delivered the opinion of the court:
First—The will, in this case, appointed no executor or trustee. George W. Brown, who was then cashier of the National Bank of Vandalia, was appointed by the county court of Fayette county administrator with the will annexed of the estate of Nathaniel M. McCurdy, deceased, and filed his inventory, a's such administrator, on January 8, 1877. The estate has not yet been settled by the county court. At the February term, 1877, of the circuit court of Fayette county, George W. Brown filed a bill, and, in the suit commenced by the filing'of said bill, the decree of March 10,1877, was entered. The bill itself and other papers in the case have been lost, and there is some dispute between the parties as to the contents of the bill, and as to the object sought by it. The appellees claim, that the object of the bill was to construe the will and determine the powers of Brown under it to conduct the business, including the bank stock. The appellants claim, that the bill merely asked for authority to sell real estate. Without deciding- what was the real character of the bill, we will confine ourselves to the language and finding of the decree of March 10, 1877.
Counsel on both sides, discuss the question, whether the administrator cum testamento ann&xo had the power to execute and carry out the provisions of the will in regard to the four hundred shares of- bank stock. Executors are often required by the terms of the will, appointing them, to act in a double capacity: first, as executors by virtue of their office; and, second, as agents or trustees under a warrant of attorney. An executor is often charged, not only with the duties and liabilities appertaining to that office, but also with certain duties in the execution of a trust, which is imposed upon him by the will. The general rule is, that the duties and powers of an executor, which result from the nature of his office as executor, devolve *93upon the administrator with the will annexed. But the duties and powers, which are imposed upon an executor as a trustee, are in the nature of a personal trust or confidence reposed in him by the executor, and do not devolve upon the administrator with the will annexed, inasmuch as they cannot be delegated. (Mall v. Irwin, 2 Gilm. 176; Nicoll v. Scott, 99 Ill. 529).
It is clear, therefore, that George W. Brown, acting under his appointment as administrator with the will annexed as made by the county court, would have had no power to take upon himself the execution of the trust in regard to the bank stock. The question then arises, whether such power was conferred upon him by the decree of the circuit court of Fayette county, rendered on March 10, 1877, in the proceedings brought therein by the ■filing of the bill by Brown against the life annuitants, Mary A. Marr, Harrietta Marr, and Imogene Marr, and the remainder-men, or those- entitled to take after the death of the annuitants, to-wit; McKendree College and the Church Extension Society of the Methodist Episcopal Church. Brown had the right, as administrator with the will annexed, to apply to a court, having equitable jurisdiction, to have a trustee appointed to carry out those provisions of the will, which did not strictly devolve upon him as such administrator. (Wenner v. Thornton, 98 Ill.156).
The decree of March 10, 1877, did not give a" definite construction of the will, so far as it related to the duties of the executor or trustee in relation to the bank stock. It will appear from the findings of the decree, as set forth in the reciting part thereof, that the object of the bill, upon which the decree was founded, was to get the permission of a court of chancery to sell the real and personal property of the estate. The decree finds, that the legatees in the will of Nathaniel M. McCurdy, deceased, were the Marrs, and the college, and the church extension society above named; that said McCurdy left a large amount of real and personal estate, which had *94been, inventoried, and reported to the county court by Brown, but that no executors were named in the will; and the finding portion of the decree then proceeds as follows: “And it further appearing, that said testator desired all of his real and personal property sold, conveyed, or transferred, to enable the specified legacies to be discharged, and of said personal estate there are four hundred shares of bank stock in the National Bank of Vandalia, valued at $100.00 a share, and the following described real estate, to-wit: (here follows description of real estate).” The ordering part of the decree is that Brown, the administrator with the will annexed, “transfer and dispose of said bank stock as in said will specified, and that it be so transferred and disposed of for the uses and purposes in said will mentioned; and that said administrator is hereby fully authorized and empowered to sell all the other property of Nathaniel M. McCurdy, deceased, including real estate, personal apd mixed property, and to collect what is due said estate, and to disburse the same as directed by said will; that said real, personal and mixed property may be sold, * * * and said complainant (Brown) shall have generally all the powers, rights, duties, and authority that an executor could or might have, if named and mentioned in said will, and said administrator shall report all his actions and doings to the county court of said Payette county, as provided by law in reference to administrators. ”
It is claimed by the appellees that, inasmuch as the decree gave Brown generally “all the powers, rights, duties, and authority that an executor could or might have, if named and mentioned in said will,” Brown was thereby clothed with power to manage the bank stock in accordance with the terms of the will. But it was expressly held by this court in Hall v. Irwin, supra, that those words did not confer upon an administrator cum testamento annexo the right to exercise the trust powers conferred upon an executor, but only the powers appertaining strictly *95to his office as executor. In Hall v. Irwin, supra, the case of Conklin v. Edgerton’s Admr. 21 Wend. 430,—where words in a New York statute, precisely similar to the words used in this decree, were construed as being limited to duties belonging properly to the office of executor, and as not extending to anything to be done by the executor as trustee,—was approved by this court. Counsel for appellees insist, that the case of Conklin v. Edgerton’s Admr. supra, has been since modified, if not overruled, by a subsequent decision made by the New York court of appeals. But we consider ourselves bound by the doctrine announced in Hall v. Inuin, supra, because the case of Hall V. Irwin was subsequently endorsed and approved by this court in Nicoll v. Scott, supra.
