Waller v. Cresswell
Waller v. Cresswell
Opinion of the Court
The opinion of the Court was delivered by
We do not propose in this case to give any construction to the words, in the twentieth Section of the fourth Article of the State Constitution, “ in business appertaining to minors,” which might, on the one hand, limit the jurisdiction of the said Probate Court to matters cognizable by it only while the party is under age, or, on the other, to extend it to rights and obligations arising during his minority, and sought to be enforced in his favor after he had attained his majority. Although the proceeding.here was commenced by the appellant when he was sui juris, no exception was made to it on that ground, either in the Probate
When a Court takes cognizance of cases in which the very nature of its organization prevents it from entertaining the issues made between the parties, and its means of administration prevent an enforcement 'of any judgment it may therein pronounce, the objection to its jurisdiction may be made at any time ; but where, having jurisdiction over the general subject, limited only by some qualification, as, possibly, here, the age of the party complaining, in the language of Chancellor Harper in Miller vs. Furse, Bail. Eq., 191, “ there can be no hardship in requiring the objection to be made, in the first instance, before the delay and expense of preparing the case for trial.”
There is another consideration which should influence the Court to entertain the appeal in the case before it, without regard to its intimation as to the want of jurisdiction by the Probate Court. The motion here is to modify and reform the judgment of the Circuit Court, which, it is conceded, (notwithstanding what may have been the concurrent authority of the Probate Court,) had original jurisdiction over the parties and the subject-matter. The sixty-fifth Section of the Code, Gen. Stat., p. 557, provides, “ that the final decision and judgment in cases appealed shall be certified to the Probate Court by the Circuit Court, or Supreme Court, as the case may be, and the same proceedings shall be had in the Probate Court as though such decision had been made in such Court.” It only
In the case before us the guardian cannot be treated as a trustee who has caused loss to his cestui que trust, by calling in, without adequate reason, good and safe obligations, and accepting for their payment a depreciated currency. The jury, by their verdict on the issues submitted, has found that the estate of the appellant was not called in by the respondent, his guardian, and therefore the Confederate Treasury notes are only to be considered as received by him as a payment on account of the interest of the ward, as a distributee of his deceased father.
The administrators of the father represented his estate. They held their letters under the authority and by virtue of the laws of Alabama, and the respondent, as guardian, had no direct control or supervisión over it. -The bonds which were taken on the sale were not secured by any mortgage of real estate, and the administrators accepted Confederate money for their payment. The cases, therefore, in which we have held that a trustee is responsible, if he received such currency when the debt was secured by a lien of that character, have no application. Nor does the doctrine which this Court has maintained, making him 'responsible if he exchanges a security for one which is inferior in value, or invests in direct opposition to the terms of the trust, affect the case of the guardian here. He was bound either to receive the portion of the ward’s estate tendered him as the only prevailing circulating medium of the country, or, by declining, leave the administrators to be pursued by the ward in the Courts of the State in which they resided. His appointment as guardian in this State conferred on him no right to bring the administrators to account for the interest of the appellant in the estate which they represented. He had no alternative; he was without remedy by which to make the obligors of the bonds liable. They had satisfied them by payment to the administrators in a medium which, by their consent, had discharged them. No evidence was offered as to the character of the administration bond, or the solvency of the principal and his sureties. They were all in another jurisdiction. Under these circumstances, is the guardian to be held accountable for receiving from the ad
The receipt of the money at the time referred to in the third ground of appeal depends upon the same principle and views which have been expressed in regard to the acceptance of Confederate Treasury notes from the administrators of the estate of the father. If it was not a breach of trust on the part of the guardian to receive such notes on account of the share of the ward in the hands of the administrators, can it be made so because he received this particular sum when he had the opportunity of investing it in an interest-bearing bond of the same Government which had issued the non-bearing interest notes ? And this applies, too, to so much of the appeal as seeks tqhold the guardian liable because of his investment in such securities. Was loss more likely to follow from the conversion of the notes into bonds of the Government which had issued both ? If not, the act of the guardian did not reduce the funds of the ward to a worse condition than they were in when he held them in the shape of Confederate Treasury notes. The good faith of the guardian is established by the finding of the jury, and as the transaction was in no way calculated to diminish the value of the funds of the ward in his hands, it does not constitute, in itself, such a breach of trust as should render him liable for the loss.
The fourth ground of appeal insists that the Circuit Court, holding the investment of the 13,000 by a deposit with the agent of the Treasury of the Confederate States inoperative, should have disallowed it entirely, instead of allowing it to stand as a charge against the ward to the extent of its value in national currency. This strikes us as a misconception of the principle in Head et. al. vs. Tal
The motion is dismissed.
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