delivered the opinion of the court:
First—The appellees in this case attack certain items in the final report of appellant, as administrator of the estate of their deceased brother, Edward B. Goodner. These items represent moneys, paid out by the appellant as such administrator upon certain claims filed against the estate. It is charged, that these claims were improperly allowed by the appellant as such administrator, and that he was guilty of fraud and collusion in so allowing the same, and neglected his duty in not presenting proper defenses thereto. The two main items, contested by the appellees, are $1560.00, with interest thereon, paid upon a claim filed by Harriet E. Marshall, mother of appellant and grandmother of appellee, Marietta E. Coleman; and $3500.00, refunded by the appellant out of the moneys of the estate of Edward B. Goodner, deceased, to appellant’s brother, James E. Marshall, administrator of the estate of Edward B. Marshall, deceased, father of, appellant and grandfather of appellee, Marietta E. Coleman, being the half of an advancement of $7000.00, alleged to have been made by Edward B. Marshall, deceased, in his lifetime to his daughter, Melvin a E. Goodner, and her husband, Lyman T. Goodner, sister and brother-in-law of the appellant, and mother and father of the appellee, Marietta E. Coleman. The contest here is not between the holders of these claims, or of the judgments entered by the county court allowing these claims, on the one side, and the administrator of the estate of Edward B. Goodner, deceased, on the other. The contest here arises out of exceptions, made to the final report of the appellant, as administrator, by the appellees, as heirs of the estate of Edward B. Goodner, deceased. The claims objected to were allowed by the county court originally; and it is claimed by the appellant that, having been allowed, they were judgments entered in regular form, and cannot be attacked in the county court through exceptions to the final report made to that court.
When the exceptions' were filed by appellees, the estate had not been closed, and the administrator presented his final report in answer to a citation, requiring him to do so. This final report recapitulated the items in four reports previously made by him to the court. The whole matter was within the control of the county court, and, upon exceptions to the final report, the items in the former reports were subject to review and correction by the county court.
The general rule, as announced in the text-books, is that “a partial or annual account is only a judgment de bene esse, often rendered ex parte, and only prima facie correct. On final settlement it may be opened to correct errors due to fraud or mistake, although the error was not excepted to or appealed from when the partial account was rendered.” (7 Am. & Eng. Ency. of Law,—1st ed.— pp. 442-446). The allowance of a claim by the county court is not conclusive against the heir excepting to the administrator’s final report, when such allowance is subject to impeachment for fraud or collusion in a court of equity. (In re Corrington, 124 Ill. 363; Ward v. Durham, 134 id. 195; Shepard v. Speer, 140 id. 238; Schlink v. Maxton, 153 id. 447). A judgment, allowing a claim against the estate of a deceased person, is only conclusive against the heir-at-law, or devisee, in respect to personal estate, where there has been no fraud or collusion in the rendition of such judgment. (Ward v. Durham, supra). The heir always has a standing in court to institute a proceeding to set aside the allowance of a claim by the probate court through fraud; and the county court, in the settlement of estates of deceased persons, exercises an equitable jurisdiction. (Schlink v. Maxton, supra, and cases there cited). In Bliss v. Seaman, 165 Ill. 422, the facts showed, that the appellees there introduced in evidence the several reports and accounts of an executor, which had been approved by the probate court, and then introduced testimony for the purpose of contradicting and surcharging said reports and accounts; and it was there contended, that the adjudications of the probate court, and orders made by it approving the different reports and partial settlements, were final and conclusive judgments and not subject to collateral attack, and that said reports and accounts could not be impeached in the manner, in which the reports and accounts of appellant are sought to be impeached by the exceptions, filed in the case at bar to the final report of appellant as administrator; and this court there said (p. 428): “The statute (sec. 112, chap. 3) makes provision that all executors and administrators shall, every year, exhibit accounts of their administration, but that no final settlement shall >be made and approved by the court unless-the heirs of the decedent have been notified thereof. A partial or annual account of an executor or administrator is usually an ex parte proceeding, and is only a judgment de bene esse and only prima facie correct, and, although not excepted to or appealed from, is open to subsequent correction or challenge. ” We are, accordingly, of the opinion that, as the estate of the deceased, Edward B. Goodner, was not closed, the county court of Marion county had a right, when appellant’s final report was presented for approval, to hear testimony for the purpose of contradicting and surcharging his former reports and accounts as administrator, and to surcharge and correct the same, if the testimony so introduced justified such actioh.- (Millard v. Harris, 119 Ill. 185; Long v. Thompson, 60 id. 27; Curts v. Brooks, 71 id. 125).
