a cause of action, in one or both counts thereof, as it could not well be said that he was moving for judgment upon a lifeless petition. Had plaintiff desired to treat the motions as demurrers, *Page 583 
he should have at least asked leave to plead over after defendant's motion (demurrer under appellant's theory) had been sustained. This he did not ask and permitted judgment to go against him. Learned counsel for the plaintiff did not treat these motions as demurrers. The additional abstract of record (undisputed here) prints the complete bill of exceptions. As to plaintiff's motion this record says:
"Thereafter, to-wit, on the 4th day of October, 1920, at the October term of said circuit court, the said court overruled plaintiff's motion for judgment on the pleadings; to whichaction and ruling plaintiff at the time duly excepted andcontinues to except."
As to defendant's motion for judgment this record says:
"To which action, ruling and judgment of the court in sustaining defendant's motion for judgment on the pleadings and in entering said judgment plaintiff at the time duly excepted and continues so to except."
When able counsel took these exceptions and filed this bill of exceptions they were clearly of the opinion that these motions were not demurrers, but on the other hand were such instruments as required a bill of exceptions to preserve them. These counsel knew that no bill of exceptions was required to preserve a demurrer or a motion which performs the functions of a demurrer. We note that three ex-members of this court appeared for plaintiff. The third one appears upon the reply brief for the first time. In this brief the idea of these motions being in the nature of demurrers is practically abandoned, and the case here is in said reply brief presented upon the only possible theory for plaintiff's side of the case, i.e. that the record proper is before us and that upon the pleadings the judgment is erroneous.
II. It is urged that these motions for judgment were in the nature of demurrers, and therefore no bill of exceptions was required to preserve them. There is support *Page 584 
of this view in Todd v. Mo. Pac. Ry. Co., 33 Mo. App. l.c. 114, but the rule there, or even the rule in O'Connor v. Koch, 56 Mo. l.c. 262, does not accord with the recent rulings of this court. The ruling in O'Connor's Case was right in result, but there is some broad language used in the opinion on the page indicated above. The motion involved there was one to dismiss the case and was not one for judgment on the pleadings.
Beginning with Sternberg v. Levy, 159 Mo. l.c. 629, there is a long line of recent decisions holding that a motion for judgment on the pleadings is not a demurrer, and that such a motion must be preserved in the bill of exceptions, which bill of exceptions must contain a motion for new trial, in which the action of the court on the motion is called to the attention of the court. In the Sternberg Case, supra, it is said:
"It is claimed that the motion for judgment on the pleadings is not a demurrer, and hence is part of the record proper, and therefore no motion for new trial or bill of exceptions was necessary, but that the court will review the judgment upon the record, so constituted.
"A motion for judgment on the pleadings is not a demurrer. It partakes of some of the qualities of a demurrer, but it is not a demurrer, and hence it is not a part of the record. It is a matter of exception and can only be made a part of the record by a bill of exceptions.
"It partakes of the nature of a demurrer, in that, it admits all facts that are well pleaded, and if it is overruled the order overruling it is not a final judgment from which an appeal will lie, but the party may plead over or proceed to trial on the issues joined. On the contrary, if it is sustained, judgment goes at once, whereas if a demurrer is sustained the order is not a final judgment, the party has a right to plead over, and it is only in case of refusal to plead over that final judgment can be rendered on demurrer."
See also Coffey v. Carthage, 200 Mo. l.c. 629; Godfrey v. Godfrey, 228 Mo. 513; Shohoney v. Railroad, 231 *Page 585 
Mo. l.c. 152; Interstate Ry. Co. v. Railroad, 251 Mo. l.c. 717; Equitable Life Ins. Co. v. Natl. Bank of Comm., 197 S.W. l.c. 117; Hodson v. McAnerney, 192 S.W. l.c. 423. These cases not only rule that a motion for judgment upon pleadings is a pure matter of exception, which must be preserved in a bill of exceptions, but they further hold that there must be present in the bill of exceptions a motion for a new trial in which the court's attention is called to the matter. That there must be a motion for a new trial in order to preserve such motion for judgment in a bill of exceptions is more tersely stated in Equitable Life Ins. Co. Case, supra, wherein it is said:
"It is contended that the court erred in overruling plaintiff's motion for a judgment upon the pleadings. Concerning this point, it is sufficient to say that the matter is in nowise saved or referred to in the motion for a new trial, and the point is therefore not properly preserved for appellate review. [Godfrey v. Godfrey, 228 Mo. 507; Interstate Ry. Co. v. Railroad,251 Mo. 707.]"