That the provision in the decree, which gave Brown the powers, rights, duties, and authority that an executor could or might have if one had been named in the will, did not confer upon him any other powers than those strictly appertaining to the nature of his office as executor, is apparent from the requirement, that he shall report all his actions and doings to the county court, as provided by the law in reference to administrators. Section 112 of the Illinois Administration act provides, that executors and administrators shall exhibit their accounts for settlement to the county court at the first term after the expiration of one year after the date of their appointment, and in like manner every twelve months thereafter. If the decree was intended to make Brown a trustee for the purpose of executing the trust in regard to the bank stock, and not a, mere administrator to discharge the duties of administration, it would seem that he should have been required to report to the chancery court, which appointed him. The decree undoubtedly gave him power to sell the land with a view to paying the legacies to be paid out of the proceeds of the sale thereof, but the decree leaves it in doubt what duty was intended to be imposed upon him in relation to the bank stock. He was *96merely required to “transfer and dispose of said bank stock as in said will specified,” and “for the uses and purposes in said will mentioned.” There is nothing in the language of the decree, that necessarily empowered him to hold the stock as administrator with the will annexed, until Mrs. Marr and both her daughters should die, and then transfer it to the college and the church extension society. Such a construction of the decree would give him the right to hold and manage the stock for a long period of years, or until the survivor of the three annuitants should die. The decree, on the contrary, seems to contemplate immediate action; and a fair construction of it would lead to the conclusion, that it was his duty to .have either himself or; another/person appointed trustee by a court of chancery, and transfer the stock to such trustee.
If the decree did not confer upon Brown, administrator cum, testamento annexo, the authority to execute the trust in reg'ard to the bank stock, his acts in so doing constituted him a constructive trustee, or a trustee de son tort. Where one without authority undertakes to execute a trust, requiring the investment of a fund, he-must himself carry all the risks, and make good all the losses, and have none of the profits, and his co-investors are equally liable, “A person may become a trustee by construction by intermeddling with and assuming the management of trust property without authority. Such persons are trustees de son tort.” (Perry on Trusts,-—3d ed.-—-sec. 245; Morris v. Joseph, 1 W.Va. 256; Piper v. Hoard, 107 N.Y. 73). “During the possession and management by such constructive trustees, they are subject to the same rules and remedies as other trustees; and they cannot avoid t.heir liability by showing that they were not, in fact, trustees, nor can they set up the Statute of Limitations." (Perry on Trusts,—3d ed.—sec. 245).
Second—But, for the purposes of this case, it may be conceited that Brown had authority, under the terms of *97the decree, to manage the trust in regard to the bank stock. Did he do his duty as trustee, if he bad the authority of a trustee in the management and investment of the trust fund in his hands?