Second—The amount of the claim of Harriet E. .Marshall, mother of appellant and grandmother of appellee, Marietta E. Coleman, which was allowed against the estate of EdwTard B. Goodner, deceased, was $1926.85. As to $366.85 of this amount there seems to be no dispute. The contention is as to $1560.00 of the claim, recited on its face to be for “care and maintenance from April 17, 1880, to April 17,1890, of Edward B. Goodner, 520 weeks, at" $3.00 per week.” In regard to this claim the Appellate Court say in their opinion: “That the claim was conceived in fraud, and that appellant knew it and assisted in carrying out the scheme, the evidence leaves little doubt iu our minds.” The same conclusion in regard to the claim, thus announced by the Appellate Court, was reached by the county court and the circuit court. After a careful examination of the record, we concur in what is thus said by the Appellate Court.
This claim of $1560.00 was made out by James E. Marshall on June 20, 1892, two months before any administrator was appointed upon the estate of his nephew, Edward B. Goodner. The evidence shows that, after James E. Marshall made out this claim, he presented it to his mother, and obtained her oath to its correctness. It was made out two years after the death of Edward B. Marshall. The appellee, Marietta E. Coleman, was present when the claim was presented to her grandmother by her uncle, James E. Marshall. James E. Marshall figured up how much his nephew’s board would be for about thirteen years, and, when appellee, Marietta E. Coleman, expressed her surprise, and asked whether her grandmother was going to charge her brother’s estate for his board, James E. Marshall answered: “No, this will be figured up, and your grandma will sign a receipt, which will be all right to make it look as though she received the money. It will be taken out of your mother’s estate to protect your interest from this little half-sister.” When James E. Marshall left, Mrs. Harriet E. Marshall said to her grand-daug'hter, that she did not understand these things, and that she might be signing her rights away. The testimony shows clearly, that Harriet E. Marshall herself had her doubts about the justness and correctness of presenting any such claim.
The appellee, Nellie May Goodner, was born in 1878, the year when Marietta E. Goodner went to live with her grandfather at Central!a. Her half-sister, Nellie May Goodner, remained with the mother of the latter, Mrs. Helen L. Goodner, who was the step-mother of appellee, Marietta. The half-sister lived in Nashville, in Washington county, while Marietta lived with her grandfather in Centraba, and it is evident from the testimony that Marietta had not seen much of her step-mother, or half-sister, for many years when the matter of this claim came up. She was made to believe by her uncles, that her half-sister was intending to make a claim upon her 'deceased brother’s estate, which was unjust, and not warranted by the law. She was ignorant of the law, and the fact, that her half-sister was as much an heir of her. deceased brother as she herself was, was concealed from her. The uncles of Marietta, who was then young and inexperienced, inspired her with the fear that her half-sister was intending to take more of her deceased brother’s estate than was just, and this fear was worked upon to keep her from making any opposition to the claim presented against the estate of her brother in the name of her grandmother. The object of making out and presenting that claim was to reduce as much as possible the interest in Edward B. Goodner’s estate, which would go to his half-sister, the appellee, Nellie May Goodner. As is said by the Appellate Court in their opinion in deciding this case: James E. Marshall intended “to deplete the estate of his dead nephew by turning as much of it as possible back into the Marshall family, and this purpose will be more clearly seen from the claimed ‘advancement’ hereinafter referred to.” .
