Hull v. Jones
Hull v. Jones
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the court.
The bill was filed the 17th of May, 1879, and alleges, that David Hull died October 1st, 1870, leaving a will, which was proved on the 6th of February, 1871, leaving all his property, real and personal, for life, to his wife, and at her death equally to be divided amongst his children, except one to whom he had made advancements in his lifetime. Isabella Hull, testator's widow, was appointed as executrix by the will, and qualified as such the 6th of February, 1871. Mrs. Hull died on the 24th of February, 1879, and at the next term of the county court (March
The administrator, supposing he was authorized to sell the land under the will, was about to do so, when complainant restrained him by filing this bill*
Complainant charges that she is the illegitimate child of Elizabeth, daughter of David PIull, deceased, and that she was about nineteen years of age at the time of filing her bill; that her father left her $344, and her grandfather, the said David Hull, deceased, became her guardian and executed bond, with James A. Neil and Andrew Lessly as his sureties, on the 6th day of August, 1866, and said $344, belonging to complainant, was thereupon paid over to him. The ^bond was renewed the 5th of January, • 1869, with Andrew Gibson and Jesse Childress as sureties.
The bill further alleges that no settlement was ever made by said guardian, and insist that the said guardian’s estate is liable to her, and also the said sureties on his bonds, for the whole amount of $344 and compound interest, no part of which was ever paid. Hull’s administrator and his heirs at law were made parties, complainant claiming in her bill that her money went to redeem a tract -of land, in which she claims a resulting trust. The sureties of Hull on his two bonds were ‘also made parties. Answers were filed raising issues of fact and law, and the chancellor decreed that complainant had failed to establish a resulting trust, and was not entitled to any decree against the estate of D. Hull, deceased, it being pro
It is insisted for defendants who have appealed,, and complainant, that the seven years' statute of limitations in favor of the estates of deceased ■ persons,, do not operate in this case, because the bill shows, that complainant was a minor at the beginning of this suit. The argument is, that the statute does not begin to run until there is a cause of action, and that complainant being a single woman and but nineteen years of age, she was not entitled to sue her guardian in her own name and right for money in his hands until she attained the age of twenty-one, ©r was married.
The cause of action, we think, arose from the time of the conversion of the fund by the guardian,, and this was most probably within a very short time after he received. it. She had then the right to sue,, as she had when this bill was filed by her next friend. The sections cited do not save the rights of infants, as do other sections of the Code. And it is upon, this ground of infancy, that the operation of the •tatute of six years, within which time actions against the sureties of guardians are to be begun, is sus—
Another branch of the case, awaiting the determination of this court, by the chancellor’s decree on the points appealed from, remains suspended in the court below, and this cause will be remanded for further proceedings.
The costs of this court will be paid one-half by-complainant and the other half by the sureties who appealed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Adeline Hull, by next friend, etc. v. W. E. Jones, Administrator
- Status
- Published