The testator, Nathaniel M. McCurdy, owned four hundred shares of stock in the National Bank of Vandalia, each share being $100.00, and the whole amounting to $40,000.00. At the time of his death on September 29, 1876, this stock had a par value of $100.00 per share, and was worth more than par. The shares were probably at the time at a premium. By the terms of his will he gave to his sister, Mary K. Marr, $3000.00 annually out of the dividends to be made out of the earnings on these shares of stock, to be continued during her life, and after her death, the same to be divided between her two daughters, Imogene and Harrietta Marr, as long as they might both live; at the death of either, the same to be paid to the survivor as long as the latter should live. By the terms of the will, after the legacies charged against the bank stock should be paid, the testator bequeathed and devised to McKendree College two hundred shares of the stock, to be transferred on the books of the National Bank of Vandalia to the credit of said college; and two hundred shares of said stock to the Board of Extension of the Methodist Episcopal Church, a corporation' organized under the laws of Pennsylvania.
When Brown was appointed administrator with the will annexed, he took possession of these four hundred shares of bank stock; represented it at the meeting of the directors and stockholders of the bank; collected the dividends thereon; paid the legacies to the Methodist Episcopal Church in Vandalia, and paid the annuities up to the time of the surrender of the bank’s charter, as hereinafter stated.
The National Bank of Vandalia did business as such until the first day of April, 1883. At the latter date the National Bank surrendered its charter, pursuant to a reso*98Iution adopted by its stockholders on January 11, 1883. That bank did no further business after April 3, 1883. The reason assigned for the surrender of its charter was, that the government bonds, pledged to secure its circulating currency or bills, had matured, and were called in for redemption; and that the premium on bonds, which could then be purchased to be substituted for those retired, was twenty-eight per cent. It is said that, in view of the high premium which it was necessary to pay in order to purchase new bonds, it was not for the interest of the stockholders to continue the existence of the bank as a national bank. Accordingly, on April 2,1883, the stockholders of the National Bank organized a co-partnership under the firm name and style of the “Bank of Vandalia,” and continued doing business at the same stand, formerly occupied by the National Bank of Vandalia. The new firm, by the agreement of the parties succeeding to the business of the National Bank, took possession of its assets, and assumed its liabilities. At the time of the surrender aforesaid, Brown, administrator with the will annexed of the estate of Nathaniel M. .McCurdy, still had in his hands the four hundred shares of the capital stock of the National Bank of Vandalia. When the new firm was formed under the name of the Bank of Vandalia, he went into said firm as a partner in his capacity as administrator, and permitted the fund, consisting of said four hundred shares of bank stock, to go into the business of the new firm, and to be continued therein as a part of the assets of said firm.
The report of the National Bank of Vandalia, made by Brown to the comptroller of the currency on December 30, 1882, showed the total resources of the bank to be $330,673.96, and the total liabilities to be $190,928.27, leaving the net resources $139,545.69. It is contended by the appellees that, of these resources, about $69,000.00 afterwards proved to be a loss. But the evidence shows that, if such a loss occurred, it could have been avoided *99in large part by proper management. The directors and stockholders, who were debtors to the firm, were settled with in such a negligent way as to involve a loss to the firm, and one or more of the stockholders was allowed to withdraw his or her capital to the detriment of the firm.
Whether the reason assigned for surrendering the charter of the National Bank was a good one or not, it was done by a vote of the necessary number of stockholders; and the question arises whether Brown made a proper investment of the funds of the estate, theretofore consisting of the four hundred shares of bank stock, when the surrender took place. The new firm, which was organized under the name of the Bank of Vandalia, was a mere partnership. It was none the less a partnership, because articles of association were entered into. The evidence is clear that Brown invested the trust fund in his hands in the new venture or partnership. The Bank of Vandalia was not subject to the restrictions, which were imposed by act of Congress upon the National Bank of Vandalia. Brown made the investment of the trust fund in the new firm upon his own judgment, and without applying for permission to do so, either to the county court, or to the circuit court. The fund in his hands belonged to McKendree College and the Board of Church Extension of the Methodist Episcopal Church, subject to the rights of Mrs. Marr and her two daughters to receive §3000.00 a year from the income of the fund, so long as any one of them was alive. It was the duty of Brown, as administrator with the will annexed, to protect the principal, or corpus, of the fund for the college and board of extension, as only the income thereof was to go to the annuitants, Mrs. Marr and her two daughters. He, however, formed a new firm or organization, and paid out dividends, which trenched upon and depleted the corpus of the fund. The law is that, where a monthly or yearly allowance is to be paid from the income of a fund, the corpus of the estate cannot be resorted to for the purpose *100of making up the accruing deficiencies in the allowance. (Einbecker v. Einbecker, 162 Ill. 267). The new partnership not only, continued the same banking business at the same stand, but substantially with the same capital and the same stockholders, as had been in and connected with the National Bank of Vandalia. The firm, known as the Bank of Vandalia, continued in business up to May 1, 1895,.when it ceased to do business, and a new bank was organized and called the First National Bank of Vandalia. Brown was cashier of the National Bank of Vandalia from some time in 1866, soon after its organization, down to the surrender of its charter in April, 1883. He was also cashier of the partnership, known as the Bank of Vandalia, and also became, cashier of the* First National Bank of Vandalia. It does not appear, that any of the trust fund in question went into the latter bank, which was organized with a capital stock of $50,000.00. The capital stock of the National Bank of Vandalia was $100,000.00, and the same amount was invested in the new firm, known as the Bank of Vandalia. The interest of the McCurdy estate in the National Bank of Vandalia was $40,000.00,' or two-fifths of its capital stock, and it had the same interest in the capital invested in the new firm.
