The court did not err in overruling the exceptions of appellants, who were defendants in the court below, to plaintiff’s amended petition.
The original petition, it is true, was filed upon a legal holiday, and the statute provides that no civil suit shall be commenced, or any process issued or served on such day, except in certain cases. (Rev. Stats., art. 1184.) But defendants first answered *416by a general demurrer and general denial and thereby, as we think waived any objection to the further prosecution of the action by reason of the irregularity in filing the petition. Besides when the exceptions were filed, plaintiff had filed his amended original petition under the rules.
A further ground of exception was that the petition showed that it was an action brought by an administrator de bonis non, to recover the proceeds of a note belonging to the estate which had been fraudulently disposed of by the first administrator. It is contended that an administrator de bonis non is not authorized to bring such a suit. But that he has such power, is, we think, definitely settled by this court in the elaborate opinion in the case of Todd, administrator, v. Willis, 66 Texas, 704, to which we need only refer.
The other grounds of exception are for the want of proper parties defendant. John Barrick the former administrator, transferred the note, the property of the estate, to appellants, in satisfaction of a debt due them by him and his brother, D. M. Barrick, and afterwards died. S. L. Terrell & Sons, the makers of the note, executed to appellants, in lieu of the original, new notes payable to the latter, which they subsequently paid. It is insisted in support of the exceptions, thát the bondsmen- of the former administrator and Terrell & Sons were liable for the conversion of the original note and not these appellants. It may be that the transfer of the note by the administrator was such maladministration as would render his bondsmen liable to account for its value, and that Terrell & Sons having paid it to a party not entitled to receive the proceeds, were not discharged of their obligation to the estate, and still owed the debt, if the administrator de bonis non saw proper to demand it of them. But-defendants were also liable. They appropriated property belonging to the estate to their own use, without .authority of law, and received the proceeds in money and they can be held td account to the estate for it. If the administrator de bonis non saw proper to ratify the payment so far as the makers of the note are concerned and to proceed against them, they have no right to complain. They have received 'money to which they are not entitled, and in the eye of the law, will have lost nothing when compelled to disgorge it. They will have their claim against the parties whose debts was paid by the transfer of the note, as they had before, and are not injured. Should Terrell & Sons be made to pay again to the estate, appellants would be *417liable to them; so that their ultimate responsibility would have been the same, however the suit may have been brought. The appellants were sued for a tort in the wrongful conversion of the property of the estate and are liable to be sued alone without reference to other parties who may have participated in, or been connected-with, the transaction. (Pomeroy on Remedies, sec. 281, et seq.)
What we have already said is sufficient to dispose of appellant’s second and fourth assignments.
Appellant’s sixth assignment of error is as follows: “The court erred in rendering judgment for plaintiff for the full amount of the note in suit, because the pleadings of the plaintiff and the testimony show, that John and D. M. Barrick were heirs of A. M. Barrick, and had received the entire proceeds of the note, and their shares as such heirs should have been deducted from the amount for which judgment was rendered.”
We find no evidence in the record showing that John and D. M. Barrick would have any interest in their father’s estate. Admitting, for the sake of the argument, that appellants should have been permitted to retain the respective shares of these heirs in any case, it could only be upon pleading and proof, showing that there would be a surplus of the estate after the payment of the debts. But even this would be calculated to embarrass the administration, and in our judgment could not be permitted.
Defendants pleaded, under oath, that plaintiff had not been duly appointed and had not legally qualified as administrator of the estate of A. M. Barrick. The application for letters, the oath and the bond were offered in evidence for the purpose of showing the invalidity of the letters of administration which had been introduced by plaintiff. It is contended that the petition is not sufficient, because it does not show the necessity for the administration. Article 1959 of the Revised Statutes reads as follows: “When the administrator of the estate not administered has been, or shall be hereafter appointed, he shall succeed to all rights,” etc. We think it sufficient, under this, merely to represent to the court that the estate is not fully administered, without the allegations named in the statute for an application for an original grant of letters. The application before us alleges that John Barrick had been appointed and qualified as administrator of the estate, and had “died before winding up the estate of A. M. Barrick aforesaid.” We are of opinion this *418is sufficient, even if it was essential to the validity of an administration that the necessity therefor should appear on .the face of the application for letters. But it has been decided that this is not necessary; that proof may be made in the probate court of a fact not alleged in the pleading; and that the presumption should be indulged that the proper evidence had been offered to support the judgment. (Kleinecke v. Woodward, 42 Texas, 311, and cases there cited.)
Opinion delivered June 3, 1887.The objection to the oath is, that it omits the words: “Died without leaving any lawful will.” The reason for this averment in the oath, it seems to us, does not exist in case of administrators de bonus non, because the oath of the former administrator and the further lapse of time may be presumed to have set at rest the question of a will. We think, therefore, the omission unimportant.
It is insisted that the bond is insufficient, because it is only in the sum of three thousand five hundred dollars, when the application for letters states the value of the property of the estate at three thousand dollars. The statute requires a bond in double the amount of the estimated value of the estate (Rev. Stats., art. 1889); and this means double the value estimated by the court. The order of the court in evidence shows that it fixed the penalty of the bond at three thousand five hundred dollars, from which it must be inferred that the court estimated the value of the estate at half that amount.
Wé find no error in the judgment and it is affirmed.
Affirmed.