After the claim was made out and sworn to, the appellant, W. Scott Marshall, filed a petition asking the county court to appoint himself administrator of the estate of Edward B. Goodner, deceased. Shortly after his appointment as such administrator, this claim was presented in the county court, and the appellant, as administrator, made no defense ag’ainst it, but entered his appearance, and waived the issuance of process, and allowed it without objection. He himself knew the character of the claim, and the object of its presentation, because the evidence shows that the appellee, Marietta E. Coleman, asked him about the claim, and he told her that it was for her protection. He thus made the same statement to her which was made to her by her uncle, James E. Marshall; and whether the statements made by James E. Marshall to appellee, Marietta, in the presence of her grandmother, were competent or not in view of the absence at that time of the appellant, it is proven that the matter of this claim was talked of with James E. Marshall afterwards in the presence of the appellant. As he made the same statements in reg'ard to it which his brother James E. Marshall had made, the admission of the testimony objected to could have done him no injury.
Where items in the account of an administrator or guardian, which are apparently regular upon their face, are allowed, there is a prima facie presumption in favor of their regularity; but “if it appears from the face of the account that items were improperly allowed, no such presumption will sustain them.” (Bond v. Lockwood, 33 Ill. 212). Inasmuch as the items in this claim were for care and maintenance froip April 17, 1880, to April 17, 1890, and the claim was not presented until January 3, 1893, against the estate of Edward B. Goodner, it is manifest that nearly all of the items in the claim had been barred by the Statute of Limitations when the claim was presented. It is true that, in the county court, there are no pleadings, and the Statute of Limitations need not be set up in writing, but the Statute of Limitations was applicable without being specially pleaded, and the defense of the Statute of Limitations should have been interposed by the appellant. In Bromwell v. Estate of Bromwell, 139 Ill. 424, we said (p. 427): “If these transactions were in fact loans of money, they created an indebtedness which was evidenced by no writing, and which was therefore subject to the limitation of five years. No evidence was offered tending to take the case out of the statute, or to bring it within any of the exceptions therein contained, and the plaintiff’s claim must therefore be held to have been barred by limitation nearly five years before it was filed in the probate court. No formal pleadings being required in the probate, court, the Statute of Limitations applied without being specially pleaded, and under the evidence in the record, there can be no question that, it constitutes a complete bar to said claim.”
Some authorities hold that an administrator is not obliged to plead the general statute of limitations in actions on claims against the estate, and others hold that it is the duty of the personal representative to interpose the bar of the statute on every claim not properly asserted within the statutory period. (11 Am. & Eng. Ency. of Law,—2d ed.—p. 919; 2 Woerner’s Am. Law of Admn. —2d ed.—sec. 401).
The tendency of the decisions in this State has been in favor of the position, that the statute should be insisted upon by the administrator against claims, which are barred by its terms. (McCoy v. Morrow, 18 Ill. 519; Unknown Heirs v. Baker, 23 id. 484; Stillman v. Young, 16 id. 318; Bromwell v. Schubert, 40 Ill. App. 330). Where an administrator, through bad faith or by failure to exercise reasonable diligence, diminishes the funds in his hands for distribution, he should be required to account, and can be compelled to render a just and true accounting by the probate court in the exercise of its equitable jurisdiction. (In re Corrington, 124 Ill. 362; Whitney v. Peddicord, 63 id. 249).
But even where it is held, that an administrator is not obliged to plead the general statute of limitations in actions on claims against the estate, he is only justified in not pleading the statute, when the claim is “otherwise justly due” or “otherwise well founded.” (11 Am. & Eng. Ency. of Law,—2d ed.—p. 919; 2 Woerner’s Am. Law of Admn.—2d ed.—sec. 401). ' As it is clear from what has already been said, that' the claim now under consideration was not justly due or well founded, it was the duty of appellant to interpose that statute as a defense..