The other cases are fully in line, but the case of Coffey v. Carthage, supra, fits this case as does the glove the hand. In that case, in discussing matters of exception (and considering whether the sustaining or overruling of a motion for judgment is a matter of exception), it is said, at page 629:
"It is well settled that no matter of exception can be considered by this court upon appeal or writ of error, unless the attention of the court below be called to it upon motion for new trial. This has been so often decided that it is deemed unnecessary to cite authorities upon the subject. The mere preservation of this question in the Jasper Circuit Court, by having signed by the judge of said court, and filed therein at the same term at which the ruling was made, a bill of exceptions, did not obviate the necessity of thereafter, after verdict, filing a motion for new trial specifically setting forth therein all matters of exception complained of, and thereby give the trial court an opportunity to correct its own error." *Page 586 
So that we rule (1) that court actions upon motions for judgment are matters of exception; (2) that there must be a motion for a new trial again calling the court's attention to such action; (3) that the motion for a new trial and the exception must both be preserved in a bill of exceptions. There was no motion for a new trial in this case, and absent that motion from the bill of exceptions we have only the record proper before us. This is so ruled in Coffey's Case, and has been the unbending rule of this court. The record proper consists in the instant case of the pleadings (petition and answer) and the judgment entered. Of that matter later.
III. There can be no question that the failure to file a motion for a new trial and to preserve an exception to the overruling of that motion in the bill of exceptions, renders all exceptions taken during the trial absolutely futile in the hearing in this court. Such failure leaves, as above said, only the pleadings and judgment (the record proper) for our consideration.Permissible  In addition to the cases cited, which cover thisJudgment.    proposition, as well as the question as to the character of the motions for judgment, many others could be cited. As said in the Coffey Case, supra, further citations are useless, so universal are our holdings.
Passing now to the pleadings and judgment, what is the situation? The judgment simply recites that defendant's motion for judgment upon the pleadings is sustained, and adjudged that defendant have judgment with the dismissal of plaintiff's petition. Is such a judgment proper under the facts pleaded? If the petition fails to state a cause of action, then this judgment is sustained by the pleadings. If the petition states a cause or causes of action, and the answer states one or more good defenses to such cause or causes of action pleaded in the petition, then the judgment accords with the pleadings. In other words, the motion of plaintiff admits all well pleaded facts. A petition may plead facts which make a cause of *Page 587 
action and yet the answer may plead facts which show an absolute defense or defenses notwithstanding the matters stated in the petition. As example, a plaintiff may plead on a note, and the defendant plead payment. If plaintiff fails or refuses to reply and the defendant moves for judgment, the fact of payment is an admitted fact, and judgment must go for defendant. In other words, the defendant's motion for judgment is good: (1) if the petition fails to state a cause of action, or (2) if the answer states a defense, notwithstanding the statements made in the petition. In this light we shall view the pleadings, and from them determine whether or not there is foundation upon which the judgment can legally stand.
IV. The petition discloses the fact that Mr. Leahy never did a thing in the administration of the estate. It is averred therein that he never came into the possession of the assets of the estate. He says that he demanded the assets before he gave the statutory bond required by law, which would entitle him to receive them. He makes no claim to haveNominal Bond:        served the estate either by collecting andNo Right to Assets:  preserving the estate, or in theJurisdiction.        distribution thereof, if he could make distribution. We have ruled that an administrator pendente lite has no right to make distribution. [Union Trust Co. v. Soderer, 171 Mo. l.c. 679.] He holds and preserves the estate, and in emergencies, under order of court, may make disbursements for the protection of the estate. At the end of the litigation he must turn over to the regular executor or a regular administrator. It may be the one named in the will, or one later named by the court. Receivers, executors or administrators are paid for services actually rendered. They are unlike persons holding official positions with salaries fixed by law. This much we ruled in the previous case, and from that ruling we see no sound reason to depart. [Leahy v. Campbell, 274 Mo. l.c. 358 et. seq.] We then said at the pages cited: *Page 588 
"So far as the record before us shows Leahy never got further than giving the $10,000 bond mentioned in this order. He never qualified under the order, so as to receive and hold the assets of the estate. It is not contended that he ever got possession of the estate. . . .