Brown was required by the decree of March 10, 1877, to report his actions and doings to the county court of Fayette county. He made three reports; the first one was filed March 8, 1879, and covered the period from November 30, 1876, to March 8, 1879. In this first report, he charges himself with a balance of $50,471.50, and says, “included in the above balance is $40,000.00 bank stock.” In this report he also charges himself with dividends on the bank stock. In the report he charges himself with items of receipts, embracing personal property which includes the bank stock, and refers to this personal property as being embraced in the inventory filed by him in the county court. The inventory describes the bank stock *101as follows: “Four hundred shares in the National Bank of Vandalia at $100.00 per share, par value $40,000.00.” His second report is dated March 17, 1884, and embraces the period from March 8, 1879, to February 18, 1884. It will be observed, that a part of the time, embraced in the latter period, was after the surrender of the charter of the National Bank, which took place in April, 1883. In this report he says nothing about the surrender of the charter of the National Bank, and nothing about the forination of a new partnership, known as the Bank of Vandalia, nor anything about his investments of the trust funds in said partnership. On the contrary, he uses the following words: “Balance due, being bank stock held in trust, $40,000.00.” He also refers to the annuities paid Imogene and H'arrietta Marr. At the time this report was made, there was really no bank stock existing in the National Bank of Vandalia, because that bauk had gone out of existence in April, 1883. Whatever stock then existed was stock in the Bank of Vandalia, or rather a two-fifths interest in the partnership doing business under that name. The report, however, treats the bank stock, as though it was still existing in the National Bank of Vandalia. The report, taken in connection with the previous report, and the inventory referred to therein, can have no other interpretation than that of describing the four hundred shares of National Bank stock as still existing. There was nothing in the report to inform the county court that the stock in his hands was not National Bank stock. The report was calculated to deceive the court as to the character of the investment; and the author of the report must be held to have intended to make the impression, which the language of the report creates. The third report made by Brown was filed in March, 1896, and covers the period from February 18, 1884, to February 18, 1896, twelve years. In this third report he mentions, among the items of receipts, the following: “February 12, 1884, fo.ur hundred shares bank *102stock par value, $100.00 each, $40,000.00.” References are made to dividends on the bank stock, and to items paid out to Imogene and Harrietta Marr. The report asked the court to reduce the rate of interest to be paid to the annuitants from ten per cent per annum to four per cent per annum, and refers to his compensation, using the following" words: “Until the conditions requiring the transfer of the bank stock to the final purpose intended by the deceased, viz.: to the McKendree College and the Extension Society of the Methodist Episcopal Church.” This third report makes' no mention of the formation of the new firm, and refers to a contemplated transfer of bank stock at some time in the future to McKendree College and the board of church extension. It is true that, in the last sentence of the report, the following" words occur: “The four hundred shares of bank stock in the Bank of Vandalia at $100.00 per share, total principal $40,000.00 held in trust as administrator with the will annexed.” No provision was made in the will for the transfer of any stock except national bank stock, and such transfer was to be made upon the books of the National Bank of Vandalia. When the third report was made, the National Bank of Vandalia had long since gone out of existence, and no transfer of stock could ever be made upon its books. No transfer of stock was directed by the will to be made upon the books of the Bank of Vandalia. It follows that the report was misleading", and although the words, “Bank of Vandalia,” were used in the last sentence of the report, all the language taken together was calculated to make the impression upon the county court, that the administrator was dealing with the same stock, which was referred to in the will, and which had been mentioned, in his former reports. The conclusion is inevitable, that this administrator with the will annexed not only failed to ask the advice of any court as to the investment of the trust funds in his hands in the new partnership venture, but that he sedulously *103concealed from the court the fact that he had made such investment after it was made.
