This is a bill in the Crittenden circuit court, in chancery, by the appellees, Mary W. Swepston and her husband, W. W. Swepston, against John W. Guerrant, her guardian, and the appellant, J. R. Jenkins, one of the sureties on his guardian’s bond (the other surety not being sued), to surcharge and falsify the various settlements of said guardian made to and confirmed by the probate court of said county, and for judgment for the balance due said ward, to be shown upon a correction of said accounts.
The facts are: On the 7th of July, 1871, Mrs. Lydia Jenkins of St. Francis county died intestate, leaving surviving her, as her sole heir at law, the said Mary W. Swepston, who was then Mary W. Denton, a child seven years old, and a considerable amount of real and personal property, consisting of a life insurance policy for $5,000, and real estate in Crittenden county, and perhaps other property.
It appears that, soon after the death of Lydia Jenkins, one Henry Hurlbert was appointed by the probate court of St. Francis county administrator of her estate, and took charge of the same as such; but it does not appear when he ceased to be such, or whether or not he is still snch administrator. The record shows, however, that on the 23d day of August, 1875, the probate court of St. Francis county, on the petition and showing of Hurlbert as administrator of the estate of Lydia Jenkins, ordered and directed him to turn over the real estate of said estate (named in the petition, being the real estate involved in this litigation, in so far as its rents and profits are concerned) to the guardian of the said Mary W. Denton, only heir as aforesaid, namely, the said John W. Guerrant. When or how this order was complied with, or whether it was ever complied with formally, does not appear; but, presumably, the parties acted upon and in accordance with it in a reasonable time after it was entered.
On the 30th October, 1871, John W. Guerrant was appointed by the probate court of Crittenden county guardian of the said Mary W. Denton, gave bond as such in the sum of $10,000, with appellant Jenkins and one R. C. Wallace as his sureties, and entered upon the discharge of his duties as such guardian; his ward residing with him until she became of age and married appellant, W. W. Swepston, in 1882.
Guerrant failed to file an inventory or make a settlement until in 1876, assigning, as his reasons for the delinquency, matters that could only interest the political antiquarian. In 1876, however, he was cited by the probate court to appear and file bis statement, on bis failing to do wbieb be was regularly and formally removed on tbe 14th October, 1876; but in January, 1877, be appeared, and asked and obtained leave to file bis settlement; and this settlement covered the whole time of bis guardianship, and was satisfactory to the probate court, and in due course was confirmed by it. When this settlement was filed, tbe probate court undertook to rescind its order-removing him as guardian, made at its previous October term, and reappointed him, permitting him to stand on bis former-bond, “as ascertained to be still sufficient,” as tbe expression is in other jurisdictions.
This settlement showed a balance in tbe bands of tbe guardian amounting to tbe sum of $5,160.05. Guerrant, under bis new appointment,, continued to make bis annual settlement with apparent regularity, until tbe institution of this suit, wbieb was on November, 1883. Indeed, be is charged with having filed a final settlement after tbe institution of this suit. But tbe record shows that be filed bis final settlement on tbe 10th of July, 1882, before tbe institution of this suit, and about tbe time bis ward arrived at her majority, and this settlement was examined and ordered to lie over until tbe July term, 1883, for exceptions. Tbe record does not state when this order was made. No further order was made.
Tbe bill sets up fraud in tbe guardian’s various settlements, .in this, that be, for example, in bis first settlement failed to charge himself with interest, as he would have done bad be, as required of him, made annual settlements (that is to say, interest upon tbe balance struck in each annual settlement), but, on tbe contrary, treating tbe first five years of bis guardianship as one period, be charged only simple interest, thereby cheating and defrauding bis ward; also in this, that be failed to charge himself with tbe rents of tbe real estate, alleged to have contained 240 acres of land in cultivation; and in this, that bis expense account against bis ward for maintenance and education was excessive.
As stated, tbe surety, J. B. Jenkins, alone appeals, and we have nothing to do with tbe case as against tbe principal, except incidentally, as it may affect tbe surety; and as Guerrant, tbe guardian for whom Jenkins was surety, was regularly removed on the 14th of October, 1876, and was not lawfully-re-appointed again (at least so as to effect Jenkins in any way), our inquiry is confined mainly, if not altogether, to the acts and doings of the guardian from his appointment as such until his removal on the 14th of October, 1876. The chancellor properly took this view of the case, and his decree, in a general way, is based upon that theory.