"Discussing the section of law authorizing the appointment of an administrator pendente lite, this court in Hawkins v. Cunningham, 67 Mo. l.c. 417 and 418, has thus described such an administrator: `This section distinguishes betwixt an administrator appointed pending the contest of a will and the executor appointed by the will or an administrator with the will annexed. The latter is termed the regular administrator. The administrator appointed while the suit is pending is only a temporary or special administrator. In the case of Lamb v. Helm, 56 Mo. l.c. 433, this court said: "Such special administrators occupy more nearly the position of a receiver who acts under the direction of the court, than they do the position of a general administrator."' To like effect is State ex rel. v. Imel, 243 Mo. l.c. 186. . . .
"We again quote from the learned opinion in Imel's Case, 243 Mo. l.c. 186: `By analogy, his office is said to be in the nature of a receivership; and, when the contest is at an end and the validity of the will established, his term of office expires and his right to act ends. The executor or regular administrator c.t.a. becomes again qualified to act in the administration of the estate. So, when that time comes the provisional administrator is functus officio. He must step down and outinstanter, settle and turn over the money and property of the estate to the executor or regular administrator, who, by that token, comes into his own again. [R.S. 1909, sec. 21; Robards v. Lamb, 76 Mo. l.c. 194; Robards v. Lamb, 89 Mo. l.c. 311; State ex rel. v. Moehlenkamp, 133 Mo. l.c. 138; Lamb v. Helm, 56 Mo. l.c. 432; Hawkins v. Cunningham, 67 Mo. 415.]'
"In the instant case, Mr. Leahy never had possession of the Campbell estate. He never performed a single *Page 589 
duty imposed by law upon administrators or executors, nor did he a single act in the line of a receiver. He neither collected nor distributed a single penny of this estate, to the time the law rendered him (to use the language of Imel's Case, supra)`functus officio.' He may have partially qualified himself to act by giving the first limited bond required by the order appointing him, but he never acted. Administrators and receivers are not paid for being qualified to act, but they are paid for services to the estate actually rendered. In the case of administrators, Section 229 fixes the services to be performed and the pay therefor, and as to receivers the court fixes the compensation on the basis of services performed, and not on the basis of services to be performed, or on a willingness to perform services. From the time of his appointment to the date of his statutory demise not a service to this estate was rendered by Mr. Leahy. This is not a case where an officer in a contested election holds his office until ousted. In such case the successful contestant may be entitled to recover for what he would have earned. This is not such a case, and cannot be governed by the same rules. Administrators and receivers must serve the estate before they are entitled to compensation. Their compensation, under the law, is based upon actual service in the preservation and distribution of the estate. Willingness to perform does not suffice."
In the same case we suggested that Mr. Leahy had never qualified to receive the assets and administer upon the estate. The petition upon its face shows that a $10,000 bond was not in compliance with the demand of the statute. The quotations supra so show.
The probate court was without power to authorize the turning over of vast assets, without the statutory bond. In this case Mr. Leahy might have been amply responsible personally and without any bond, but the purpose of the statute is to make safe the assets of the estate by good and sufficient bond in double the amount *Page 590 
of the assets, and this too, before the assets shall be turned over to the person named. The reason for this rule is clear, or can be made clear. Suppose there be an estate of one million dollars in cash or negotiable bonds. Suppose the court made an order as was made in this case, and the appointee under a ten-thousand-dollar bond got possession of the one million dollars and then fled the realm. He could pay his bondsmen and have a neat sum for his trouble. This but demonstrates the idea that the law contemplates a bond in double the assets, and this bond in advance of receiving the assets. The statutory bond is a condition precedent to receiving the assets and acting in the matter. The order of the probate court upon its own recital of facts was a fraud upon the law, and in so far as it attempted to authorize the turning over of the assets in advance of the statutory bond was void. Mr. Leahy, from the face of his own petition, had never legally qualified to demand or take possession of the assets of the Campbell estate. This much we ruled in the previous case, supra. The regular administrator or executor could rightfully refuse to turn over the assets until the administrator pendente lite had qualified by giving the bond required by law. It would be a dangerous doctrine were we to announce that in the face of the statute a probate court could authorize an administrator to take possession of large estate assets on a mere nominal bond. The statute does not so read, and we would do violence by writing such an idea into the law. Leahy having no right to demand or receive the property, acquired no cause of action by reason of the refusal to turn over to him. The count in tort for this and other reasons fails. Without a right to demand he could not have action in tort or otherwise.
