delivered the opinion of the court.
This is an action, brought to annul a judgment of the Court of Probates, homologating an account of administration, rendered by the defendant, as curator of the estate of Sherwood B. Bonner, deceased.
The petitioner, who is admitted to be the sole heir of Bonner, alleges, that the curator fraudulently retains six hundred and fifty dollars and fifty-seven cents of the moneys *408of thé estate, and that the fraud was- not discovered until after the decree confirming the account.
An action of nullity, to annul judgment homo-logatmg^cura-will be sustained, ■when the account is shown fraudulent! as re-lar item Fnh! °U” A definitive íedSamuíiedmin all_cases, when have bee™oh-the'fraud'an°d 111 practices of the party obtaining it.The answer avers the account to be correct, and that it was agl’eed upon, and settled with the attorney in fact and agent of petitioner.
The court annulled its former decree homologating the account, and ordered the defendant to settle the estate in his capacity as curator. The defendant appealed.
It appears that Robert Newport, and the deceased, had dealings together, by which they became mutually indebted. The curator received the balance due from Newport, after deducting the amount owed by the estate, and charged the estate with this amount, as having been paid by himself, whereas it was in truth allowed in compensation, to extinguish so much of the greater debt of Newport; that is, it was already paid by compensation, but is again charged to the estate by the curator.
This transaction appears so palpably fraudulent, that it is difficult to explain it under the milder name of error, as it is called in the judgment of the court. Errors maybe com-from oversight, or when it is difficult to perceive the differences between things resembling each other. But it is 0 0 hardly • possible that the defendant could not have plainly se6n> that by charging the estate with what was already Pa^> be appropriated that sum to his own use.
We think'that the testimony of Newport and the parish juc*ge5 brings this case clearly within the provisions of article 607 of the Code of Practice, which declares, that “ a definitive judgment may be annulled in all cases, when it aPPears that it has been obtained through fraud, or other ill practices on the part of the party in whose favor it was , , ‘ rendered.
It is, therefore, ordered, adjudged and decreed, that the judgment of the District Court be affirmed, with costs.