The contention of the guardian as guardian and as individual, his wife joining with him, as against the administrator of his deceased war.d’s estate, is that by oral agreement entered into between him and his wife and the other heirs of the ward at the time the-guardianship was undertaken by him he and his wife have become entitled to the entire fund in his hands as guardian, and that there is no occasion to pay it over to the administrator. But it is a sufficient answer to this claim that there has been no adjudication with reference to this oral agreement, and that no/ such adjudication can be had in the guardianship proceeding in which it is attempted to interpose such oral agreement. The court cannot in the guardianship proceeding settle the estate of the deceased ward, nor determine who is entitled to the proceeds of the estate. The heirs of the deceased ward are not parties to the guardianship proceeding, nor do we think it competent for the court to make them parties, in order to compel them to litigate in such proceeding the question as to whether any agreement was made between them and the guardian hy which on the ward’s death the guardian and his wife were to be entitled to the estate of the ward. That matter may, perhaps be determined in the proceedings for administration of the deceased ward’s estate, but certainly not in the proceeding to settle up the guardianship.
No question is made as to the regularity of the appointment of the administrator, but the contention is that, as result of the administration, it will be the duty of the administrator to pay over to the guardian as individual and to his wife all the proceeds of the estate, and that there are no claims against the estate which will be payable out of such proceeds. But, in the first place, it has not yet been determined, so far as ‘appears by this record, whether or not there are any claims against the estate, and that question *122cannot be adjudicated in tbe guardianship proceeding. Nor, as already indicated, has there been any adjudication that the heirs other than the guardian’s wife have transferred their prospective interests in the estate of the deceased ward to said guardian and his wife. Authorities are cited to the effect that the heirs may by mutual agreement settle the estate of a deceased person, and render administration unnecessary; and as applicable to proceedings to administer the estate of a deceased person this contention is no doubt well founded. Douglas v. Albrecht 130 Iowa, 132; Granger v. Harriman, 89 Minn. 303 (94 N. W. 869); Foote v. Foote, 61 Mich. 181 (28 N. W. 90); Waterhouse v. Churchill, 30 Colo. Supp. 415 (70 Pac. 678); Gwinn v. Melvin, 9 Idaho, 202 (72 Pac. 961); Succession of Graves, 50 La. Ann. 435 (23 South. 738). Thus in Christe v. Chicago, R. I. & P. R. Co., 104 Iowa, 707, it was held that after settlement by the parents of an intestate, who would be entitled to the entire proceeds of his estate, with the railroad company against which there was a claim for damages on account of injuries received by intestate, causing his death, there was no occasion for the appointment of an administrator, and an action could not be maintained by such administrator against the railroad' company. And it has been held that, in the absence of administration, the persons who would have been entitled to the proceeds of the estate, if such administration had been granted, have such interest in the property of deceased that they may make disposition thereof which will be effectual at least as an equitable assignment, and may perhaps maintain an action to recover debts due to the deceased. Phinny v. Warren, 52 Iowa, 332; Wood v. Weimar, 104 U. S. 786 (26 L. Ed. 779); People v. Abbott, 105 Ill. 588; Angier v. Jones, 28 Tex. Civ. App. 402 (67 S. W. 449). But in general the rights of claimants to the property of a deceased person are to be determined through an administration upon his estate, and the heirs or other persons having interest in or claims against the estate cannot by *123their agreements bind the administrator subsequently appointed. Ritchie v. Barnes, 114 Iowa, 67; Stahl v. Brown, Adm'r., 72 Iowa, 720; Seery, Adm’r. v. Murray, 107 Iowa, 384. It is to be borne in mind that the alleged agreement was made before the death of the ward, and therefore at a time when the rights of the persons making the agreement had not become vested, and cases relating to agreements between heirs or next of kin can have no application. And especially are these cases without application to a proceeding to wind up a guardianship in which the only question to be determined is the liability of the guardian to the estate of the deceased ward.
The general contention for appellants that the guardian should not be compelled to pay over to the administrator money which it will be necessary subsequently in the administration of the estate for the administrator to pay back to the guardian as an individual is not sound in any view. It cannot be determined in the guardianship proceeding tha't it will be necessary in an administration of the estate to return the money found in the hands of the guardian as guardian to him as an individual claimant against the estate. It would be wholly irregular and impracticable to convert the proceeding for the winding up of the guardianship into a proceeding for the administration and distribution of the estate of the deceased ward.
The action of. the 'trial court was right, and it is affirmed.