The claim is for care and maintenance of a grandson, Edward B. Goodner, for ten years, by a grandmother, Harriet E. Marshall. During the ten years in question Edward B. Marshall, the husband of Harriet E. Marshall, was alive, and was the head of the family. If any claim for care and maintenance existed, it was not in favor of Harriet E. Marshall, but in favor of the estate of Edward B. Marshall, deceased. During" the years in question Edward B. Goodner was a member of the family of his grandfather, and the care and maintenance, which were extended to him by his grandfather, are presumed to have been so extended gratuitously in the absence of evidence as to any arrangement they were to be paid for." (Heffron v. Brown, 155 Ill. 322; Switzer v. Kee, 146 id. 577; Miller v. Miller, 16 id. 296; Faloon v. McIntyre, 118 id. 292; Brush v. Blanchard, 18 id. 46; Collar v. Patterson, 137 id. 403). No evidence appears in this record to rebut the presumption, that the care and maintenance referred to in this bill were furnished to the deceased, Edward B. Goodner, by his grandfather gratuitously. There is nothing to show, that it was ever the intention of the grandfather to charge his grandson with the support which he gave him. No entry of any charge was made in his books. The facts in regard to the relations of these parties were not presented to the county court, and no defense was made to the claim by the administrator upon,the grounds here suggested. In this respect there was a gross neglect of his duty as administrator by the appellant. As administrator, he was charged with a trust, and with the duty of protecting the estate against unjust claims. We are of the opinion, that the action of the lower courts in charging appellant with the above amount so paid out upon this claim, and interest thereon, was correct.
Third—The next contention is in reference to the advancement, which is alleged to have been made by Edward B. Marshall in his lifetime to his daughter, Mel vina E- Goodner, and her husband, Lyman T. Goodner, This matter of the advancement was not broached, or put into tangible shape, until several years after the deaths of both Edward B. Marshall and Edward B. Goodner. Appellant says, that Edward B. Marshall advanced $7000.00 to his daughter, Melvina E. Goodner, and her husband, during his lifetime in various sums from time to time during the period from May 1, 1866, to October 1, 1878. There is no written evidence, that any such advancement was made or intended by the deceased, Edward B. Marshall. James E. Marshall paid to the appellee, Marietta E. Coleman, and to the estate of Edward B. Goodner, deceased, their distributive share in the estate of their grandfather without making any deduction for such advancement. He, therefore, could not have known of it when he paid over such distributive' share, although it is claimed by appellant that it was a matter of ‘'family knowledge.” James E. Marshall presented a petition to the county court, saying that he had paid over the amount of such advancement, to-wit, $7000.00 to the two grandchildren of Edward B. Marshall by “mistake and inadvertence;” and the county court was requested to enter an order, and did enter an order, directing the appellant, as administrator of Edward B. Goodner’s estate, to pay back $3500.00, the one-half of the alleged advancement. If there was no advancement, then the refunding of this $3500.00 by the appellant tos James E. Marshall, administrator of Edward B. Marshall’s estate, was wrong.
Section 7 of chapter 39, Revised Statutes, in regard to “Descent” provides as follows: “No gift or grant shall be deemed to have been made in advancement unless so expressed in writing or charg'ed in writing, by the intestate, as an advancement, or acknowledged in writing by the child or other descendant.” (2 Starr & Cur. Ann. Stat. —2d ed.—p. 1432). In view of this statute this court has held in several cases, that an advancement, which is not evidenced in the manner required by the statute, is in legal effect no advancement at all, however clear it may appear that it was so intended. (Long v. Long, 118 Ill. 638; Bartmess v. Fuller, 170 id. 193; Wilkinson v. Thomas, 128 id. 363). In Wilkinson v. Thomas, supra, we held that parol statements and oral declarations are insufficient to establish an advancement. When the order was made by the county court, allowing the $3500.00 in question to be refunded, no evidence was produced before that court to sustain the claimed advancement. Indeed, the county judge himself testifies in this case, that no evidence was offered in favor of the claims “of Harriet E. Marshall, Charles P. Marshall or W. Scott Marshall against Edward B. Goodner’s estate, except that shown by the claims themselves, and that no evidence was offered in favor of the refunding of the $3500.00, mentioned in the petition of J. E. Marshall, other than the petition itself, as shown among the files in the case. But, upon the hearing upon the exceptions filed to the final report of appellant, he makes a statement in regard to this advancement, and his statement is the only evidence upon the subject. It is to be noted, that the appellant is in this matter an interested witness, testifying against the heirs and estate of his deceased nephew, Edward B. Goodner, because, when the amount of the advancement is returned to the estate of Edward B. Marshall, deceased, a distributive portion thereof, amounting, with the inherited interest of the deceased, Xenophon S. Marshall, to the sum of $1600.00, or thereabouts, goes to the appellant, as a son and heir of E. B. Marshall.
