Action by the appellant against the appellee, upon an administration bond.
The complaint shows that in May, 1855, Robert Marshall and Robert M. Marshall, were appointed administrators of the estate of Josepih G. Marshall, deceased, and with their sureties executed the bond in suit; that the deceased, in his life-time, made and delivered to one Samuel G. Humphreys, a certain promissory note, but died leaving the same unpaid; that after the death of the deceased, Humphreys filed the note in the office of the Clerk of the Jefferson Court of Common Pleas, as a claim against said estate, and such proceedings were afterwards had by said Court that said claim was allowed against said estate, to the amount of 404 dollars and 20 cents, which the administrators were ordered to pay; the claim was allowed in May, 1860, and afterwards, in June of the same year, Humphreys, for value, assigned the claim on the order book of said Court, to the relator, Stevens. The payment of the claim is negatived, and several matters are alleged by way of showing a breach of the condition of the bond, which need not be here noticed, except the following:
“Plaintiff also avers and charges that said administrators, as such, have had and held in their hands ready cash and persona., assets belonging to the estate of the deceased, *288amounting to not less than 5000 dollars, ever since the beginning of the year 1857, and before that time, and that they still have and hold the same, and that for all the time aforesaid they have kept, used and controlled the same for their own use and benefit, and that they still hold and use the same; and that they have wholly delayed and refused for all that time, and still refuse and delay to pay the said money and assets into this Court, or to pay it to the creditors of said estate.”
The defendants answered, “That the said Robert Marshall and Robert M. Marshall, administrators, as mentioned in the plaintiff’s complaint, have fully administered on the personal estate of said decedent and accounted to and settled with the proper Court for the same, as will fully appear by the records of the Common Pleas Court of Jefferson county, Indiana, reference to which is now here made, all of which payments were made on claims that were undisputed and allowed against said estate, and while the claim of the plaintiff was still pending and unallowed against said estate; that they, the said administrators, have petitioned said Court for the sale of the real estate of said decedent, and procured an order and deeree of said Court for the sale of said real estate, which, if said real estate is sold for two-thirds of its appraised value, would produce assets sufficient to meet the plaintiff’s claim and the other liabilities of said estate; that they have offered said real estate, after having the same duly advertised according to law, both at public and private sale, but that they have not as yet, after using all diligence in the premises, been able to procure a bid for the same; that the real estate so offered for sale is as eligible property and would sell as readily in the market as any real estate belonging to said decedent.”
To this answer the plaintiff demurred, but the demurrer *289was overruled, and final judgment was rendered for the defendants.
S. C. Stevens, for the appellant. J. Y. Allison and C. E. Walker, for the appellees.In our opinion the Court erred in overruling the demurrer to the answer. "We have seen that the complaint charges the administrators with having in their hands the sum of 5000 dollars, for which they fail to account, and which they fail and refuse to pay over to creditors. If this be so, the fact that they have procured an order for the sale of real estate which has not yet been sold, for want of purchasers, can be no defence to the action. The gist of the answer is that the administrators have fully administered upon the personal estate and accounted to and settled with the proper Court for the same, as will fully appear by the records, &c.
No copy or transcript of the records alluded to, is filed with the answer. This renders the answer clearly bad, as the accounting to and settlement with the proper Court, is the foundation of the. defence. Without such settlement and accounting the facts stated do not constitute a defence.. There is in the record before us, a copy of the record of a partial" settlement by the administrators with the proper Court, but that, it is inferred from the place it occupies in the record, was filed by the plaintiff, and is not the one relied upon by the defendants. But if it be it does not help the answer any, as it shows that in August, 1857, the administrators filed an account charging themselves with 4479 dollars, and 50 cents, and claiming credit for money paid out on, claims, &c., in the sum of 3271 dollars and 39 cents, leaving-a balance in their hands of 1208 dollars and 11 cents.
Per Curiam.The judgment is reversed, with costs, and. the cause remanded.