In Re Estate of Mansour v. Solomon

185 S.W.2d 360, 238 Mo. App. 623
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 6, 1945
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 185 S.W.2d 360 (In Re Estate of Mansour v. Solomon) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Estate of Mansour v. Solomon, 185 S.W.2d 360, 238 Mo. App. 623 (Mo. Ct. App. 1945).

Opinion

*628 McCULLEN, J.

— This is. an appeal and cross-appeal wherein Frank T. Hines, administrator of veterans’ affairs, and P. W. Zerwekh, guardian ad litem for Peter Mansfrar, have appealed from the judgment of the Circuit Court of the City of St. Louis approving certain disbursements made by George Solomon, guardian of the person and estate of Peter Mansour, non compos mentis, and George Solomon has appealed from that part of the same judgment denying and disallowing credit to him as guardian for certain other disbursements and removing him as guardian. Hines, administrator of veterans’ affairs, and Zerwekh, guardian ad litem for Peter Mansour, will be referred to in this opinion as appellants, and Solomon, guardian of the person and estate of Peter Mansour, will be referred to as guardian.

Peter Mansour, the ward, is a native of Syria and still is a Syrian national. He is a veteran of the first World War, having served in the United States Army from April, 1914, to January, 1918. He became insane and, in January, 1928, was discharged from the Army and admitted to a government hospital in the District of Columbia for treatment and care. Later he .was transferred to the Veterans’ Hospital at North Little Rock, Arkansas, and in August, 1935, was transferred to the Alexian Brothers Hospital in the City of St. Louis, Missouri, where he remained until April, 1936. On January 12, 1924, George Solomon, also a native of Syria, but a naturalized citizen of the ■ United States, was appointed, by the Supreme Court of the District of Columbia, Committee for Peter Mansour, and, on February 19, 1932, was appointed, by the Probate Court of the City of St. Louis, as guardian of the person and estate of Peter Mansour. The administration of the estate in the District of Columbia was closed and Solomon was discharged as Committee, but continued to act as guardian of the ■ person and estate of Peter Mansour under his appointment by the Probate Court of the City of St. Louis. Said guardian has been a resident of the City of St. Louis since 1908.

The cause- herein originated in the Probate Court of the City of St. Louis where, on December 10, 1935, the guardian filed an application for an appropriation of $5000 to be made out of the funds of the estate of his ward for expenses of a trip to be made by said ward and his guardian to Syria for the purpose of visiting the ward’s brother and sisters.

On January 23, 1936, after a hearing on said application of the guardian, the probate court entered an order that the sum of $3000 “be and the same is hereby appropriated out of the assets of said ward’s estate to defray the expense of such a trip. ” The estate of the ward at that time amounted to more than $15,000. On April 27, 1936, the guardian, with his ward, departed from St. Louis and, on May 18, 1936, arrived by steamship in Beirut, Syria. . The ward, • Peter Mansour, who was known in Syria as Mansour Hatem, was taken to and remained at the home of his brother, Boutros Hatem, in the *629 town of Ebreen, Lebanon, Syria. Ebreen is a little more than an hour’s ride by automobile from Beirut. Boutros Hatem was also known as Peter Hatem in Syria. The guardian had stated in his application to the court that the journey would require from three to four months and that upon their return he would file a full accounting of his expenditures of the appropriation.

On October 30, 1936, while the guardian and his ward were still in Syria, a second application (also referred to as petition) was filed in the Probate Court of the City of St. Louis for an additional sum of $2000 from the ward’s estate to meet the expenses of the visit in Syria. On the same date the probate court entered its order as follows: ‘ ‘ The court appropriates the additional sum of $2000 out of the estate of said ward to defray the expenses of' said ward and said guardian on their extended visit to Syria, as prayed for in said petition. ’ ’

According to the guardian’s testimony, the extended stay in Syria was caused by the refusal of Boutros Hatem, the ward’s brother, to permit the ward to be returned to the United States. The guardian testified that he consulted the American Consul in Beirut, Syria, two or three times and told "him the whole story about the ward, but that the consul said to him: “ I am sorry, Mr. Solomon, he is not an American citizen; you see, he is a native from this country, I can’t do nothing with him.” The guardian thereafter asked for and received instructions by cable from his counsel in St. Louis, pursuant to which he made arrangements to return to the United States alone, which he did, leaving his ward in Syria in charge of the ward’s brother. The guardian arrived in St. Louis on April 27, 1937, having been gone exactly one year.

On July 10, 1937, the guardian filed in the probate court' a supplemental report of disbursements showing that he had expended a total sum of $6782.06 in connection with the journey and the visit in Syria, which amount exceeded the two appropriations totaling $5000, theretofore made, by the sum of $1782.06. There were seventy-five items 'of expenditures shown in said report, which is styled “ Supplemental Report and Petition of Guardian. ’ ’ The guardian prayed therein that the court approve said report and make an order allowing him said additional sum of $1782.06, and also a further allowance of $1500 for maintenance of the guardian’s family during his year’s absence from his home, and compensation.

On March 29, 1938, the administrator of veterans’ affairs filed in the pi’obate court exceptions to the guardian’s supplemental report and petition for additional allowances. The exceptions are thirty-nine in number and go to all but a few of the items of the guardian’s report, totaling $720 for railroad and steamship fare and expenses connected therewith. The exceptions charged that the guardian had perpetrated a fraud upon the estate of his ward and upon the court, and had spent the larger part of his time in Syria with his own relatives; that *630 be failed to comply witb the original order of the probate court in that he failed to keep an accurate account of the actual expenses and failed to keep Iona fide receipts covering the alleged expenditures. The exceptor prayed that the estate of the ward be charged with ‘ ‘ only those items which are clearly and positively shown to have been made by said guardian in the interest and welfare of said ward and not the guardian individually, and that any sums expended by the guardian on his own account, or on account of persons other than the ward, be surcharged against the guardian individually and the National Surety Corporation.”

On April 15, 1938, the administrator of veterans’ affairs filed in the probate court a petition asking for the removal of the guardian on the ground that the guardian had falsified, in part, his report of expenditures.

On April 8, 1938, the guardian filed a motion in the probate court to strike the exceptions of the administrator of veterans’ affairs from the files, and on June 22nd filed therein a motion to strike from the files the motion of the administrator of veterans’ affairs for the removal of the guardian.

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Bluebook (online)
185 S.W.2d 360, 238 Mo. App. 623, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-estate-of-mansour-v-solomon-moctapp-1945.