In re Hutton's Estate

SMITH, P. J.

Wm. T. Hutton died intestate, in February, 1897. Erancis M. Hutton, his brother, was appointed the administrator of his estate by the probate court. The administrator filed his inventory in which was listed several notes on John A. Hutton, the principal and interest of which, at that time, aggregated $1,020.06. On the fifteenth day of November, 1898, the administrator filed in the probate court his petition for a compromise of these notes. On the same day that court made its order purporting to authorize the administrator to compromise said note. Later on John A. Hutton paid the administrator $100 in cash and executed a release of his interest as heir in the estate of his deceased brother for these notes. On the twenty-second day of May, 1899, the administrator filed his final settlement,- in which he charged himself with $100 received from John A. Hutton, and asking-credit for $1,020.06, the amount of the notes of John A. Hutton charged against him in the inventory, and thereupon objections were filed to such proposed final settlement by the exceptions therein. Such final settlement contained the terms of the compromise with John A. Hutton, the first and only paper filed in the probate court, showing what compromise had *136been made. Tbe probate court overruled tbe exceptions and approved tbe final settlement. Tbe case was appealed to tbe circuit court and there tried. That court made a special finding of facts and in its conclusion of law bolding that tbe order of tbe probate court made on tbe eighteenth day of November, 1898, was a complete protection to tbe administrator, and overruled tbe exceptions, approved tbe final settlement and ordered its judgment certified to tbe probate court. Tbe exceptors, after tbe usual motions were overruled, brought tbe cause here by an appeal. Tbe objectors filed an affidavit for an appeal, but filed no bond.

Tbe administrator has filed a duly verified motion to dismiss tbe appeal, alleging as tbe grounds thereof that tbe ex-ceptors have failed to file an appeal bond; and that pursuant to tbe said judgment of tbe circuit court, appealed from, be the administrator made bis final settlement of said estate with tbe probate court, which was duly approved, and an order of distribution was made; that be bad paid to tbe distributees of said estate, including tbe exceptors, tbe several amounts due them on said final settlement, taking their receipts therefor, and has received bis final discharge.

Under tbe statutes, section 866, Revised Statutes 1899, when a case is brought before us by appeal or writ of error, we are required to examine the record- and award a new trial, reverse or affirm tbe judgment or decision of tbe circuit court, or give such judgment as such court ought to have given as to us shall seem agreeable to law. It is thus seen that, in the exercise of our appellate jurisdiction, our view of cases coming before us by either of tbe methods just stated, is restricted to an examination of tbe record. To tbe rule just stated, there may be, and doubtless are many exceptions. All appellate courts are sometimes compelled to receive evidence dehors tbe record, affecting their proceedings in cases before them on appeal or writ of error. -

A case coming within tbe exception is where tbe death *137of one of the parties, after a writ of error or appeal, requires a new proceeding to supply its place. Another is where a transfer of . the interest of one of the parties by assignment, or by judicial proceeding in another cause, as in bankruptcy, is brought to the attention of the court by evidence outside of the original record, and is acted on; and still another, is “where there is a settlement o'f the controversy with an agreement to dismiss the appeal or writ of error, or any stipulation as to any proceedings in this court, signed by the parties, will be referred, as an agreement to submit the case on printed argument alone,” etc. Dakota v. Glidden, 113 U. S. 222. In the case of Cleveland v. Chamberlin, 1 Black. 419, the plaintiff in error having bought out the interest of the defendant in the subject-matter of the suit, and having control of both sides of the litigation, still sought, for some purpose, to have the case decided by the court where pending. On evidence of this by affidavit the court dismissed the writ. Cases have been dismissed because the parties have settled the matter, so that there was no longer a-real controversy, one or both of them seeking a judgment for an improper purpose in regard to an issue no longer in existence between the parties. Lord v. Veasey, 8 How. 251; Paper Co. v. Heft, 8 Wall. 333. It has been ruled that if a party against whom a decree went, appealed, and pending the appeal availed himself of the decree by accepting and receiving a large portion of the money deposited to his use, that upon the matter being brought to the attention of the appellate court in the proper way, he would not be permitted to maintain his appeal. Atkinson v. Tabor, 7 Colo. 195. In the last-cited case the court said that there is no doubt of the general proposition that it is inconsistent with the principles of justice and the rules of the law to permit a party who has voluntarily taken advantage of a judgment rendered at nisi prius to afterwards present proceedings to reverse it.”

