Parker v. Coffman

121 S.W.2d 6, 275 Ky. 203, 1938 Ky. LEXIS 395
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedNovember 1, 1938
StatusPublished

This text of 121 S.W.2d 6 (Parker v. Coffman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Parker v. Coffman, 121 S.W.2d 6, 275 Ky. 203, 1938 Ky. LEXIS 395 (Ky. 1938).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Judge Perry

Reversing.

This suit was brought in equity by the infant plaintiff, Ella Coffman, suing by W. A. Daugherty, as next-friend, against her guardian, T. G. Parker, to surcharge an alleged improper settlement made by him, as such, in administering and disbursing her estate.

On June 11, 1920, Ella Coffman being then three-years of age and her father having been killed that year-while working as a coal mine employee, the appellant,. A. G. Parker, was upon motion of plaintiff’s mother,, duly appointed guardian for her, for the purpose of collecting the compensation owing her on account of her' father’s death.

Appellant, upon his appointment as guardian, duly qualified as such by taking oath and making bond, with the co-appellee W. L. Morris as his surety, in the sum of $2,500, conditioned for the faithful performance of' his fiduciary duties.

Acting in such capacity, the appellant recovered on behalf of his ward compensation for the death of her father in the amount of $1,576.80 and the further' amount of $120.41 interest thereon from the bank with, which the same was for a while carried as a time deposit.

It is admitted that the appellant guardian was derelict, in that he never filed, upon his appointment and qualification as guardian, as was by the statute required, any inventory or settlement of these amounts-when collected and received by him nor any later biennial report and settlement thereof nor made any report of his account as guardian or his disbursement and. handling of this trust fund received until January 14, *204 1927, nearly seven years after Ms appointment and qualification as her guardian, when lie made what purported to be his first settlement or report of his guardian’s account with the Pika County Court, wherein he claimed and took credit for the sum of $1,143.03 of the $1,697.21 received, as having been disbursed by him for the support of his then 10 year old ward, to various persons in various amounts not itemized in his report, but for which he filed Ms vouchers showing Ms disbursement of the claimed amount which the vouchers showed was made chiefly by his sale of merchandise from his own store to the mother of his ward, allegedly made for the latter’s use.

During this seven year period, however, covered by the first January 1927 settlement, it is undisputed that the infant ward lived practically throughout the entire time with her grandparents, who furnished her a home without charge and with practically her entire support and maintenance, as if their own child.

Appellant later filed his second and final report of settlement on August 4, 1928, wherein he reported that he had, as guardian, then disbursed the entire amount or balance of $554.18 shown by his previous report as at such time remaining in his hands, of the $1,697.21 total received, except a small balance of $22.11, accompanying his report with vouchers evidentiary of such disbursement or receipted bills and cancelled checks. With his report he further tendered Ms check to his ward in the amount of $22.11, reported as remaining in his hands, and asked that this, his second and final settlement as guardian be approved and that he be discharged from all further liability by reason thereof.

Thereafter, in October 1934, more than six years after the filing of these two reports of settlement in the Pike county court, Ella Coffman, by W. A. Daugherty as next friend, filed her suit against her guardian, T. C. Parker, and his surety, W. L. Morris, therein alleging certain errors made in each of the reported settlements of her estate, as particularly set out and specified in the petition, and that he had not faithfully discharged his trust as guardian by its wasteful and negligent disbursement and asked that the purported settlements be surcharged and that the defendant be required to disclose all moneys that had come into his hands as such *205 guardian and that he be required to make proper settlement and accounting thereof to her.

To the petition both a special and general demurrer were filed by the defendant and also an answer, denying the allegations of the petition and alleging that he had received only the amounts as stated in his two settlements as guardian for the plaintiff and had fully disbursed and paid out same for the use of plaintiff as shown by his reports of settlement made with the Pike county court, wherein he filed vouchers showing the specific items for which the disbursements were made, the price of each and that they each and all were furnished for the use of the plaintiff.

The court upon motion of each of the parties, referred the case to the master commissioner of the court for the purpose of settling the accounts of the guardian.

The master commissioner, having heard the proof upon the matters referred to him, filed his report, finding and recommending that the plaintiff should recover of the defendant the sum of $253.75 with 6% interest from January 1, 1928, as representing the various items and amounts found to have been improperly disbursed by the guardian and for which the master commissioner found he was improperly given credit in the settlement of his guardian account, but refused to surcharge the guardian’s accounting by the further amount of some $400 claimed by the plaintiff to have been improperly allowed the guardian as credit upon his account, upon the ground that same represented profits realized by him as guardian upon the merchandise he as a merchant furnished his ward out of his own store and upon which the guardian testified that he had realized a profit of 25% to 33%.

Upon exceptions filed by each of the parties to the master commissioner’s report, the court adjudged that the ward’s exceptions to the report be sustained to the extent it denied plaintiff the right to recover, for estimated profits realized by guardian and wasteful disbursements made for articles neither needed nor used by his ward, to the extent of $571.57, with interest from January 1, 1924, or one-half of the amount claimed disbursed and for which he took credit in his first or January 1927 settlement and overruled guardian’s exceptions to that part of the master's report, surcharging his *206 second settlement as improper by the amount of $253.75, with 6% interest from January 1, 1928, as representing improper disbursements for which he was not entitled to credit.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
121 S.W.2d 6, 275 Ky. 203, 1938 Ky. LEXIS 395, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/parker-v-coffman-kyctapphigh-1938.