V. Apparent upon the face of plaintiff's petition is another fatal defect. Had the petition averred the giving of a statutory bond (which it does not) and had it averred that plaintiff had taken the actual possession of *Page 591 
the estate, and had performed services toward the preservation of such estate, pending an actual will contest, yet the plaintiff should have first presented his claim forSuit Must be    services to the probate court for considerationBrought in      and allowance. In other words, the probate courtProbate Court.  is the court having original jurisdiction in such claims, and not the circuit court, where by this suit the plaintiff first lodged his claim. As this court has ruled (Union Trust Co. v. Soderer, supra), and as stated in 11 R.C.L. sec. 558, p. 453, special or temporary administrators (an administrator pendente lite is such) are not appointed to wind up and distribute an estate, but to preserve the estate for the regular administrator. In a will contest the regular executor would receive from the special administrator the estate for final settlement and distribution if the will be sustained. If it be not sustained, then a regular administrator would have to be appointed, and he would receive the estate from the temporary administrator. As stated in the text cited, supra:
"The occasion for such an appointment usually arises when for some cause, such as a pendency of a suit concerning the proof of the will, regular administration is delayed. Obviously, therefore, the powers and duties of a special administrator are limited, and do not include authority to settle or distribute the estate or to sell land for any purpose. Generally they are restricted to the conservation and preservation of personal property of the decedent until a regular administrator can be appointed. And it is the duty of a special administrator to turn over the estate to the regularly appointed administrator or executor, on his appointment, which generally works a revocation of the special letters."
If for the preservation of the estate it became necessary to pay out funds, or even to sell real estate, we are inclined to the view that under an order of the probate court, whose officer he is, as a receiver is an officer of a chancery court, he could pay out money or even sell *Page 592 
realty, but only for the preservation of the estate. The statute makes no provision for the sums to be allowed such special administrator. Section 220, Revised Statutes 1919, and Section 229, Revised Statutes 1909, refer to the regular administrator. [Hawkins v. Cunningham, 67 Mo. l.c. 418.] But even if the special administrator were to receive compensation (and he should if he preserves the estate), for such services as he rendered, it would be for the probate court to pass upon in the first instance. Those statutes provide for a commission of five per cent, but it has been ruled that such allowance cannot be made unless distributions have been made. It is the final distribution which determines the five per cent commission. [In re Garrison v. Trust Co., 77 Mo. App. 338; Hawkins v. Cunningham, 67 Mo. l.c. 418; Hitchcock v. Mosher, 106 Mo. l.c. 582.]
If one administrator serves part of the time, and another the remainder, we have never gone further than to rule that the first administrator should be paid only on the amount of funds disbursed by him. [Cases cited, supra.] Whilst the statute fixes the commission, yet it contemplates that it should be allowed by the probate court and paid out of the estate at or prior to the final settlement of the estate. The allowances are made by the probate court. Mr. Leahy made no claim against the estate in his alleged capacity as administrator pendente lite. He makes no claim now for anything save the five per cent. If the probate court wrongfully paid the defendant, this fact does not give Leahy a cause of action against the defendant. If he were entitled to anything (which we deny under the facts pleaded by him) his claim was against the estate and not otherwise. He is neither suing the estate nor the executor of the estate. This suit is one between private individuals. This also suffices to sustain the judgment nisi, for if it be conceded that the allowances made to defendant were wrongfully made by the probate court, the estate, through the heirs and devisees, alone could complain. This alleged wrongful *Page 593 
payment could not give this plaintiff a cause of action against defendant. His claim, if any he had, was against the estate.