When such matters appear on the face of the record, the *138objection, is properly taken by motion to dismiss; but when they do not so appear, the proceedings must appear by a plea in bar of the proceedings in error. Powell on Appeal Proceedings, p. 181, sec. 12 and 12a. In some cases it has been held that when litigation in an action has been settled, or disposed of in some other way, and it has thus become unnecessary to decide the questions presented by the appeal, it will.not proceed to decide them, but will dismiss the appeal. Courts, being eminently practical tribunals, will in proper case on motion supported by affidavit, dismiss the appeal. Hasty v. Funderburk, 89 N. C. 93, and cases there cited. In Bayha v. Philips, 97 Mo. 331, it was said that “the plaintiff had the right to have the full measure of relief he claimed or else, by a solemn adjudication of the court to know the why and wherefore of the refusal which denied him redress in full of his demand. He had the right to make the demand he did, and it was out of the power of the defendants to prevent adjudication of the matter demanded, except by a concession as broad-as that demand. In that event would the issues be dead V’

The affidavit and exhibits filed in support of the motion in the present case do not bring it within any one of the exceptions to which we have hereinbefore referred; nor does it appear therefrom that the claim made before the probate court by the exceptors was extinguished by the receipt of the amount in the hands of the administrator ordered to be distributed, and about which there was no dispute. The amount paid the objectors was an amount due them, independent of that claim in the present suit. The administrator was paid no part of the amount claimed by the exceptors on account of the failure of the administrator to collect the Jno. A. Hutton notes. He has not been induced to alter his relation to the suit by anything the exceptors have done or said. His payment seems to have been partly voluntary. He has made no compromise nor parted with anything of his own nor been deceived or misled by the conduct of the exceptors, so we can not *139see that he can claim that the objectors are estopped in any way to proeeed with their suit (State v. Sitlington, 51 Mo. App. 252), nór does it appear that the objectors by receiving the amount paid thereby made “a concession as broad as their demand," or that they thereby “killed the issues" in the pending cause.

¥e are unable to discover anything in the facts disclosed by the motion of the administrator which takes the case out of the operation of the general statutory rule quoted at the beginning, requiring us, in reviewing cases brought before us on writ of error, or appeal, to restrict our examination to the record. It may be that since the exceptors did not file an appeal bond in the court below, that court was authorized to order a certificate of its judgment to the probate court. And it may be, too, that if the final settlement made with the probate court from which the appeal was taken, was approved by the circuit-court, and thus allowed to stand, that it would be conclusive as to every item therein, except that put in litigation by the exceptors, in this suit. The jurisdiction of the circuit court having once attached, would not be divested by any subsequent action of the probate court pending the litigation in that court; nor in this, because to make a final settlement under such conditions would be a fraud, since the estate was not then fully administered and could not be until the claim made by the ex-ceptors was finally adjudicated or in some way extinguished. Smiley v. Cockrell, 92 Mo. 105; Nolan v. Johns, 108 Mo. 437; Siebel v. Simmeon, 62 Mo. 255. Accordingly, we think the administrator’s motion should be denied.

It appears from the court’s special verdict that it found that if the administrator had acted with the care and diligence in attempting to collect the John A. Hutton notes that a prudent man would have used in the management of his own business affairs, that said notes could have been collected; but since the probate court had by its order authorized the said administrator to compromise said notes; and since he acted under said *140order, and made tlie best compromise he could,, that said order was a final determination of said matter by said probate court, binding and conclusive on it and a complete protection and defense to the said administrator against the claim made by the exceptors.

It appears that the administrator, under section 235, Revised Statutes 1899, had presented a petition to the probate court, stating therein that the said debtor, John A. Hutton, was wholly insolvent, and that an action at law against him on said notes would be fruitless; and, further, that it would be for the best interest of said estate that said notes be compromised on the best terms obtainable, and praying for an order of the court authorizing such compromise, which said petition was duly verified by the affidavit of the administrator. The record discloses further that on the presentation of this petition, the probate court made the order authorizing the administrator to make such compromise in accordance with the prayer of said petition.