Appellant says, that he and his father, E. B. Marshall, were partners in the banking business at Centralia, and in such business used a ledger which was opened in 1873; that his father, E. B. Marshall, carried some individual accounts in this partnership ledger; that, not earlier than 1873 or later than 1875, E. B. Marshall showed appellant an account on the ledger against Lyman T. Goodner and wife, headed “To advancement charged.” He says, that E. B. Marshall footed up the account and it amounted to $7600.00; that, after the death of E. B. Marshall, his administrator made a search for the book and it could not be found; that in 1892, two years after the death of E. B. Marshall, this book was found in a wood-shed, with the leaf, which is alleged to have contained the advancement, torn out. Appellant swears, that he did not tear the leaf out, and James E. Marshall swears that he did not tear it out. Thé index to the ledger under the letter “G” was offered in evidence by appellant, and it showed “L. T. Goodner.” The index would seem to point to an account in the ledger against L. T. Goodner, and not against Melvina E. Goodner. In their opinion deciding this case, the Appellate Court say: “We are not satisfied that the advancement was established by legal evidence, either as to its origin, or its continuance, if so established.” We agree with this conclusion of the Appellate Court.
In the first place, the document, dated January 14, 1895, being the first paper which appears in this record in regard to the advancement, describes the moneys advanced as having been “received from year to year from May 1, 1866, up to October 1, 1878, amounting'to the sum of $7000.00.” That is to say, Edward B. Marshall is represented as having made advancements to his daughter, Melvina, during a period of more than two years after her death. The evidence does not show the exact date of the death of Melvina E. Goodner, the first -wife of Dr. Lyman T. Goodner, but it does show that Dr. Lyman T. Goodner married his second, wife on August 24, 1876. Marshall could not, therefore, have made advancements to his daughter, Melvina E., as late as October 1, 1878, when the account in regard to the advancements is stated to have ended. Appellant says, that the amount of the advancements, as shown by the ledger, was $7600.00, and yet the amount claimed was only $7000.00. The ledg'er referred to was appellant’s own book, because he states that it was a book belonging to the partnership between himself and his father. He cannot make evidence for himself by entries in his own books. It appears that this book was brought to the bank, of which the appellant was president, and of which his brother, James E. Marshall, was cashier, after the death of his father. It is said, that the leaf, on which the advancement charges were made, was torn out of the book. As it is denied that such mutilation was made by either appellant, or his brother, James E. Marshall, the presumption is that the leaf, if any leaf in the book contained advancement charges, was torn out by the deceased, Edward B. Marshall himself. The ledger was found in his wood-shed upon his homestead premises, as we understand- the evidence. It must, therefore, have been in his own possession at the time of his death. Where a will is found in a mutilated condition in the possession of a testator after the latter’s death, and there is no evidence to fix the spoliation on any other person, the court will presume that it was done by the testator with the intention of canceling the will. (Moore v. Moore, 1 Phil. 875; Lexley v. Jackson, 3 id. 126; Wilson v. Wilson, id. 552; Davis v. Davis, 2 Adams, 223; Taylor v. Pegram, 151 Ill. 106; Boyle v. Boyle, 158 id. 228). There is nothing in the record to rebut the presumption that, if any leaf containing advancement charges was torn out of this ledger, it was done by the deceased, Edward B. Marshall himself animo cancellandi. There is no evidence in the record to show, that this $7000.00 was ever paid to Mel vina E. Goodner, or her husband. It does not appear when the entries in the ledger were made, nor whether or not there were original entries in any journal before they were posted in the ledger, and, if so, when such entries were made in the journal. The appellant does not attempt to prove the contents of the leaf which, as he alleges, was torn out of the book, and