— As this is an action in equity brought by the beneficiary, Mary C. Lycan, against the defendant trustees, we will briefly state the facts as •developed by the evidence, before proceeding to the consideration of the alleged errors complained of by the plaintiffs, who prosecute this appeal.
Eliza J. Grigsby, who died in November, 1886, by her will appointed the defendants her executors, and vested in them her real and personal estate, to be held and managed by them after the payment of her debts in trust for her only child Mary, who is the present plaintiff. The instrument directed that the trustees should pay the taxes, keep the real estate-in repair, complete the education of the daughter and maintain her comfortably, according to their discretion, but not to expend for that purpose more than the net income of the estate. All interference with the property or its income by any husband of said Mary was excluded. When the beneficiary arrived at the age of thirty-five years, the estate was to be turned over to her by the trustees for her. sole and separate use. In default of her attaining that age, the estate was to go to the testatrix’s collateral kindred.
The defendants qualified as executors and took charge of the personal property, inventoried at $8,591.26. The real estate was at the time in the possession of the executor of the father of the testatrix,*81but in 1890 a partition took place and forty-four • acres of tbe land were set off to the defendants as the share of said Eliza, and thereafter held and occupied by the defendants as trustees for the plaintiff Mary. On the eleventh day of February, 1891, the defendants made their final settlement as executors in the probate court, which was approved by that court, showing a balance in their hands of $3,314.01; and on the same day they executed a receipt as trustees to themselves as executors for the assets which composed said $3,314.01. There was evidence in the case, which was not controverted, that the defendants would have made such settlement much earlier, but for the fact that the first settlement made by them was taken from the probate court by one of the plaintiffs’ present counsel for examination, and was not returned to them, for eighteen months. There was also evidence which was not controverted that, although no debts of the testatrix were allowed, as demands against the estate in the probate court, many of the items for which the defendants took credit in their settlement consisted of funeral.expenses, taxes and other expenses of administration. Shortly after the plaintiff Mary arrived at the age of eighteen years, she intermarried with her present eoplaintiff, and thereafter on the twenty-fourth of July, 1890, the plaintiffs instituted an action against the defendants for money had and received by them to said Mary’s use. The money charged to have been thus received consisted of the personal property inventoried, and the value of the use of the real estate which the defendants occupied and cultivated. It appearing in this action that the defendants held the property upon specific unexecuted trusts, the plaintiffs were defeated therein. The plaim tiffs thereafter instituted the present action asking that the defendants be compelled to account to' them in equity, and charging that they had fraudulently ims*82managed and wasted the estate and violated their trusts. The petitidn prays that the defendants be removed as trustees, and be compelled to pay the funds in their hands to some other person appointed by the court.
The answer of the defendants denies that they have mismanaged or wasted the estate. It states that they had faithfully accounted therefor in the probate court while administration was pending; that at the close of the administration they receipted for the balance of the estate then in their hands as trustees; that they had since faithfully managed the estate as such trustees; that there is a balance in their hands which they are willing and ready to pay over to any trustee the court may appoint. The answer was denied by reply.
The cause was somewhat irregularly tried. The court, instead of requiring the' defendants to file their account as trustees in the first instance, and then requiring the plaintiffs to surcharge and falsify it, if they deemed proper, proceeded at once to the hearing of evidence as to how and in what manner the defendants had performed their duty as trustees. For this irregularity, however, the court was in nowise to blame, as the plaintiffs did not move that the trustees should be required to file theib account, but themselves at once proceeded to try the case in the manner aforesaid. All subsequent complications in the trial of the cause are traceable to this source. The evidence thus adduced, which consisted mainly of the testimony of the two trustees, one of whom was called for the plaintiffs and the other for the defendants, tended to show that the trust was administered by the trustees carefully, honestly and without any waste.
Defendants also introduced the settlements made by them in the probate court as executors, resulting in *83the balance which they paid to themselves as trustees. "When these settlements were introduced, the plaintiffs objected to them as evidence of any credits allowed by the probate court, but stated that they were perfectly willing that the defendants should now have credit against them for every just item contained in these settlements. The court overruled the objection, and the plaintiffs excepted.
The court thereupon directed the defendants to make out their statement and report as trustees, and •continued the cause until July 10, 1893. The defendants filed such report, starting with the balance received by them upon the final settlement and bringing the account down to date of filing, and, the plaintiffs filing no exceptions thereto, the court upon •examination approved it, discharged the trustees and ordered them to pay the balance of $3,625.73 found in their hands to a new trustee then appointed by the •court.
This being the state of the record before us, we cannot conceive how the plaintiffs have any just ground •of complaint. Their complaint is that the trial courl treated the final settlement, made by the defendants as ■executors in the probate court, as conclusive evidence against them of the correctness of such settlements. This nowhere appears by any ruling which the court made. As the final settlement made by the defendants as executors was in any view of the case conclusive against the plaintiffs as to all credits of ivhich the prohuie court had jurisdiction, and as many of the credits which the defendants took in that settlement were ■unquestionably of that character, the objections of the plaintiffs to this settlement in proof of any credits allowed to the defendants therein by the probate courl was too broad, and was properly overruled.
The plaintiffs evidently take the view that the *84probate courts in this state have no jurisdiction to-allow claims against the estate of a decedent accruing after his death, and that, since no debts were proved against the estate of Eliza J. Grigsby, the probate-court never had any jurisdiction of the estate at all. This is an erroneous conception of the statute and decisions. The probate courts have jurisdiction of many claims originating after death, as, for instance-funeral expenses and taxes against the estate (Revised Statutes, 1889, sec. 183); costs and expenses of administration, including attorneys’ fees (sec. 222, Ibid); claims of legatees and distributees, etc. Ferguson’s Adm’r v. Carson’s Adm’r, 86 Mo. 673; State ex rel. v. Tittmann, 103 Mo. 553; Williams, Adm’r, v. Heirs of Petticrew, 62 Mo. 460; Powell v. Powell’s Adm’r, 23 Mo. App. 365. It was the duty of the defendants in this case to administer upon the estate under the will, as it could not be definitely ascertained with what amount they were chargeable as trustees until such administration was closed. The final settlement, therefore, was conclusive in their favor, as far as items therein of which the probate court had jusrisdiction were concerned.
The further complaint, that the court gave no-opportunity to the plaintiffs to examine, surcharge and falsify the account which, at the close of the evidence, was filed upon order of the court by the defendant trustees, is not borne out by the record. It does not appear at what date such final report was filed, except, inferentially by the defendant’s affidavit annexed thereto, which was made on the fifteenth of June, 1893. The court made no final order in the premises until July 10,1893, and it does not appear that the plaintiffs it any time between the two dates asked leave to file exceptions to the report. The report shows that it was accompanied by vouchers verifying each item of *85the expenditures, and the decree in terms recites that no exceptions to such report were filed and that 'the ■court approved the same upon examination.
As there was no substantial evidence before the ■court that the trustees had mismanaged or wasted the trust estate, nor of any fraudulent conduct on their part which have authorized their removal, the court was warranted in allowing them reasonable counsel tees in defending' the two successive actions brought ■against them by the plaintiffs.
Finding no error in the record, the judgment is .affirmed.
All the judges concur; Judge Bond in the nesult.