As to that count in his petition alleging failure to turn over upon demand and consequent damages, it suffices to say that his remedy was to sue for the possession, if he were qualified to sue for and receive the assets of the estate. This he did not do. Or, he might have had defendant cited in the probate court for withholding property of the estate. This he did not do. He stood by and allowed the probate court to pay these fees to defendant and close the estate. These allowances, like other judgments of the probate court, are final as to the right of defendant to receive the commission.
VI. The foregoing propositions are based upon the theory that plaintiff's petition failed to state a cause of action. These, we think, suffice to permit the judgment entered to stand upon the pleadings herein. But this is not all. There wasRes Adjudicata.  much new matter in the answer. Judgments of the probate court, of the circuit court and of this court are plead in the answer as res adjudicata. Some of this new matter should be noted. It must be considered that plaintiff filed no reply, and hence the facts stated in the answer constitute very largely the facts of the present case. Averring that the suit filed by Margaret Harrison et al. was not a will contest, the answer in this case avers that the probate court suspended the letters of administration issued to defendant upon the application of Margaret Harrison et al; that an appeal from such judgment and order was granted to the circuit court; that Leahy and his attorneys were present and assisted Harrison et al. in that trial in the circuit court; that the judgment of the circuit court was against Harrison et al., and in favor of the defendant in this suit and the heirs and devisees of Campbell; that Harrison et al. did not appeal, and on *Page 594 
these facts this circuit court judgment is res adjudicata. These facts bring in a matter not involved in the case of Leahy v. Campbell, 274 Mo. 343, supra. In that case we ruled that Leahy was not a party to the suit, and hence could not appeal. This because only a party to a suit can appeal from a judgment therein. Upon this point we need not cite he case, but we cite the statute, Section 1469, Revised Statutes 1919. Since 1895, Laws 1895, p. 91, that statute has read: "Any party to a suit." Prior to that it read: "Every person aggrieved" might appeal. But the ruling in Leahy v. Campbell, 274 Mo. 343, supra, is not opposed to the plea of res adjudicata now invoked against Leahy in the pleading of this circuit court judgment. As to all the parties shown by the pleadings such judgment became final in the circuit court. This because they did not appeal. This, however, does not militate against this circuit court judgment as beingres adjudicata as to Leahy. One does not have to be a party to the record to be estopped by a judgment. If he participates in the trial, as it is averred in this answer, then we have resadjudicata, or estoppel by judgment, just as fully as if he had been a party. His interest was interlaced with Margaret Harrison et al. They sought the suspension of the Mercantile Trust Company as executor of James Campbell, and Leahy was interested in that suspension. He fought his fight through Margaret Harrison et al. Margaret Harrison et al. quit at the judgment of the circuit court. As to them the judgment became final in the circuit court, and as to them it was res adjudicata. It is just as much resadjudicata as to Leahy as it is to them, under our rulings. [Titus v. Dev. Co., 264 Mo. l.c. 246 et seq; State ex rel. v. Stone, 269 Mo. l.c. 344, and cases there cited.]
So, whilst Leahy (not being a record party to the action) had no right to appeal, he, owing to the pleaded facts in the present answer, would be bound by the judgment. *Page 595 
VII. To obviate the situation described above it is urged that there was no right of appeal from the probate court to the circuit court in the case disposed of in the circuit court, and, therefore, no jurisdiction in the circuit court. This presents a question which is not really discussed in view of our suggestion last above made. That question is, have we a judgmentCollateral  in the circuit court which can be attackedAttack.     collaterally? Absent jurisdiction of parties to an action, and absent jurisdiction of the subject-matter, apparent upon the face of the record, a judgment may be attacked collaterally but not otherwise. That both the circuit court and the probate court had the parties before them cannot be gainsaid. The judgment could not be void for want of jurisdiction over the parties. The subject-matter was the suspension of an executor under a will. The probate court had jurisdiction of such subject-matter. It has jurisdiction of all matters relating to estates and their administration. It had power to appoint, remove and suspend administrators. It had like power to remove or suspend executors. [Sec. 2542, R.S. 1919.] The jurisdiction of both subject-matter and persons was in the probate court, and when that court granted the appeal the law gave the circuit court jurisdiction over appeals from the probate court. [Clause 4, Sec. 2436, R.S. 1919.] The circuit court became possessed of both the subject-matter and the parties, and this is true although the probate court committed error in granting the appeal, and the circuit court erred in hearing the same on its merits. There is a difference between mere error in the course of a case and the absence of jurisdiction which allows a collateral attack upon a judgment. [15 R.C.L. secs. 310 and 311, p. 835 et seq.] When this appeal reached the circuit court, such court had the power to say whether or not it was rightfully there. If it decided wrong, it was a matter of error to be reached on appeal, and not a matter subjecting its judgment to collateral attack, as is insisted upon here. This because *Page 596 