Under the law, Brown, as administrator with the will annexed, holding this bank stock in trust, had no power or authority to invest it or the proceeds of its sale, if it had been sold, in the new partnership. The evidence is clear that he did so invest it, and that he put it into the partnership, as trust funds in his hands as administrator with the will annexed. A trustee will not be protected from loss in investing trust funds, unless he invests in government or real estate securities, or other securities approved by the court, to which he is accountable. (Simmons v. Oliver, 74 Wis. 633). A trustee should not invest the money of others in his care in the stock or shares of any private corporation, nor has he any right to employ trust funds in a private business, and thereby subject them to the fluctuations of trade, even though such investment is approved of by his own judgment, and is made with honest intent. It is the duty of a trustee to make investments of trust funds in real estate securities or government securities, whether of the national or State government, or, if he is acting under the direction of a court, to select such securities as the court approves of (11 Am. & Eng. Ency. of Law, pp. 819, 835; Grey v. Fox, 1 N. J. Eq. 259; White v. Sherman, 168 Ill. 589; Mattock v. Moulton, 84 Me. 545; King v. Talbot, 40 N. Y. 76; 2 Pomeroy’s Eq. Jur. sec. 1074). In King v. Talbot, supra, the court said: “It is not denied that the employment of the fund as capital in trade would be a clear departure from the duty of trustees. If it cannot be so employed under the management of a co-partnership, I see no reason for saying that the incorporation of the partners tends in any degree to justify it.”
It is claimed that, by making an investment of the trust fund in the partnership formed under the name of the Bank of Vandalia, it was continued as an investment in the banking business, and that the testator in his will *104showed a preference for an investment in bank stock. The will, however, shows a preference on the part of the testator for an investment in the stock of a national bank, and not in the stock of a private bank. He says in his will: “I would advise, that it be kept as stock in the bank so long as the bank may hold an existence as such, and then seek other investment.” This language refers to stock in, a bank so long as it should exist as a national bank, subject to such examinations and other restrictions as are imposed by the National Banking law. There is nothing in the will to indicate, that the testator ever intended the investment to be changed from one in the national bank to one in the stock or shares of a private banking partnership. Changes in investments,,or re-investments, should not be made by trustees as a general thing, unless they are ordered by a chancery court; and, in such case, the trust fund may be withdrawn and re-loaned. (11 Am. & Eng. Ency. of Law, p. 824). It is not claimed, that the Bank of Vandalia was organized under any private banking charter, granted by the legislature before the present constitution was adopted; and the present act, permitting the organization of corporations with banking powers, did not exist in April, 1883, when the firm, known as the Bank of Vandalia, was formed; that act was not adopted until 1887.
Third—The question arises as to the liability of those who were partners with Brown in the firm, known as the Bank of Vandalia. They are called stockholders, but it is apparent that they were mere partners. When the firm, known as the Bank of Vandalia, was dissolved on May 1, 1895, George W. Brown, as administrator with the will annexed of the McCurdy estate, owned an interest of two-fifths, or $40,000.00 in the firm; and other parties, whose names appear in the record, owned the other interest of three-fifths in various amounts, ranging all the way from $15,000.00 to $500.00. Prom the time when the firm was orgnnized up to the time of its dissolution, a few *105changes in the stockholders took place, through death, and, in three instances, through transfers of stock.
Where a partner, who is a trustee or executor, improperly employs the money of his cestui que trust in the partnership business, or in' the payment of partnership debts, the cestui que trust will be entitled to re-imbursement by the firm, if the other partners have knowledge of the nature of the fund at the time of the misapplication. The other partners, at the election of the cestui que trust, are placed with the misappropriating'partner in the attitude of trustees of the fund; and they are regarded as having connived at the violation of the trust. If they know that the fund belongs to an estate, they are bound to inquire upon what terms it is held. The liability, when incurred, is a joint and several one. (17 Am. & Eng. Ency. of Law, pp. 1071, 1072).