The matters and things presented by the bill and answers and the evidence in this cause were referred to a special master by the chancellor; and his report, involving his findings in the matter, was adopted by the court, and a decree rendered, in which the master's findings became the findings of the court, and they will be so referred to in this opinion. ,
The surety Jenkins, by reason of the removal of his principal on the 14th of October, 1876, was and is only responsible for the funds and other property really in the hands of the guardian at that time, or that should have been in his hands, and for the faithful payment and delivery of the same over to his lawful successor, or his ward, or others entitled, on the orders and directions of the probate court.
In this case there seems to have been no lawful guardian after Guerrant was removed on the 14th of October, 1876, and the ward did not arrive at age until about the, time of the institution of this suit; and, above all, there does not'appear to have been any order of the probate court making a disposition of the funds in the hands of the guardian. The funds, so far as this surety was and is concerned, were still in the hands of his principal,—just where they should have been. Besides, there was no one to loan them out under the orders of the court or otherwise,—a condition of things for which this surety is in no wise responsible on his bond. It follows, therefore, that the appellant is not liable for interest on the amount on hand when his principal was discharged, which accrued after that time.
Again, while it is charged that the real estate of Lydia Jenkins came into the possession of Guerrant immediately after his appointment as guardian, yet the charge is made in the face of the record; for that shows that as late as August, 1875, the administrator of Lydia Jenkins was petitioning the court to make an order directing him to deliver possession over to said guardian, as all tbe debts of her estate had been paid, and there was no longer a necessity for him to hold said real estate.
It is not meant here, to say that Guerrant should not be charged with what he received from said administrator for rents of this real estate during the time, for he should have been, and should be now, charged with every cent he received for or on account of his ward from Hurlbert, the administrator,—not only that which came to Hurlbert as rents of the real estate, bnt from any other source, so that it was the property, in fact, of the ward and held for her.
The two ways of putting this matter, it is readily seen, make a wondei'ful difference in making up accounts. In the one case he is held liable for the rental value of the land, and in the other for just what he received of these rents collected and paid over by another lawfully entitled to receive the rents; and he claimed to have rendered an account for the sum so received from Hurlbert.
Whether the expense account against the ward, during the time we are now considering, was exorbitant or not, we have no means of determining. In fact, the complaint on this score is mostly, if not altogether, applicable to subsequent accounting of the guardian. ■ They may be, after all, merely matters to be coi-rected on appeal only, and not by bill.
From the method the master observed in restating the account, it is almost impossible to ascertain just what he would show to have been the balance on the 14th of October, 1876, but the chancellor makes it the sum of $6,120.99. The master allowed interest for and against the guardian from the time debits were and should have been charged, and credits asked, until the date of final decree, November 15, 1894,—a period from eighteen to twenty-three years. No interest accruing after November 15, 1876, should have been taken into the calculation. The guardian had already charged himself with interest on all sums coming into his hands during the five years covered by his first settlement, at the rate of 6 per cent, per annum, amounting in the aggregate to $985.23, and this had been passed upon by the probate court. Whether the amount was correctly stated in his account, we cannot say. The principal fund was $5,000 insurance on the life of Mrs. Jenkins. There is no reason to say that the probate court was not made acquainted with all the facts concerning this and the other items of debit, so as to be able to determine the proper amount of interest due. If so, it may be that its judgment in this respect could only be the subject of appeal. However, it is needless to make .any ruling on this subject.
From the facts in the record, and the view we take of the law applicable thereto, we are unable to see that the findings of the chancellor (deducting amounts growing out of errors of law pertaining thereto) would make the amount for which this surety is liable to be $6,120.99, as decreed, or any other sum in excess of $5,160.05. The appellant surety is liable for that much, according to his own showing and the judgment of the probate court (which, in this particular matter, it is not proper to disturb), together with lawful interest from the 15th November, 1894, the date of the decree; and while the bill, as against him, is not sustained,, yet, as the chancery court obtained jurisdiction of the ease, and it would be burdensome to all to resort to the original court for enforcement of this judgment against him, final decree will be entered here.
During the pendency of this action Jenkins died, and the cause was revived in the name of his administrator, J. T.' Haden, and the judgment was against him as such. The decree of the lower court is modified, so as to make the amount $5,160.05, bearing lawful interest from the 15th day of November, 1894, and with this modification it is affirmed. Appellees will pay the costs of this appeal.