the circuit court is given jurisdiction to hear and determine all appeals granted by probate courts. [Clause 4, Sec. 2436, R.S. 1919.] It may be that at times the appeal may be wrongfully granted, but such fact does not prevent the circuit court, under its jurisdiction to hear such appeals, to determine the matter; and if the circuit court determines the question contrary to law, it is a matter of error and not one of jurisdiction. So, that, without discussing the right of the probate court to grant an appeal (the matter uppermost in the contention of counsel), it is clear that the circuit court had jurisdiction to determine such appeal, and its judgment is not subject to collateral attack. In plain terms, if the circuit court should have dismissed the appeal instead of hearing the case upon the merits, its failure was a mere matter of error and not absence of jurisdiction, because it is given jurisdiction of all appeals granted by the probate courts. The judgment in the circuit court was not subject to collateral attack, and Leahy was bound thereby under the facts pleaded in the answer. If the subject-matter was one over which the probate court had absolutely no jurisdiction, we might have a different case. It did have power to revoke and suspend letters of administration. Suspension is but a limited revocation. There is no statute prohibiting an appeal, and it did grant the appeal. Of all appeals the circuit court had jurisdiction. After that errors and not want of jurisdiction were in the case.
VIII. It is rightfully said by counsel that we did not specifically pass upon the question of the propriety of the probate court in granting the appeal in the matter wherein it suspended the letters of administration to the Mercantile Trust Company. We gave our views upon it and said that we were satisfied with the rulings upon other questionsAppeal: From    which determined the case, and would pass aOrder of        discussion of the matter. One of those questionsProbate Court.  was that Leahy could have no interest in the appeal, because *Page 597 
he had not served the estate and could not be entitled to pay. When this was said his time to serve had lapsed by reason of the will having been previously sustained by a dismissal of the plaintiff's appeal in the will contest case. In this opinion the writer's views received the full approval of WOODSON, WALKER and FARRIS, JJ., and in paragraph two of the opinion we had the approval of BOND, J. After properly saying that we did not in the previous case rule on the right of the probate court to grant an appeal in the matter of suspending the letters of administration of the Mercantile Trust Company as executor of Campbell's estate, counsel proceeds to urge that there was no right of appeal. As stated, supra, so far as this case is concerned, it is immaterial whether there was or was not such right. The circuit court having been granted jurisdiction of all appeals from the probate court (Sec. 2436, R.S. 1919) possessed the full power to dispose of that appeal; and if it disposed of it contrary to law, it was an error to be corrected upon appeal. It did not destroy the judgment under a plea of res adjudicata as is presented in this case.
We have no reason to dodge even this issue suggested by counsel. Nor do we deny that an appeal is statutory. We do, however, contend that we have statutes which fully justified the Probate Court of St. Louis in granting the appeal from its order and judgment suspending the letters of administration granted to the Mercantile Trust Company. Administrators pendente lite hold until the reason for their appointment ceases. They are arms of the court to protect and preserve the estate, not to settle or distribute the same. See note to Davenport v. Davenport, 6 Am. 
Eng. Ann. Cases, p. 623 et seq. In the appointment of such administrator, and the suspension of the executor's power to act, the order of suspension may mean the final discharging of the executor, for if the will is defeated such would be the result. Whether or not the judgment of suspension was lawfully made is, in my judgment, appealable under the ninth as well as the *Page 598 
fifteenth clause of Section 282, Revised Statutes 1919. Originally the fifteenth clause was not in this statute. This fifteenth ground appeared for the first time in 1845 and was added for a purpose. That purpose was to cover matters not therefore covered. These two clauses so far as pertinent read:
"Ninth, on all orders revoking letters testamentary or of administration; . . . fifteenth, and in all other cases where there shall be a final decision of any matter arising under the provisions of Article I to XIII, inclusive, of this chapter."