The rule is thus stated by Story in his work on Partnership (5th ed. sec. 368): “If one partner is separately entrusted with trust money, and he, with the knowledge and consent of his partners, applies it to partnership purposes, it will constitute a joint debt against the partnership at the election of the cestui que trust or beneficiary.” (See also Parsons on Partnership,—4th ed.—sec. 104). Where all the partners know that the fund invested is trust money, they are implicated in the breach of trust. If they know that such money is being employed in the partnership business for the common benefit, they will all be bound for the money so employed, and be made answerable for the breach of trust committed by their co-partner with their acquiescence. (Englar v. Offutt, Trustee, 70 Md. 78). Bates in his work on the Law of Partnership, (vol. 1. secs. 481, 483,) thus lays down the rule: “If a partner has possession of the funds of others in trust * * * and improperly uses the trust funds for the benefit of the firm, the nature of the co-partners’ liability depends on whether they participated in the breach of trust. * * * But if the other partners have knowledge of the nature of *106the funds at the time of such misappropriation, they are implicated in the breach of trust, and become themselves, at the election of the cestui que trust, his debtors, or even trustees of the fund, as having connived at the violation.” (1 Lindley on Partnership,—5th ed.—pp. 161,162; Jaques v. Marquand, 6 Cow. 497; Hutchinson v. Smith, 7 Paige Ch. 26; Guillon v. Peterson, 89 Pa. St. 163; Emerson v. Durand, 54 Wis. 111; Durant v. Rogers, 87 Ill. 508; Renfrow v. Pearce, 68 id. 125).
The evidence is clear to the effect, that all the partners or stockholders in the partnership known as the Bank of Vandalia, had notice of the fact that Brown held the funds in his hands as administrator with the will annexed of the McCurdy estate; and that he invested the trust funds in the business of the new firm; therefore, these other partners are brought within the scope of the liability announced in the foregoing authorities. The other partners, in the accounting which is to take place when the case goes back, shall be charged with the value of the interest belonging to the estate of the deceased testator which had been represented by four hundred shares of National Bank stock before April 2,1883, as such value existed when the new partnership was formed. When the new firm was formed in April, 1883, W. M. Pogler owned $5000.00 of the stock, and Mary I. Henninger owned $2000.00 of the stock. On January 14,1892, Mary I. Henninger transferred $500.00 of her stock to W. M. Parmer, and $500.00 thereof to J. J. Brown, and on March 5,1892, W. M. Pogler transferred $4000.00 of his stock to Mary Wagner. The rule, announced in some of the text books, that, where the misuse of the trust funds has taken place before the admission of a partner into the firm, he will not be liable because not a participator in the mis-use, is invoked in behalf of these transferees. This rule is based upon the case of Twyford v. Trail, 7 Sim. 92. The examination, however, of the facts of that case will show that, at a certain date, two persons were admitted as *107partners into a firm, and knew that certain trust money remained in the firm, but they afterwards retired, and other partners were admitted, and, upon the failure of the firm, these two persons were held not to be responsible for the breach of trust committed by their co-partners. No such state of facts exists in the case at bar. W. M. Farmer and J. J. Brown and Mrs. Wagner acquired their interests in the firm in 1892. The firm continued to do business thereafter for three years, and these transferees remained in the firm during that time. They did not retire from the firm to be succeeded by other partners, as was the case of the partners held not to be liable in Twyford v. Trail, supra. Farmer and J. J. Brown, as we understand the record, were lawyers, who had been consulted by G. W. Brown during his administration of the estate. Mrs. Wagner and J. J. Brown and Farmer knew that the funds, which George W. Brown had put into the firm, were trust funds. Those funds were used for the benefit of the firm during the three years following their entrance into it. It cannot be said of them that they were not participators in the mis-use of then trust funds. The liability of the firm to these beneficiaries, the McKendree College and the board of church extension, and the daughters of Mrs. Marr, existed when the new partners came into the firm, and continued to exist thereafter. The incoming partners should not be chargeable with liabilities for the violation of the trust which occurred before they became members of the firm, but the partners, who sold to them their interests, are to remain affected with such liabilities to the extent of their interests so sold.