which, as he further alleges, contained the items of advancement. It does no good to prove the loss of a written instrument, unless secondary evidence is introduced of its contents. (Hansen v. American Ins. Co. 57 Iowa, 741; Kearney v. New York, 92 N. Y. 617). If the contents of the lost leaf were proven, it would be evidence offered in the interest of the intestate, E. B. Marshall. It would not be competent testimony, except as to such entries as are shown to have been made cotemporaneously with the facts of the record. Book accounts are only admissible in favor of the party who keeps them, when the entries are made cotemporaneously with the transactions recorded; and the same rule applies to books and entries of deceased persons. (Greenleaf on Evidence, —13th ed.-—sec. 118; Wharton on Evidence, secs. 246-688; 2 Woerner’s Am. Law of Admn.—2d ed.—sec. 558; Nelson v. Nelson, 90 Mo. 460). “Declarations or book entries of the donor subsequent to the transaction are inadmissible, unless they are of the res gestee or against interest.” (2 Woerner’s Am. Law of Admn.—2d ed.—sec. 558).
The evidence is not in our opinion sufficient to show tint any advancement was made as claimed. It is not contended that Nellie May Goodner, who was a minor until August 2, 1896, made any admissions or waivers in regard to this advancement, which were binding upon her. As the Appellate Court say in their opinion, “the appellant’s acts, so far as this advancement is concerned, and so far as they affected Nellie May Goodner, were in fraud of her rights.” Therefore, the circuit court did not err in sustaining the exceptions of the appellee, Nellie May Goodner, to the refunding of the $3500.00, so far as the $1750.00 of it, which would be distributed to her,, is concerned.
The Appellate Court, however, sustained the circuit court in overruling the exceptions of the appellee, Marietta E. Coleman, to the refunding of the $3500.00, and sustained the circuit court in refusing to charge the appellant with $1750.00, the half of the $3500.00 which would belong to Marietta E. Coleman, as distributee of her deceased brother’s estate, and as his heir. We cannot agree with the Appellate Court in this conclusion. We think that the county court decided correctly in requiring the appellant to account for the whole of the $3500.00 paid out by him, both the part which would go to the appellee, Nellie May Goodner, and the part which would go to the appellee, Marietta E. Coleman. What may have been done with the $3500.00 by James E. Marshall, after he received it, is not the question here. The question here is whether appellant’s account, as administrator, should be surcharged to the amount of the sums wrongfully paid out by him.
There can be no question, that the document, dated January 14, 1895, signed by Marietta E. Coleman, was obtained from her by gross fraud and misrepresentation on the part of her uncles, and their attorney in Centralia. She signed this document when she was a resident of Colorado, and the wife of a citizen of Colorado. It was sent to her by mail. She at first declined to sign it, and wrote for some information in regard to it, but finally did sign it in view of letters written to her by her uncle, Charles P. Marshall, and the attorney of her uncle, W. Scott Marshall, the appellant herein. 'These letters play upon her fear that her half-sister will do something to take her estate away from her. A partition suit in reference to the real estate seems to have been begun by Nellie May Goodner. She was a legal heir of her deceased half-brother, Edward B. Goodner, and this fact must have been known to appellant, and his brothers. The Illinois statute, making her half-sister an heir, was not known to Marietta E. Coleman. The representations, which induced her to sign the document, dated January 14,1895, came to her in letters sent to Colorado, of which State she was then a citizen. The maxim, ignorantia legis neminem excusat, has no application here, for the reason that mistakes as to foreign laws are regarded as mistakes of fact. Ignorance of law, which will not excuse, is ignorance of the laws of one’s own country or State, but the laws of foreign countries or other States are facts. (Schaefer v. Wunderle, 154 Ill. 577). Being a resident of Colorado, she was not affected with knowledge of -the statutes of Illinois, in which State she did not reside.