The suspension of the letters mentioned was, in fact, a revocation of the power of the executor to act. It was, in fact, a revocation either temporary or permanent (owing to result of the will contest) of the letters of administration. We have treated it as a revocation, for FERRIS, J., in State ex rel. Damon v. McQuillin, 246 Mo. l.c. 688, said:
"The statute provides that during a contest the letters of the executor may be revoked and an administrator appointed, pendentelite; this, upon the theory that the contest suspends the judgment of the probate court. Proceeding upon this idea, it has been decided in a very recent opinion by LAMM, J., that the application to revoke the letters of the executor, and appoint such administrator, may be made as soon as the petition in the contest is filed, and such is the common practice."
Other cases have like expressions, and the statute, Section 13, Revised Statutes 1919, is not averse to this construction. This statute reads:
"If the validity of a will be contested, or the executor be a minor, or absent from the State, letters of administration shall be granted during the time of such contest, minority or absence to some other person, who shall take charge of the property and administer the same according to law, under the direction of the court, and account for and pay and deliver all the money and property of the estate to the executor or regular administrator when qualified to act." *Page 599 
This provides for the granting of new letters and necessarily contemplates the revocation of the previous letters during the life of the letters to the administrator pendente lite. This court has heard and determined appeals such as we had in Campbell's Case and proceeded without question. [Rogers v. Dively, 51 Mo. l.c. 194; Lamb v. Helm, 56 Mo. l.c. 430, where the Rogers Case is reviewed; Achor v. Sullenger, 137 Mo. App. 372.] In the first and last of these cases there was an appeal from the probate court's judgment suspending letters testamentary to the executor in the will where a will contest was on in the circuit court or court of common pleas, and then an appeal by the displaced executor to this court from the judgment of the circuit court. In the last case we transferred the case to the St. Louis Court of Appeals, and our former brother, GOODE, J., wrote the opinion. In the Lamb Case an appeal from a similar order in the probate court was to the circuit court, and from that brought to our court on writ of error. Not until the case of Leahy v. Campbell has it been seriously urged by bar, or seriously considered by bench, that an appeal did not lie in a case of this character. The only case cited by my learned brother, State ex rel. v. Mochlenkamp, 133 Mo. l.c. 138, does not rule that an appeal does not lie. Evidently in urging their right to prohibition counsel in that case suggested that there was no appeal, and what BURGESS, J., said was in response to that matter. Suffice it to say that he did not rule that an appeal would not lie. He simply ruled that the probate court had jurisdiction and prohibition would not lie, because such writ cannot be made to perform the functions of an appeal, a writ of error or a certiorari, its purpose being not to correct errors but to prevent an usurpation of jurisdiction.
This opinion is valueless on the question. The fact that both bench and bar have recognized this right to appeal from a judgment of suspension, as indicated by the cases cited, would be very persuasive even without the language of the two clauses of the statute, supra. *Page 600 
Not only so, but in Hanley v. Holton, 120 Mo. App. 399, we have a case where the administrator pendente lite moved to have the suspended executrix to make settlement; and the motion being overruled, an appeal was allowed and the Court of Appeals held that it was a final judgment and came under the fifteenth clause of Section 282, supra. The circuit court had dismissed the appeal on the ground that it should never have been allowed. See also In re Estate of Rooney, 163 Mo. App. l.c. 393; McCrary v. Menteer,58 Mo. 446. In State ex rel. Alderson v. Moehlenkamp, 133 Mo. l.c. 138, 139, it is said:
"By this statute it is perfectly clear that the probate court had authority to suspend the functions of the executor named in the will and to appoint an administrator pending the contest. . ..
"The controlling question, however, is one of jurisdiction in the probate court. It was for that court to determine from the evidence before it whether there was a proceeding pending at that time in the Circuit Court of St. Charles County, contesting the will of Benjamin A. Alderson, deceased, and this court cannot assume its functions and determine in this extraordinary proceeding whether or not its rulings were correct. If error was committed in its rulings it cannot be corrected by this proceeding. [State ex rel. v. Withrow, 108 Mo. 1; State ex rel. v. Burckhartt, 87 Mo. 533.]"