It does not appear that the said administrator made any report as to the compromise under the order of the probate court, other than was shown by his proposed annual settlement, wherein he asked credit for the amount of said notes, less one hundred dollars paid thereon as the consideration for the compromise. It is thus disclosed that the administrator, by his petition to the probate court, had represented to it that the said debtor was wholly insolvent and that an action at law against him on said notes would be fruitless; and that on the faith of these representations, the said probate court had made the order authorizing the compromise.

The circuit court, in effect, found as has been already seen, that such representations of the administrator were false, or which is the same thing, that the said debtor was solvent, and that said administrator could have collected said notes by the use of proper diligence. State v. Elliott, 82 Mo. App. 458; Jacobs v. Jacobs, 99 Mo. 427; Schudder v. Ames, 142 *141Mo. 231. It would seem from tbe reading of the record before us, that the said order of compromise was procured by false representation, and is open to attach for fraud. It is no doubt true that this order, and the action of the administrator under it are prima facie valid and binding, but it is inconceivable how either or both could be (as the circuit court found) conclusive and not open to question by the heir at the final settlement. We must think this contention of the court was erroneous.

The exceptors were not notified of the proceeding taken to effect the compromise. The first time that any opportunity was afforded them to question the proceeding in any way was when the final settlement.was presented. If the court found that the amount of the unpaid part of the notes had been previously allowed to the administrator in some one of his annual settlements, then there would be no doubt that its correctness could have been inquired into at the final settlement — such an allowance would only have been prima facie correct, and the administrator would have been entitled to' a credit therefor in his final settlement unless it was then impeached. State v. Elliott, supra. And the fact that it was first claimed as an item of credit at the final settlement, could make no difference. The order of compromise was merely interlocutory in its nature and stood as a part of the proceeding under the control of the court; and was open and subject to review and correction at the final settlement. Myers v. Myers, 98 Mo. 262; Picot v. O’Fallen, 35 Mo. 29; West v. West, 75 Mo. 204; North v. Priest, 81 Mo. 562.

If it be contended that the order authorizing the compromise was in effect an allowance in favor of the administrator of a credit for the amount of the notes as the amount received of the debtor, still this order and the action taken by the administrator Was subject to review at the final settlement; for if not then reviewable, it was conclusive. And if conclusive in favor of the administrator, then there was no time when *142the heirs of said estate could have contested it. One of the objects of the law in providing the notice is, that the heirs may have an opportunity to appeal and question any item of credit claimed by or previously allowed to the administrator in his previous annual settlement. Everything in the proposed final settlement is “wide open” to him, -and especially so as to credits claimed by the administrator. If an order like that in the present case is conclusive, and has the effect to foreclose the right of the heir and creditors to have the action of the probate court in making such order reviewed at the final settlement, then such settlement is but an idle and meaningless ceremony.

The heirs were notified to appear at the final settlement, and when they did so they had the right to challenge the correctness of any annual settlement or any item of credit therein, or any order touching any credit allowed the administrator, during the progress of the administration. Then, and not until then, were they authorized to come in and question any item in the whole administration that was against their interest. State v. Board, 108 Mo. 241; Brown v. Weatherby, 71 Mo. 152; Wickham v. Page, 49 Mo. 526. The exceptors did appear at the final settlement and objected to the same on account of the credit claimed by the administrator, for the John A. Hutton notes. The probate court overruled this objection and approved the settlement as presented. This was a final judgment from which an appeal would lie. The said order authorizing tire compromise was not conclusive. It was at most only interlocutory. It was subject to review at the final settlement.

When the circuit court found, as it did, that the said notes could have been collected had the administrator used proper diligence, the conclusion that the order of compromise was conclusive and a complete protection to,him was clearly erroneous. From this finding of fact the only conclusion of law which the court could have drawn therefrom was that the exceptions-to said credit for the amount of the John A. Hutton *143notes should have been sustained; and for that reason the said final settlement was disapproved. The judgment must be reversed and cause remanded.

All concur.