The document of January 14, 1895, sent to her was signed by her three uncles; one of them was the administrator of her deceased brother’s estate; the other was the administrator of her grandfather’s estate; and the third was the guardian of her brother. They stood to her in peculiarly confidential and fiduciary relations. Where two persons stand in such relation to each other that confidence is necessarily reposed by one in the other, and the one has over the other an influence which naturally grows out of that confidence, the abuse of such confidence or influence to obtain an advantage, at the expense of the confiding party, will not be permitted to prevail, even though the transaction could not have been impeached, if no such confidential relations had existed. (Tait v. Williamson, L. R. 2 Ch. 55; 10 Am. & Eng. Ency. of Law, p. 327; 1 id. p. 375; Purvines v. Harrison, 151 Ill. 219; Sayles v. Christie, ante, p. 420; White v. Ross, 160 Ill. 56).
In order to induce Mrs. Coleman to sign the document, dated January 14,1895, a lawyer, who was also the father-in-law of appellant, wrote her a letter referring to the probability that a suit would be brought by her half-sister, and advising her to sign the advancement paper of January 14, 1895, expressing the opinion that her uncles would be honest with her in' the matter. Her uncle, Charles P. Marshall, wrote her a letter in which he said: “When a document is signed by your three uncles, you ought to know that it means straight business, even though you do not understand the purpose at the time.” It does not appear, that Mrs. Coleman was a party to any scheme to defraud her half-sister, but she was made to believe that her half-sister had no rights in the estate of her deceased brother. We agree with the Appellate Court when they say in their opinion in regard to Mrs. Coleman: “We are satisfied from the evidence that up to June 5,1895, she was the dupe of designing men.” We are, however, still further of the opinion, that she was the dupe of designing men on June 5,1895, and June 25,1895, when she signed the subsequent papers signed by her, having reference to this advancement, and mentioned in the statement preceding this opinion. They were all parts of one and the same fraudulent scheme.
As soon as the document, dated January 14,1895, was signed by her and received by her uncles, one of them wrote her a letter on April 30, 1895, proposing to buy out her interest in the real estate of her deceased grandfather. When she came to Centralia from Colorado, she and her husband were taken to the bank, of which her uncle, the appellant, was the president, and her uncle, James E. Marshall, was the cashier, in the evening, and there remained with them all night until four or five o’clock in the morning. The appellant represented to her that it was necessary for her to keep out of the way, in order to avoid’service of summons upon her in some suit, which had been instituted by her half-sister. As this suit was a simple partition suit, which her half-sister had a right to bring, it would have made no difference if she had been served with process, but she was made to believe that it was a serious matter. In addition to this, she ,was told by the appellant, that they had in their possession letters, written by her father in his lifetime, which, if made public, would disgrace her, and that they would disgrace her by the publication of such letters, unless she came to their terms in regard to the advancement, and in regard to the sale of her interest. In view of these and other facts, which it is impossible for us within the limits of this opinion to further comment upon, the written consents to this advancement, which were procured from her, were so procured by fraud and misrepresentation, and she ought not to be bound thereby. The validity of the deeds of her lands, which she executed to her uncles, is not involved in this, proceeding, and we pass no opinion upon that question. But the documents show, that the purchase of her interest in the land by her uncles was made use of by them, in order to force her to consent to the refunding of the advancement. She and her husband, who was a young man teaching school in Colorado, without acquaintance in Illinois, and without practical business knowledge, had no disinterested legal adviser to inform them in regard to their rights, and were imposed upon and defrauded. We are of the opinion, that the Appellate and circuit courts should have required the appellant to account for the whole of the $3500.00, which appellant paid out to the administrator of E. B. Marshall’s estate on account of the portion of this alleged advancement, which had been paid to Edward B. Goodner’s estate.
