— This appeal grows out. of the final settlement of Herbert A. Owen as curator of the estate of Webb Steele,' in which the curator charged himself with $3,481.23 and asked credit for $1,249.27, which left a balance in his hands of $2,231.96. Exceptions were filed in the probate court to certain allowances in favor of the curator. The case was appealed to the circuit court where the exceptions were partly sustained and curator’s account restated, whereupon he appealed to this court.
The following items are in controversy, viz:
April 1, 1896, John M. Stewart, on account of attorney’s fee, $100.
August 21,1896, John M. Stewart, attorney fee, $50.
January 4,1898, John M. Stewart, attorney fee, $50.
July 18, 1898, John M. Stewart, attorney fee, $20.
August 29,1898, John M. Stewart, attorney fee, $50.
August 28,1899, John M. Stewart, attorney fee, $25.
August —, 1900, John M. Stewart, attorney fee, $10.
*13August 21, 1896, H. A. Owen,' services as curator, $100.
August 29, 1898, curator’s compensation, $25.
August 28, 1899, curator’s compensation, $250.
August —, 1900, curator’s compensation, $25.
All these items were allowed by the probate court, which allowances were. excepted to by the ward who appealed to the circuit court, as aforesaid, where the case was heard, upon which hearing the court restated the curator’s accounts and reduced his fees from $400 to $250, and fees for attorney from $305 to $200.
The curator has appealed to this court and assigns as a grpund for reversal that the action of the trial court was not justified by the evidence.
It was disclosed by the evidence that all the estate' -that came into the curator’s hands, except a library appraised at $125, was realized from rents, from the administrator of Mildred E. Steele on orders of distribution, and from the sheriff of the ward’s distributive share growing out of a sale in partition. There was no trouble attending the collection of the money constituting the ward’s estate. But the record further discloses that there was another estate in which the ward had an interest, and one in which it was at first supposed he had some interest hut later decided to the-contrary.
There was $10,000 in the hands of one Beattie-Weakley, who held -it in trust without bond for Webb Steele, the ward herein. The curator deemed it a duty he owed his ward to require the trustee, Weakley, to secure said sum; and for that purpose he instructed his attorney to prepare a petition and file it in the-circuit court of the county for the purpose of compelling said trustee, Weakley, to give bond to secure said trust money. The attorney prepared and filed the necessary petition in the circuit court, upon notice of' which said Weakley executed a bond, prepared by said attorney, with satisfactory security. The record does not show that the curator was allowed any par*14tieular sum for the services of Ms attorney in said matter.
There was another suit in which the ward was joined as plaintiff with another party, against Snsan B. Weakley and her husband for the recovery of certain stock which it was charged they held in trust for the plaintiffs in that suit. It does not appear that the curator’s attorney, Mr. Stewart, rendered any important services in the case, and the record here does not show that the curator was allowed any sum as compensation for said attorney’s services in the matter. But it does appear that on August 29, 1898, John M. Stewart, the attorney, presented a bill of $120 for services rendered the minor in litigation in the circuit court, and for other services. The bill, however, is not copied into the record. ■ Said Stewart, however, testified on the trial as to the service's he rendered in the two cases. 'As to the first case mentioned, his evidence was in substance that he had much trouble in getting Weakley, the trustee, who was insolvent, to make a bond to secure the money in his hands belonging to the ward; that it required considerable diplomacy, and that he was bothered with the business about a month. W. D. Rusk, a member of the Buchanan county bar, testified that ordinarily a fee of twenty or twenty-five dollars would be a reasonable compensation for such service, but that under the facts as'stated by Mr. Stewart such ¡services would be worth one hundred dollars. Weakley, the trustee, testified that when he got notice •of the application he promptly gave the desired bond.
The estate in the hands of the curator does not appear to have been involved in any dispute or litigation whatever. All that the curator did with respect to* it was to collect certain, rents due his ward, and to receive his distributable share from the administrator of Mildred E. Steele, and his share of the proceeds of said partition sale.
An inspection of the final settlement shows that the money for which the curator asks credit, except for court costs and small sums páid the ward from time *15to time, were mostly allowances to Mmsélf as compensation for Ms services, and for the services of his attorney. - The .whole amount for which the curator received credit was $1,249.79, of which sum $705 was for himself and his attorney. There is no statement in the record showing in detail the services rendered by the curator. It does not appear that he was put to any expenditure of his time in preserving the estate, .as from its nature he could not well have been. Under such circumstances his allowance under the statute should have been five per cent upon the whole amount of $3,481.23, or, in other words, $174.06. As the record does not show that he gave any considerable part of his time to the proceedings to compel Weakley to give bond to secure the trust funds of his ward in said Weakley’s hands as trustee, we think the court may have properly found that an allowance of $250 would be ample compensation for all his services.
Judging from the items of which they are composed, the annual settlements of the curator were not complicated. They were plain matters of debit and credit, not involved with legal questions and requiring for their presentation to the probate court no greater skill than that possessed by the ordinary business man. And it was shown that the curator, who was a lawyer, was as capable of making the settlements as his lawyer. We are not holding that a curator should not be allowed, when necessary, suitable compensation. to employ another lawyer to assist him, though he may be a lawyer himself. But after all, it is a question for the court to determine whether such service is necessary .and what compensation shall be allowed for it.
But the appellant contends that the annual settlements of the curator are judgments and as such constitute a prima facie case in his favor. Such is the law. State ex rel v. Strickland’s Admr., 80 Mo. App. 4Ó1, apd other cases. And it is claimed that this prima facie case was not overcome by the evidence, but that the judge -acted according to his own judgment .of the matter and not upon evidence. We think, however, *16that the finding of the circuit court is amply sustained by the record. The court might well have held that there was no necessity for allowing the curator any compensation whatever for services for an attorney for making any of the settlements in issue, annual or final, as the curator himself was an attorney and competent to make them without legal assistance. The curator was allowed over twenty per cent of the entire-estate in his hands as compensation for himself and attorney, which seems to us, considering the nature of the estate and the services rendered, a very extraordinary allowance.
The courts should guard with great care the interests of minors and protect them against the cupidity of the persons to whom the law has confided the custody of their property.
Finding no error, the cause is affirmed.
All concur.