Ashley v. Ashley

51 So. 2d 239, 255 Ala. 313, 1951 Ala. LEXIS 310
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedMarch 15, 1951
Docket6 Div. 35
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 51 So. 2d 239 (Ashley v. Ashley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ashley v. Ashley, 51 So. 2d 239, 255 Ala. 313, 1951 Ala. LEXIS 310 (Ala. 1951).

Opinion

FOSTER, Justice.

This is an appeal from a final decree denying relief to complainant in a suit in equity filed by authority of section 145, Title' 13, Code. This statute authorizes a suit in equity by an injured party to correct any error of law or fact in the settlement of an estate. The nature of the error which is thus subject to correction is discussed in Evans v. Evans, 200 Ala. 329, 76 So. 95; Morgan v. Gaiter, 182 Ala. 322, 62 So. 731; Adams v. Walsh, 190 Ala. 516, 67 So. 432. No question is here raised as to the sufficiency of the bill in that respect.

The decree sought to be reviewed was rendered on the final settlement of the estate of Lewis J. Ashley, dated November 9, 1940. The bill was filed July 1, 1941, within the statutory period of two years. Lewis J. Ashley died March 25, 1940. On April 23, 1940, Grover C. Ashley was appointed administrator on his petition alleging that he was the only child and heir at law of the deceased. After other proceedings, to which we will refer, Grover C. Ashley filed in the probate court a petition alleging that he was the only child and heir at law of deceased, and there are no' debts unpaid; that he was appointed administrator April 23, 1940, and further administration is unnecessary, and prayed that the administration be dismissed and his surety released and discharged. No notice was given by reason of the allegation that he was the only child and heir at law. The probate court on that day made an order'and decree as prayed for. That is the decree sought to be corrected by the instant suit.

The complainant is a sister of Lewis J. Ashley and was a non compos mentis, and was not a party to any of the proceedings and had no notice of them. The sole con *316 tention made is that Grover C. Ashley was not a legitimate child of Lewis J. Ashley because Lewis and Myrtle, his parents, were not lawfully man and wife at the time Grover was born of their union for the reason Myrtle had previously been married and not divorced, and that both she and her former husband are even now still living; and that Lewis had no lawful descendants. The bill seeks to have Grover account for the funds of the estate which he received.

'Issue was joined on the only contested matter, and the court found and decreed that Grover was the only heir and legitimate child of Lewis J. Ashley and denied relief. The complainant has appealed from that decree.

A summary of the facts in chronological order is here undertaken to be set out, repeating some of the matters already alleged so as to show their historical setting. These facts are as follows.

Myrtle Tucker at the age of fourteen married Samuel Till Colley on June 30, 1907 in Blount County. They lived together about three months when he “went across the river” to work. They did not live together after that. He enlisted in the Army October 19, 1907, and was discharged October 18, 1910, having served his term of enlistment. There was no communication between them, although he testified that he wrote her several times but received no answer. Colley re-enlisted on the day he was discharged for another three year term and was again discharged October 18, 1913.

Colley married Viola Hallmark on October 16, 1916, according to his testimony. He has three boys and two girls by that marriage: all of whom are grown. He says he did not obtain a divorce from Myrtle, having heard she was dead.

Myrtle testified to the effect that she married Colley on June 30, 1907, when she was fourteen years of age, and that they lived together “one” month, when he left and did not return. She was informed by her father that Colley was dead; that he had been killed on the train. On December 7, 1909, she married Doss and had two children: one of whom is now a grown man, married and has four children. Doss died in 1913. After Doss died, she married Lewis J. Ashley on February 7, 1915, and had one child, Grover C. Ashley, as to whose legitimacy the result of this cause depends. She was -divorced from Ashley December 2, 1918. He died March 25, 1940. He was a soldier in World War 1 and came back demented and was in the hospital for the insane. A birth certificate was offered in evidence showing that Grover C. Ashley was born December 20, 1915 in Walker County, and that his parents were Myrtle Ashley and Lewis J. Ashley. A. E. Ashley was appointed guardian of Lewis J. Ashley on November 21, 1921. Myrtle married Miller in 1918, and has been living with him to the present time. She has three children by him, the oldest being twenty-four years of age and the youngest sixteen years.

On December 2, 1931, Myrtle filed a petition in the Probate Court of Cullman County, in which she sought an allowance to be made for Grover C. Ashley out of the estate of Lewis J. Ashley, alleging that said Grover C. Ashley is the only heir at law and child of Lewis J. Ashley. Grover was then sixteen years of age. Said petition was heard by the judge of probate on December 8, 1931, when the court made an allowance of $30 a month to be paid by the guardian of Lewis J. Ashley to the guardian of said minor child, Grover C. Ashley, for his maintenance, support and education. The record shows that J. S. Hyatt, as guardian of Grover C. Ashley, received from the Veterans Bureau on account of Lewis J. Ashley, the total sum of $4,456.21 covering a period from January 26, 1929 to August 1933.

On July 20, 1936, the guardianship of A. E. Ashley was transferred from the probate court to- the circuit court in equity.. On January 6, 1937, A. E. Ashley filed his accounts and vouchers and a hearing on the settlement was had on January 29, 1937. On that day John Chapman was appointed guardian of Lewis J. Ashley.

Lewis J. Ashley died March 25, 1940. ■On April 23, 1940, Grover C. Ashley was *317 appointed administrator of the estate of Lewis J. Ashley with the United States Fidelity and Guaranty Company as surety on his bond. On November 9, 1940 he was discharged on final settlement in the Probate Court of Cullman County.

On April 13, 1940, a decree of the probate court found that the will of Lewis J. Ashley was void because of his unsound mind, and the contest of the will by Grover C. Ashley was sustained. It was decreed that Grover C. Ashley is the son and only heir at law of Lewis J. Ashley and is entitled to all of his property of every kind in the hands of Ruth Wilbanks as the guardian of Lewis J. Ashley. There appears an agreement dated April 13, 1940 between the solicitor for Ruth Wilbanks, as guardian of Lewis J. Ashley, on the one part, and Grover C. Ashley on the other, where he signed as the only child and heir at law of Lewis J. Ashley. Said agreement directs the guardian to pay over and deliver to Grover C. Ashley all the assets belonging to the estate of Lewis J. Ashley, and recites that Grover C. Ashley is the only child and heir at law of Lewis J. Ashley. It was ratified by decree on April 13, 1940.

On April 22, 1940, a petition was filed in the Circuit Court, in Equity, of Cullman County by J. A. Ashley and C. A. Ashley, alleging that they are nephews of Lewis J. Ashley and praying said court to set aside and annul the decree on final settlement of the guardianship of Lewis J. Ashley made on the 13th day of April, 1940, alleging principally that Grover C. Ashley is not the child and heir at law of said Lewis J. Ashley, and not entitled to inherit his estate.

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Bluebook (online)
51 So. 2d 239, 255 Ala. 313, 1951 Ala. LEXIS 310, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ashley-v-ashley-ala-1951.