By the Court,
Hawley, J.:The plaintiff, Boyce, a brother of Oliva Bosanna Eord, decéased, seeks to set aside a decree of distribution of his sister’s estate, made by the district court of Storey county, on the third day of October, 1876, upon the ground of fraud, concealment, and misrepresentation upon the part of J. C. Hampton, who was administrator of her estate, and of William John Eord,.hen husband, who was by said decree declared to be the sole heir at law of said estate. All of the proceedings in the settlement of the estate were regular and legal in form. The court, before which this cause was tried without a jury, found that there was no fraud, concealment, or misrepresentation upon the part of the administrator, or of the husband of the deceased, and that plaintiff,'by not appearing in the proceedings of said estate, “was guilty of negligence and laches which are unexcused.” Appellant claims that these findings are not sustained by the evidence;
It is a cardinal principle that courts of equity will not grant relief to a party who has had an opportunity of being heard in a court of law without a showing that he was prevented from doing so by the wrongful acts of the prevailing' party, unmixed with any negligence or fault on his part. The general rule is thus stated by Freeman in his Avork on judgments: “To entitle a party to relief from a judgment or decree, it must be made evident that he had a defense upon the merits; and that such defense has been lost to him, without such loss’ being ‘attributable to his own omission, neglect, or default.’ The loss of a defense, to justify a court of equity in removing a judgment, must, in all cases, be occasioned by the fraud or act of the prevailing party, or by mistake or accident on the part of the losing party, unmixed with any fault of himself or his agent.” (Sec. 486.)
1. Does the evidence show that plaintiff was guilty of *31negligence and laches Avhicli are unexcused? It appears that Mrs. Ford died intestate on the eleventh day of June, 1875; that on the twelfth of July following, J. C. Hampton Avas appointed administrator of her estate; that plaintiff Avas advised of these facts shortly after they occurred, and was notified that the estate Avas Avorth seventy-five thousand dollars; that the plaintiff, thereafter, wrote four letters to the administrator, dated, respectively, October 19, 1875, November 20, 1875, February 20, 1876, and April 9, 1876, which Avere received by due course of mail Avithin about one Aveek after they were written, making inquiries about the estate and proceedings therein, and representing himself to be a brother of the deceased; that on the tAventy-third of February, 1876, one G. T. Dennis, at the request of plaintiff, addressed a letter to Mr. Hampton; that Hampton ausAvered the first letter Avritten by plaintiff, and the letter written by Dennis, and made no reply to the other letters; that on the fourteenth of July, 1875, Mr. Ford, in answer to a letter received from plaintiff’s Avife, addressed a letter to the plaintiff and, among other things, said: “Now, Thaddeus, concerning our property, it is in the hands of an administrator. We owe someAvhat in the neighborhood of tAvelve thousand dollars, Avith íavo per cent, interest per month, but I think that at the expiration of a year from date everything will be easy Avith good management, and the debts mostly paid. Rose always wanted to' look out for your boys, and God knows that as I loved her, and hope for his love, I will carry out her wishes to the best of my ability. But at the present time nothing can be done until after the time alloAved for the administration of the estate by our district court, and things are at present in a muddle on account of not keeping books, Avliich, .if' they had been kept, Avould not have been a pressure on her brain while living, nor have given vultures a chance to prey on our estate after her death.”
Conceding, for the purposes of this opinion,’ that the letters Avritten by Hampton, and Ford’s letter of July 11, Avere calculated to mislead the plaintiff and conceal from him the true condition of the estate and of the proceedings had *32therein, it becomes necessary to determine whether, as a matter of fact, the plaintiff relied upon these representations. His testimony shows that he did not. Speaking of the value of his sister’s estate he says: “I heard from Mrs. Terrill that she was worth about seventy-five thousand dollars;” this was “before her death and after her death.” In reply to the question of defendants’ counsel, “ Did you ever learn anything to the contrary?” he answered: “I did not.” If he was mistaken in giving this testimony and had the right to believe from Hampton’s letter that his sister’s property after the fire of October, 1875, was “a pile of smoldering ruins,” stfil it affirmatively appears that he did not rely upon the letter he received from Hampton, and that he was not misled by the letter of Ford. He admits that he received letters from Mr. Ford after the letter of July II, stating in substance that he (Ford) did not recognize any relationship between himself and the plaintiff, and requested plaintiff not to call him brother; and that from these letters and from the failure of Hampton to reply to his letters he suspected something was wrong. He says: “I supposed, of course, they were endeavoring in some way to beat me out of the estate my sister intended me to have.”
A court of equity will not relieve a party upon the ground of misrepresentations made to him, unless he shows that he relied and acted upon them believing them to be true. Now, with knowledge upon his part, several months before the decree of distribution was made, that the estate was valuable; that Mr. Ford did not recognize any relationship; that Mr. Hampton failed to answer his letters, and that the estate was in process of settlement and distribution, what efforts did the plaintiff make to have his rights protected ? He resided in the state of Pennsylvania, and was a farmer by occupation. He applied to two or three of-f-his friends in that state to assist him. It does not appeaf &at either' he, or they, took any steps to make an apprj 'anee in the court where the proceedings were pending; that he, or they, ever communicated with any lawyer in this state to ascertain whether or not any arrangements could be made to have his claim presented to the court, and to 'have, his legal rights then and there heard and determined..