Note the language: "It was for that court" (the probate court) "to determine from the evidence before it whether there was a proceeding pending," etc. The determination of an issue upon evidence in a court is a judgment, and in this instance a final judgment. This brings it under the fifteenth clause of Section 282, supra.
It is urged by counsel, and sustained by authority, that even though Section 282, Revised Statutes 1919, does not cover this appeal, yet it is covered by Section 2436, Revised Statutes 1919, which, so far as applicable, reads: "Fourth. Appellate jurisdiction from the judgment and orders of county courts, probate courts and *Page 601 
justices of the peace, in all cases not expressly prohibited bylaw, and shall possess a superintending control over them, and a general control over executors, administrators, guardians, curators, minors, idiots, lunatics and persons of unsound mind." In the foregoing quotation the italics are ours.
In Brockman v. Webb, 189 Mo. App. l.c. 476, it is said:
"We think it was error to dismiss the appeal. Defendant says that the only right of appeal from the probate court to the circuit court is found in Section 289, Revised Statutes 1909, and that that section does not authorize an appeal from the judgment of a probate court setting aside a judgment rendered by that court. Passing by this position without decision, we find that that section is not the only statute on appeals from the probate court. Under the title `Circuit Courts,' Section 3956, fourth subdivision of the statute, an appeal lies from the judgments and orders of the probate court to the circuit court `in all cases not expressly prohibited by law.' In this case the probate court had rendered a judgment of allowance of a demand against an estate. Afterwards the administrator filed a motion to set aside and annul such judgment and it was so ordered by the probate court. We think it clear that an appeal lies to the circuit court in such an instance. [Coleman v. Farrar, 112 Mo. 54, 72; Stanton v. Johnson's Est., 177 Mo. App. 54.]"
The authorities and statutes justify our remarks in Leahy v. Campbell, supra, wherein we said that we thought the right to appeal could be "demonstrated with the accuracy and precision of an Indian's arrow." From the cases we have cited, supra, both bench and bar proceeded upon the theory that an appeal did lie from an order suspending or revoking temporarily the letters of administration of an executor in a will pending an alleged will contest. Not only so, but our own records show that numerous applications were made to this court for prohibition *Page 602 
and other original writs in this very case, by which it was sought to stop the hearing of the appeal from the probate court to the circuit court, and this court denied the writs. If the appeal was without authority of law and beyond the jurisdiction of the circuit court, our writ of prohibition should have issued. We denied it, and such judgment is persuasive, at least, here.
IX. We have discussed, supra, the failure to give a statutory bond under the failure of the petition to state a cause of action. This matter is specially pleaded as a defense in the fourth paragraph of the answer. We need add but little to what we have already said. The giving of a statutoryFailure to Give  bond is a condition precedent to taking over theStatutory Bond.  estate. [State ex rel. v. Holtcamp, 168 Mo. App. l.c. 410, et seq.] It would be a dangerous precedent to permit a probate court to turn over to an administrator a vast estate upon a mere nominal bond. Such is against the public policy of this State, as expressed in our statutes. Section 17, Revised Statutes 1919, contemplates the giving of the statutory bond upon the issuance of the letters. By express provision of Section 19, Revised Statutes 1919, the same bond is required of one who administers pending a contest of a will. In State to use v. Price, 15 Mo. l.c. 378, it is said: "The grant of the letters and the execution of the bond are, under our law, parts of one and the same transaction, and the different acts may be brought together to show what was intended." The reference is to the statutory bond required of an executor or administrator, and by Section 19 of Article I, Revised Statutes 1919, an administrator pendente lite is required to give a like bond and in like time. If we read Section 12 of Article I, Revised Statutes 1919, we find that where two or more executors are appointed "none shall have authority to act as such or intermeddle, except those who give bond." And under Section 19, supra, the requirement is for the administrator pendente *Page 603 lite to give bond in the same manner as the suspended executor. If the executor who fails to give the required statutory bond cannot act or intermeddle with the estate, neither can the administrator pendente lite, for like reasons.
Other questions are presented by the answer, but we shall go no further. The judgment should be affirmed.
It is so ordered: Walker and Higbee, JJ., concur; David E.Blair and James T. Blair, JJ., concur in result; Elder, J.,
dissents in separate opinion in which Woodson, C.J., concurs.