delivered the opinion of the court.
It appears that the appellee, who in 1870 qualified as the committee of the lunatic, annually settled before a commissioner her fiduciary accounts, which were duly confirmed by the county court. At the time of her qualification there was due her (as she claimed), for the care and maintenance of the lunatic for several years, under agreement with a former committee, the sum of 11,727.01. with interest. This sum she charged in her ex-parte, settlements in her own favor against the estate of the lunatic. The latter died in 1877, at which time, as appears from the settled accounts, there was due the appellee the principal sum of 84,289.89. The object of this suit was to subject the real estate left by the lunatic1 to the payment of this balance. The heirs-at-law, except the appellee, who was the plaintiff below, were made defendants. They answered, denying the claim, averring that the ex-parte settlements were erroneous, and relying on the statute of limitations. IS Inch testimony was taken, and at the final hearing a decree was entered in the plaintiff’s favor, from which decree the case is now here on appeal.
The statute provides that the report of the commissioner settling the accounts of a fiduciary, to the extent to which it may be confirmed, shall be taken to be correct, except so far as the same may, in a suit in proper time, be surcharged or falsified. Oocle 1873, chapter 128, section 29.
In Newton v. Poole, 12 Leigh, 112, it was held, in respect to an executor’s accounts, that though great and numerous errors *61appear, or even though tlie executor appear to have taken an unfair advantage, and though he never returned to the court and did not exhibit to the creditors any inventory and appraisement of the estate, the audited accounts are yet to be taken as l>rimu facie evidence, and to be corrected only so tar as they are surcharged and falsified by proof. In delivering the opinion Tucker, P., said: “The audited account does not, as has been erroneously supposed, stand upon the footing of a stated account between the parties. The latter rests upon the supposed adjustment between the parties themselves; and if there be fraud, it is of course void in Mo. The other rests upon the supposed integrity of an impartial tribunal, and is only to be corrected so far as it is proved to be erroneous, unless corruption in the tribunal itself can be established; for where the law authorizes any person to make an inquiry of a judicial nature, and to register the proceedings, the proceedings so registered are not only'to be presumed to be true, but they are generally held to be the only legitimate medium to prove the result. Stark. Ev. part iv. page 1018.” The same doctrine was held in the recent case of Leake’s c.e’or v. Leake and other, 75 Va. 792, and in other cases. And the same is true in respect to the settlements of a committee and all other fiduciaries, whose accounts are required by the statute to be settled before a commissioner, and returned to the proper court for confirmation.
It is insisted, however, that the item of §1,727.01 was erroneously included in the e.c-parte settlements, and is therefore not within the. influence of tlie principles just, adverted to. But this objection is not well founded. The sum was due for the maintenance and support, of the lunatic by virtue of an agreement with a former committee, and was a charge not against the committee individually, but against the estate of the lunatic. Barnum, &c., v. Frost's ad'mr., 17 Gratt. 398. It was therefore properly brought into the c.r-¿iarte settlements. For how else was the committee to proceed? The debt was due, and she could not sue herself. Nor could she sue the *62former committee, for credit bad not been given to liim individually, and bis powers as committee bad been revoked. There was nothing, therefore, for her to do but to include the item in her accounts before the commissioner, in which it was her duty to show the exact condition of the estate, and thus to give to any person interested the opportunity to attack the settlement, who might see fit to do so by proper proceedings in time. And as the item was thus properly brought into the accounts, the defence of the statute of limitations was plainly unavailing.
The ex-parte settlements being prima facie correct, it devolved on the defendants to surcharge and falsity them. And this they have failed to do, except so far as the corrections made by the- decree complained of extend. It was contended in the circuit court and also here that there was an agreement between the appellee and the former committee to board and maintain the lunatic at a fixed price — much less than the sum charged in the cx-partc settlements; and the testimony of Blackwell, the former committee, is to that effect. But this is emphatically denied by the appellee in her deposition, and the circumstances of the case tend to corroborate her statements. In addition to her own testimony is that of a number of intelligent and disinterested witnesses, who were examined in the case; and in the light of this testimony, there is little room for doubt that the sum allowed her by the decree complained of is reasonable and just. And the same must be said in respect to the sum ascertained by the decree as a proper charge against her for the annual rents and profits of the real estate.
But the appellants insist that the appellee was not a competent witness, and that their objection to her competency ought to have been sustained. This objection would be well founded if the lunatic could have been and had been a party to the contract. But as the latter was not sai juris, and the contract was with the former committee, there is no reason upon which the objection can rest, as Avas very properly held by the circuit court-
*63Nor did tlie court err in its order allowing a reexamination of the appellee as a witness. The order was-made because, as recited therein, it appeared that by the inadvertence of counsel she had not been examined as to certain matters when her deposition was first taken. “ It is a general rule,” says Barton, “that without the leave of the court, for good cause shown, a deposition once taken cannot he re-taken, the object being to compel a full disclosure on one side before the other side proves his case, and to prevent the temptation to perjury that would he offered by giving Opportunity to change the evidence to suit the emergencies of the case. But the courts possess much latitude in permitting a second examination; and when the circumstances of the case and justice require it, an order for the second examination of the same Avitness avíII he Anade, .and unless palpably improper the appellate court will not for this cause reverse the decree.” 2 Barton’s Chy. Pr. 759; Fant v. Miller & Mayhew, 17 Gratt. 188. In the present case the reexamination was confined to a single point to Avliich, by the inadvertence of her counsel, as recited in the order, the attention of the AA'itness had not been prcA'iously called. In granting the order, under these circumstances, the couid cannot he said to liaA'e exceeded the limits of a reasonable discretion, and certainly did not commit a palpable error for which the decree should be reversed.
It remains to say that the provisions of the Code (chapter 82, sections 49 d setj.) relating to the sale of the real estate of an insane person, for the payment of his debts or to make provision for the maintenance and support of such person and his family, do not apply to a case, like this, AA'liere the real estate is sought to be subjected to the payment of debts after the death of the lunatic.
Upon the whole case Ave are of opinion that there is no error in the decree, and that the same must he affirmed.
Decree affirmed.