Appellant was properly charged with ten per cent interest. Under the statute an administrator is chargeable with ten per cent annual interest on moneys, bonds, notes and credits in his possession or control as property or assets of the estate after a period of two years and six months from the daté of his letters of administration, unless good cause is shown to the court why such should not be taxed. (Rev. Stat. chap. 3, sec. 114). It appears here that appellant refused to make final settlement, and, when compelled to render a final account on citation, he filed a written protest against any order of distribution at that time, although it was about four and one-half years after his appointment. He had this money in his bands, and, as he paid it out under circumstances which required his account to be surcharged, and neglected to make settlement, he has failed to show the court good cause why the ten per cent interest should not be charged against him. {In re Schofield, 99 Ill. 513).
Fourth—It is said by the appellant that the appellee, Marietta E. Coleman, should have taken an appeal'from the judgment of the circuit court, and that she was not entitled to assign as cross-error in the Appellate Court, that the circuit court disallowed one-half of the $3500.00 above referred to. We are of the opinion that this question can be raised by the assignment of cross-errors, and a cross-error has been assigned by the appellee, Marietta E. Coleman, as to this item. The item in the reports of the administrator was one item of $3500.00, and the exceptions filed were filed to that particular item. The order, made by the county court, was an order that the appellant should refund $3500.00. This item was one, and not divisible. It has been held, that each item in an administrator’s account is a separate claim depending alone upon its own merits, having no connection with the other items, and that an appeal by the administrator from an order or judgment, rejecting one of his claims against the estate, only brings up for review the propriety of the ruling in respect to such rejected claim. (Millard v. Harris, 119 Ill. 185; Curts v. Brooks, 71 id. 125; Morgan v. Morgan, 83 id. 196). This rule is applicable, as between the claim of Harriet E. Marshall for $1560.00 and the claim of Charles P. Marshall for $168.00 and the claim for the refunding of the $3500.00. Each of these claims is a separate item. The rule, however, in regard to a separate appeal from'a judgment as to each separate item in an administrator’s account has no application here, because the item, as to which the cross-error is assigned, was in the county court one item of $3500.00, and not two items of $1750.00 each. The allowance of a part of it, instead of the whole, does not split it into two claims.
Fifth—As to the item of $168.00 for medical charges by Charles P. Marshall against the estate of Edward B. Goodner, deceased, no appeal was taken from the order of the circuit court, or from the judgment of the Appellate Court in reference to the allowance of that item. As it was a separate item in the account, its allowance cannot be here attacked by means of the assignment of a cross-error.
Sixth—The appellant charges $14.88 for traveling expenses from Chicago, and return, in answer to a citation from the county court. This item of $14.88 was disallowed by the circuit court, and the order disallowing the same has been affirmed by the Appellate Court. The action of the lower courts in regard to this item was correct. After appellant was appointed administrator of the estate of Edward B. Goodner, he removed to the city of Chicago; and this item is made up of charges for his traveling expenses in coming from and returning to Chicago in answer to a citation which was issued against him, because he failed to Settle his accounts. The item was properly disallowed.
Seventh—The complaint is made, that the costs were taxed against the appellant personally, and not against him as administrator. This action of the lower courts was proper, because the costs of this proceeding have been caused by the misconduct of the appellant himself.
The judgment of the Appellate Court is affirmed, except so far as that judgment affirmed the decree of the circuit court requiring appellant to surcharge himself with only $1750.00; and ten per cent interest, of the $3500.00 item, instead of requiring him to surcharge himself with the whole of the $3500.00 item and ten per cent interest; he should have been charged with the whole of the $3500.00 and ten per cent interest.
Accordingly, the judgment of the Appellate Court and the decree of the circuit court are reversed, so far as they failed to require appellant to surcharge himself with the whole of the $3500.00 item and ten per cent interest thereon; and the cause is remanded to the circuit court with directions to enter a decree in accordance with the views herein expressed.
Partly affirmed and partly reversed.