*33The only excuse which he offers is that he was “in rather poor circumstances and in poor health;” that he was “scant of money and hard to get along; Aiat he had no means to go to Virginia City * * * or to send some one there.” It is not shown that plaintiff’s mental faculties were impaired, as claimed by his counsel. His deposition is quite lengthy, and, although there are discrepancies in some material portions of it, he seems to have remembered dates and events, and to have given his testimony in an ordinarily intelligent manner. The only testimony, in addition to his own, upon this point, is “that Eoyce was a person of delicate health, and subject to frequent and violent epileptic fits; and that said Eoyce was a man in poor and' needy circumstances ; and was such in the year 1874, and ever since has been poor and in delicate health.”
These facts, however important they might have 'been in determining this case upon its merits, had the plaintiff shown that he had relied upon the representations of Hampton and Ford, and had thereby been misled to his prejudice, are not sufficient to excuse him, upon his knowledge of the condition of affairs, as before stated, from making an effort to appear in the proceedings in the district court. He could, notwithstanding his poverty and ill-health, have written letters and ascertained the names of prominent and reliable attorneys residing in Virginia City. He could have communicated with the attorneys, setting forth the facts, and could, doubtless, have secured their services upon reasonable terms. His financial circumstances and poor health' are not shown to have been in any better condition after the decree of distribution than before, and he is now represented by able counsel. It is, therefore, fair to presume that he could have procured counsel as well before as afte1’ the settlement of his sister’s estate if he had made an efi -t to do so.
The law a 3 those who are vigilant, and not those who • sleep upon or slumber over their rights. Courts “ can not obliterate the recognized rules of law, requiring of all persons the diligence and attention demanded of a prudent man in the transactiomof his own business, and establish a *34measure of care and diligence for each particular case.” (Boyd v. Blankman, 29 Cal. 43.)
The facts found by the court in its nineteenth, twentieth, twenty-second, twenty-sixth, twenty-seventh, and twenty-eighth findings, relative to the negligence of plaintiff, are, in oür opinion, fully sustained by the evidence.
2. Counsel for appellant argue that notwithstanding this negligence upon the part of their client the decree should be set aside because Hampton, as administrator, and Ford, the husband, committed a fraud upon the court in concealing from it the fact that plaintiff claimed to be a brother of the deceased. The record shows that Hampton, soon after his appointment as administrator, was made aware of the fact that plaintiff claimed to be a brother of Mrs. Ford, deceased; that he was about the same time notified by Mr. Ford that plaintiff was a bastard, and was not entitled to any share of the estate. These facts he communicated to Messrs. Mesick and Seely, attorneys for the estate. He seems to have acted in good faith in administering upon the estate. The evidence “ shows that in all of said estate proceedings he acted entirely under the advice of the said attorneys.”
Upon the trial of this cause it was expressly admitted by counsel for plaintiff “ that no actual fraud, concealment, or misrepresentation had been in any wise intended by defendant, J. C. Hampton, in the estate proceedings of said Oliva Rosanna Ford in said district court, either upon said court or plaintiff.”
The only question, therefore, which presents itself upon this branch of the case, is whether or not it was the official duty of the administrator to notify the court that Royce had written letters to him claiming to be an heir of the estate? Administrators should be held to the utmost good faith _and strict performance of official duty. But they are mere creatures of the statute, and are only bound to perform such duties as are imposed upon them by the law. The decree of distribution in the estate of Mrs. Ford was not made upon the petition of the administrator, and we know of no provision of the law that required him, under the cir*35cumstances shown to have existed, to notify the court that Royce claimed to be an heir of the estate.
With reference to the husband of the deceased, upon whose petition the decree was made, but little need be-said. If he knew that Royce was an heir of the estate, it was his duty to inform the court of this fact. But the truth is that Ford claimed to be the sole heir of the estate. He verified his petition setting forth this fact, and caused due notice thereof to be published to the world in the manner provided by the statute of this state.
It is true that the evidence shows that prior to the death of his wife, when visiting the pláintiff at his home in Pennsylvania, during the year 1874, Ford “ recognized said Royce as his wife’s brother and talked of him as such publicly and openly.” The fourteenth finding of fact, in so far as it states that Mr. Ford “always claimed that plaintiff Royce was not the lawful brother of said Oliva Rosanna Ford,” is not sustained by the evidence. But the fact is that after the death of his wife and prior to the month of November, 1875, and always thereafter, he claimed that no relationship existed. Upon the cross-examination of the plaintiff, when defendants’ counsel called for the production of the letter of Mr; Ford to plaintiff, denying any relation-' ship, “plaintiff’s counsel states that the letter is lo§t and can not be found, * * * that a' copy of that letter is not here.” Thereupon defendants’ counsel asked plaintiff this question; “In that letter Ford distinctly stated*, did he not; that he recognized no relationship betiueen himself and you, and requested you not to call him brother?” The plaintiff answered as follows: ‘ ‘ He said something similar to that; that luas the substance of it.”
With the exceptions already noted, and perhaps in a few other minor and unimportant particulars, the findings of fact necessary to support our conclusions are sustained by the evidence, and support the conclusions of law arrived at by the district court.
The judgment of the district court is affirmed.