delivered the opinion of the court.
The defendants in error move to dismiss the writ of error in this case. It appears from the record that the defendants duly qualified as executors of the decedent, Frederick M. Halstead, under a will which was subsequently adjudged to be void. Thereupon administrators de bonis non were appointed. The former executors settled their accounts before the commissioner of accounts under the provisions of chapter 221 of the Code, and the commissioner stated the accounts and filed the report thereof as required by sections 5426 and 5427. Thereupon the administrators d. b. n. *520filed exceptions denying the correctness of certain disbursements made by the executors, and gave the executors notice of the same. Upon the hearing of these exceptions under section 5428, the court allowed other parties to come in as co-plaintiffs, it being recited in the order: “And upon the hearing of said exceptions all the heirs of Frederick M. Halstead, deceased, by leave of court, joined as plaintiffs with his said administrators, those heirs being the following:”
A hearing was then had before the court on the exceptions filed by the administrators. Considerable evidence was produced and after argument the court overruled the exceptions and entered an order declaring the accounts fully approved and confirmed.
Does an appeal or writ of error lie from this order of confirmation? We think not.
Section 5429 of the present Code, which has been, in the same language, in our legislation relative to the settlement of fiduciary accounts for many years, is as follows:
“The report, to the extent to which it may be so confirmed, shall be taken to be correct, except so far as the same may in a suit, in proper time, be surcharged or falsified.”
• That such an order of confirmation is not a final judgment or decree, from which an appeal may be taken, is scarcely open to question in Virginia. The right to a review of such an order, by the appellate court, was directly presented in Owens v. Owens, 109 Va. 432, 63 S. E. 990. The court there stated the question raised thus:
“On the 29th of October, 1907, a settlement of the executorial accounts, made by the commissioner of accounts, was filed in the clerk's office of the chancery court. The widow of the testator excepted to this *521report upon the ground that certain allowances to the executor in the form of commissions were improper.
“Upon consideration of this exception by the chancery court, as provided by section 2698 of the Code, the same was overruled, and the report confirmed. From this action of the chancery court this appeal was taken.
“The first question to be determined is whether or not this court has jurisdiction to entertain an appeal from the order here complained of.”
The court held that section 2699 of the former Code, corresponding with section 5429 of the Code of 1919, negatived the idea of an appeal from an order confirming the ex parte settlement of the fiduciary' accounts, notwithstanding the fact that the ex parte settlement had been excepted to; such a proceeding was not a suit between the parties plaintiff and defendant; that the settlement when confirmed was yet an ex parte proceeding, to be taken as prima fade correct, but subject to be surcharged and falsified in a suit for that purpose, as provided by statute. The appeal was dismissed as improvidently awarded.
The law, as thus enunciated, has remained unchanged. The same effect was given to a similar West Virginia statute. Haught v. Parks, 30 W. Va. 246, 4 S. E. 276.
In Leachman v. Board of Supervisors, 124 Va. 616, 98 S. E. 656, there was an exception to the report of a commissioner of accounts auditing the accounts of a county treasurer; the exception was overruled and the accounts confirmed; and an appeal was allowed from the order of confirmation. On page 620 (98 S. E. 656) the court recognizes the binding effect of the conclusion reached in Owens v. Owens, but shows that the auditing of the account of a public officer is provided for by a statute entirely different from the regulations under *522which administration and executorial accounts are settled.
It is clear in the instant case the order confirming the executorial accounts had the effect of making the settlement approved by the court prima facie correct. Being only prima facie correct the accounts are still subject to be surcharged and falsified, and in a proceeding for the purpose, the executors cannot claim that the order of confirmation should be given the effect of an estoppel by former judgment against the plaintiff in error here or any other persons interested in the settlement of the estate.
The writ of error must be dismissed as improvidently awarded, without prejudice to any person in interest to bring a suit to surcharge and falsify the accounts.
Dismissed.