*136Tlie opinion of tlie Court was delivered by
Bermudez, C. J.This is a suit by the children of Luke and Ilonora Maliony against the succession of their tutor and uncle for the revenues of property inherited by them from their authors, and which was under the administration of their said tutor, Francis Maliony, during five years and several months.
They collectively claim $2500, to be afterwards apportioned among themselves, the sum being the aggregate of rents received, averaged at about $40 per month.
To the demand, the succession answers substantially, that the average rent was $20 -per month, and that, after deduction of disbursements for insurance premiums, repairs, support of the minors, tutor’s advances and commissions, the balance remaining is $88 15, which are tendered.
Prom a judgment allowing the- sum claimed in full, apportioning it among the heirs, the administratrix of the succession of the late tutor prosecutes this appeal.
It is difficult, not to say impossible, to conceive- how, under averments which, for the host could, if proved, hold the tutor liable for the largest amount which the property could have yielded while in his administration, this official can he sought to he made to pay that sum, without crediting- him with disbursements which he necessarily must have made.
It appears that the only property owned hj^ the plaintiffs consists in a piece of real estate with buildings, etc., thereon, which was appraised, at the time of the appointment of the tutor in 1879, at $1000, although true it he, that eight years previous, the same had been purchased for four times as much, part cash and part on time, and was assessed at $2000.
Much testimony was adduced to prove the condition of the buildings and the rentals yielded. It establishes clearly that they were in had condition at the time of the death of Mrs. Maliony, the plaintiff’s mother and tutrix, who had had them in her charge and custody during the four years which intervened between her husband’s death, in August, 1874, and her own, in December, 1878, and that they continued such, with the difference that their condition grew worse as time rolled by, for want of better keeping and repairing.
The testimony is vague, disconnected, unsubstantial, unsatisfactory and surely does not establish that the property yielded ■ $40 monthly during the time that it was in the charge, of Francis Mahony, the deceased tutor.
Patiently and as attentively considered as it can he, it loaves the impression on the mind, however, that the property has rented more than *137tlie $20 monthly admitted by the defendant during that period, and that, considering the fluctuations in the rental of property, the non-rental of the same, the non-payment of rents and the other incidental and unavoidable disappointments in the same, an allowance of $30 per month, during the course of tutorship, is a liberal one.
This would give a total for the five years and eight months, constituting that period, of $2040.
On the other hand, the heirs cannot be permitted to claim the gross rent received and to ignore the counter demands of the tutor.
It would be. idle work to enumerate specifically here, the numerous items of disbursements for insurance, taxes, repairs, support of at least two of the minors, advances by the tutor, his commissions on sums collected.
It is enough to say that, in addition to the presumption attaching fox such disbursements, the proof in the record establishes that the tutor is entitled for the samo to a credit of $1535, which would leave a balance in favor of all the children, four in number, of $505, or thereabout.
The evidence shows, however, that no expense was incurred for the minor Mary, who was cared for by a friend, and that since 1883, John has been self-supporting. The item for board, lodging, etc.,, during the tutorship, must be borne by two of the children, and to some extent, difficult to determine with exact precision, by John, but which may bo set down at $50.
The share accruing in the residue to those two minors cannot, nevertheless, be charged with the item for board, etc., for the reason, that the tutor was not authorized by a family meeting and the judge, to encroach upon tlieir capital. He ought to have restricted the expenses to the revenues. This entitles the minors to be relieved of the, difference.
It is proper to say, that tin*, charges of maladministration against the tutor are groundless. It appears to his justification, that- in the straightened circumstances under which he labored, he acted honestly and in good faith, and that his devotion to his nephews and nieces had involved him pecuniarily.
It is therefore ordered and decreed, that the judgment appealed from be amended, so as to reduce the amount allowed by it against the succession of Francis Mahony to $203; whereof $76 50 shall accrue to John Mahony, individually; $126 50 to Mary Mahony, represented by her tutor; and nothing to the other two minors, Cornelius and Francis; with legal interest from judicial demand, and costs of the lower court, and that thus amended, said judgment be affirmed at appellees’ costs.