Fourth—It is claimed by appellees, that the cross-bill does not contain such allegations as are sufficient to authorize an inquiry into the mismanagement of the trust fund by the partnership. We think that the bill is sufficient to authorize the granting of the relief asked for by it. It is a bill for account and relief. It traces the trust *108fund into the hands of defendants, and avers that “the trust fund and interest thereon is a liability of the partnership.” It charges that the defendants should, “in equity and good conscience be held to account to your orator for the said sum of $40,000.00, so received by defendants as aforesaid.” It is not necessary in a bill to charge all the circumstances, which may conduce to prove the general charge, for these circumstances are matters of evidence. This is especially true where the circumstances are of such a nature as to be peculiarly within the knowledge of the defendants, as was the case here. When the relief granted is not repugnant to the facts alleged and proved, it is properly granted, although not specifically prayed for under the prayer for general relief. (Story’s Eq. Pl. sec. 28; Stanley v. Valentine, 79 Ill. 544; Pope v. Leonard, 115 Mass. 286; Hopkins v. Snedaker, 71 Ill. 449). Moreover, the defendants here did not challenge the sufficiency of the cross-bill by a demurrer, nor did they make any motion to make its allegations more specific. Nor did they raise the question of its sufficiency upon the admission of the evidence, and thereby furnish an opportunity for amending the bill. The proof, which is now claimed to be improper under the allegations of the bill, was allowed to go in without objection. Such proof discloses a case' for relief, which is ‘not inconsistent with the object and scope of the bill, and therefore may be given proper effect in entering the decree. Although the relief granted may be different from the relief specifically prayed, yet if it is consistent with the allegations and proof made, it is properly granted. (McNab v. Heald, 41 Ill. 326; Morrison v. Smith, 130 id. 304; Hopkins v. Snedaker, supra). As, in the case at bar, the statement and charging part of the bill make a case for account, it is not proper to refuse to consider evidence, which discloses other facts in addition to those charged, when the facts disclosed strengthen the right claimed, and merely expand the measure of accounting.
*109Fifth—It is further claimed that the beneficiaries, whose rights are here in controversy, to-wit: the daughters of Mrs. Marr, and McKendree College, and the board of church extension, are estopped from complaining of the conduct of these defendants by reason of alleged acquiescence and laches on their part. So far as McKendree College and the board of extension are concerned, their interests were not to accrue under the will until the death of the last survivor of the life annuitants. They are, therefore, mere remainder-men, and, under the law, ¿’remainder-man cannot acquiesce until his interest falls into possession. (Perry on Trusts,—3d ed.—sec. 467; White v. Sherman, 168 Ill. 589).
So far as Imogene and Harrietta Marr are concerned, we have been pointed to no evidence, and have discovered none, which shows that they had any notice or knowledge of the improper investment made of these funds by the administrator with the will annexed. There is nothing in the record to show that any of the beneficiaries acquiesced in the wrong here complained of, and therefore, the principles announced in White v. Sherman, supra, upon this subject are precisely applicable here.
Sixth—Where a. cause of action arises from a fraud, the bar created by laches will not apply in equity until the discovery of the fraud, or until the fraud could have been discovered by the exercise of reasonable diligence; the failure to use diligence is excused where there is a relation of trust and confidence, which renders it the duty of the party committing the fraud to disclose the truth to the other. (Farwell v. Great Western Tel. Co. 161 Ill. 522). There is nothing here to establish the fact, that any of these beneficiaries were guilty of laches after their discovéry of the improper conduct of the trustee. Laches cannot be here pleaded against any equitable right of the college or against the board of extension, because they are not asking that they be put into possession of the fund, but that it be secured. The lapse of time is *110no bar or evidence of laches against them, because as remainder-men they had not come into possession at the time of the wrongful investment and continuance of the same. (Bennett v. Colley, 5 Sim. 181).
Our conclusion is that John Penn, trustee, the complainant in the cross-bill below, and one of the appellants here, and the beneficiaries in the trust which he represents, are entitled to the relief prayed for in the cross-bill.
Accordingly, the judgment of the Appellate Court and the decree of the circuit court are reversed, and the cause is remanded to the circuit court with instructions to proceed in accordance with the views herein expressed.
Reversed and remanded.