Bunting v. Bunting

99 A. 840, 87 N.J. Eq. 20, 2 Stock. 20, 1917 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 103
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedJanuary 6, 1917
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 99 A. 840 (Bunting v. Bunting) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Court of Chancery primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bunting v. Bunting, 99 A. 840, 87 N.J. Eq. 20, 2 Stock. 20, 1917 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 103 (N.J. Ct. App. 1917).

Opinion

Walker, Chancellor.

The bill in this ease was filed to obtain a lien in the form of a mortgage on the premises therein described, and to compel the defendants, Martie Bunting and Anna May Bunting, to execute such bond and mortgage.

[22]*22On December'31st, 1914, James N. Bunting, since deceased, purchased a lot of land in Trenton for $2,200, subject to a mort- , gage of $1,000. The bill alleges that at the time of the purchase of the lot mentioned, the complainant, Mary N. Bunting, requested James N. Bunting (who was her son) and Martie Bunting, his wife, one of the defendants, to- execute a bond in her favor in the penal sum of $2,000 and a mortgage to secure the same on the lot described for $1,000, to run for one year from January, 1915, with interest at six ppr cent., per annum, payable semi-annually, but not alleging that he owed the money; that at the request of James N. Bunting, since’deceased, William Gr. Howell prepared the bond and mortgage mentioned, but that Bunting departed this life without having executed them; that he died intestate leaving him surviving his widow, Martie Bunting, and his daughter, Anna May Bunting, a minor, the defendants.

A subpoena ad respondendum was'issued directed to the-defendants and was returned' with an acknowledgment of service for both endorsed thereon by a solicitor of this court. The bill alleges that the defendant Anna May Bunting is a minor under the age of twenty-one and above the age of fourteen years. The solicitor had no authority to acknowledge service for the infant defendant. If the infant directed the solicitor to acknowledge service for her, it was, nevertheless, a nullit}r, because an infant is incompetent tp employ a solicitor and voluntarily appear. Lang v. Bellof, 53 N. J. Eq. 298. Doubtless, 'the solicitor was ignorant of the fact that the defendant Anna May Bunting was a minor, and I have no doubt he acted in perfect good faith.

An incapacitated party defendant should be brought into court by adverse proceedings. In re Martin, 98 Atl. Rep. 510, 513. After the time limited for answer under the subpcena had expired, a decree pro confesso was entered, which recited -that subpoena for the “defendants” to answer had been duly issued •and returned with acknowledgment of service by a solicitor for “the defendant,” and -further recited that the defendant Martie Bunting, the adult, had not appeared and answered, and thereupon it was ordered that the complainant’s bill be taken as confessed 'against her,-to' the end that such decree might be made [23]*23against her as the chancellor should think equitable and just;- and it was further ordered that the complainant proceed to take depositions and other evidence to substantiate and prove the allegations in her bill and to bring Qn the hearing of the cause ex parte. Prior to the entry of the áeeree pro confesso the usual. notice to the Infant, she being between fourteen and twenty-one years of age, was given of an application for the appointment of a guardian. On the day specified for the application, the infant not appearing, an order appointing a guardian was entered. It recited that she had been served with process to appear and answer to the complainants bill (which was not the fact) and that she had neglected to apply for the appointment of a guardian to defend the suit. Robert' H. McAdams, Esquire, clerk of this , court, was thereupon in the order assigned and appointed her guardian by whom she might appear and answer and defend the suit. The guardian ad litem entered an appearance and filed for her the usual formal answer submitting the infant to the judgment of the court and praying that her interest in the premises might be protected and saved to her. • '

’A preliminary question is here presented. It is: Can a guardian be appointed for an infant who is not regularly in court in a cause ? I am sure that if this situation fell under the notice of the court, in the' first instance, as it did (In re Martin, supra), a guardian would not have been appointed, but the complainant would have been given leave to bring' in the defendant in adverse proceedings—that is, by service of process upon her as a step preliminary to proceedings for the appointment of a guardian. But after the court has 'taken the infant under its protection, the case is different. In Beddinger v. Smith, 13 S. W. Rep. 735, the supreme court of Arkansas, on a bill filed to set aside a decree for want of service on certain minor defendants, held, that as the record showed that a guardian ad litem was appointed for them, who accepted the appointment and filed their answer,' and the decree recited that the cause, was heard upon their answer, such recital was conclusive as to service of legal notice on the minor'. That is not exactly this case, but it is a declaration that when the infants have been protected to the full extent to which they are entitled, the decree against them [24]*24will not be set aside for want of service of original process upon them. See Manson v. Duncanson, 166 U. S. 533; 41 L. Ed. 1105.

■ It is the duty of the court'to protect the'interest of an infant party to litigation, and to exercise a'general supervision-over the conduct of the next friend or guardian ad litem. 22 Cyc. 531. This oftentimes results in the appointment by the court-of counsel to represent guardians ad- litem•, and, through them, the Actual parties, the'infants. See Colgate v. Colgate, 23 N. J. Eq. 372. This -was done in this casé on application of the guardian when it was ascertained that a-final decree had passed against the infant without the guardian having been heard.

■ Chancellor Zabriskie, in Colgate v. Colgate, 23 N. J. Eq. (at p. 383), in directing a guardian ad litem to employ proper counsel, approved by the court, to represent the infant, said that the guardian ad litem, who was the clerk of the court, was appointed pro forma only for the purpose of placing the infant within the jurisdiction of the court.

I am of opinion that when the-court appoints a guardian ad litem for an infant defendant, upon proceedings for that appointment which are in and of themselves regular, the infant is then- in court and" under its protection, although he is not regularly in court under initial process. And this, too, in analogy to the case of an infant who is brought into court by its next friend when the infant is a complainant, for in such a case the infant does not voluntarily appear but is brought into court by prochem ami, who is a person who undertakes to prosecute a suit in behalf of the infant, commonly called "next friend.” When the infant is a complainant he does not appear of his own volition, nor is he brought in on adverse proceedings. Whether complainant or defendant, he is brought in involuntarily and is represented before the -court by next friend, if complainant, or guardian ad litem, if defendant,-who, the procliein ami or guardian, as the case may be, must protect the infant’s interest under the sanction of the court who is the ultimate protector of the incapacitated party.- There is little, if any, difference between the functions-of a next friend and a guardian ad‘litem.

[25]*25I hold, therefore, that this defendant is now properly before the court represented by her guardian ad litem.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
99 A. 840, 87 N.J. Eq. 20, 2 Stock. 20, 1917 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 103, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bunting-v-bunting-njch-1917.