The plaintiff sued his tutor, MeOaleb, for an account, and obtained a judgment against him for $1042 32, from which the plaintiff has appealed and contends he is entitled to a larger balance.
The main point urged by the appellant is his alleged right to hold the defendant responsible for not having obtained a larger judgment for his ward against the succession of Story, who preceded Me Caleb in his tutorship. The circumstances were as follows: Patricio Tegart, the father of plaintiff and Joseph Tegan't, died in 1836, and Edward Story was appointed tutor of the two minors. Story died in 1843, and McCaleb was appointed tutor in 1844. He instituted, with reasonable diligence and with the professional aid of Messrs. Bowman & Ma/yo, attorneys and counsellors at law, a suit against the adminis*260trator of Story's estate to compel an account of the tutorship. An account being filed, McOaleb, by his attorneys above mentioned, made an elaborate opposition, which resulted in amendments by the Judge, and a judgment in favor of Me Caleb, as tutor of the plaintiff and his brother, for an increased sum, to wit: $5230 G2. McOaleb did not appeal from this judgment, and made efforts to collect it. His diligence in collecting did not, however, appear sufficient to the District Judge, who therefore held him in this suit personally liable for its amount. But the plaintiff is not satisfied with this measure of responsibility, and says McOaleb could, by a proper opposition, have obtained a judgment for $7450 34 against Story’s estate. This result, he argues, would have been attained by a different system of charging interest to the late tutor, and by obj ecting to Story’s taking the amount of the annual expenses of the wards out of capital, when it should have been taken out of interest, according to an interest account properly stated, with reference to cash funds received, and that ought to have been received. An examination of the account of tutorship rendered by Story’s administrator, of the opposition thereto filed by Messrs. Bowman & Mayo, as attorneys of McOaleb, and of the proceedings and judgment thereon, leads us to ' the conclusion that an opposition more skillfully prepared, especially with reference to principles of law enforced in the more recent authorities on the subject of tutorship, would probably have resulted in‘a judgment against Story’s succession more favorable to the minor’s. But this would not necessarily be a just test of the defendant’s responsibility. The question should rather be, has the tutor acted with reasonable diligence and good faith in that suit for the minor P Has he acted “as a prudent administrator?” O. 0., 327. This, we think, he did. He employed licensed attorneys and counsellors, whose good standing is not questioned, to prosecute the suit for an account; it does not appear that there was any lack of diligence with regard to any assistance he could be expected to render in the way of preparation of evidence and such other matters, in which a client could be expected to aid his attorneys in his own litigations; and if for want of greater acuteness on the part of the attorneys in their proceedings and argument, or from erroneous conclusions on points of law by the Judge, the result has been a smaller judgment in favor of the minors than the rigor of the law would have sanctioned, we do not think the burden should fall on the defendant. See Baldwin v. Bank of Louisiana, 1 Annual, 13.
This disposes of the main question in this cause, the reconsideration of which seems to have been the principal object of counsel in prosecuting this appeal. With respect to other objections made to details of the account, an examination of the evidence has not satisfied us there is error authorizing a reversal. Several items are disputed which were for expenses incurred in holding family meetings and like proceedings. It is not a sufficient reason for imposing upon the tutor these expenses (which appear to have been incurred in good faith, under advice of counsel) that they did not ultimately result to the benefit of- the minor.
There was a piece of land which appears to have been acquired by McOaleb for the benefit of the minors, in part settlement of the claims on Story’s estate. This acquisition the plaintiff repudiated. As the judgment below allowed him to do so, there should have been a provision in the judgment recognizing the title of this tract, quoad, the plaintiff’s share, to be in the defendant. The ap-pellee has, in his answer to the appeal, prayed an amendment to that effect, to which amendment he is entitled.
*261It appears He Caleb has died since the appeal, and an appearance has been made by his representative, &c.
It is therefore decreed that the judgment of the District Court be so amended as to declare the interest of said plaintiff in the tract of land of 738 arpens, acquired in his behalf by said MoCaleb, in his capacity of tutor of said plaintiff, to have vested in said HoCaleb individually, and passed at his death to the said HoCaleb’s succession, and that so amended, the said judgment bo affirmed, and be binding upon the succession of said MoCaleb, represented herein by Mrs. Lucinda HoCaleb, administratrix thereof, and upon the said Mrs. HoCaleb, as surviving widow in community, and also as tutrix of the minor children of the said deceased. Costs of appeal to bo paid by appellant.