Carlisle v. Tuttle

30 Ala. 613
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedJanuary 15, 1857
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 30 Ala. 613 (Carlisle v. Tuttle) 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
Carlisle v. Tuttle, 30 Ala. 613 (Ala. 1857).

Opinion

WALKER, J.

The permission to file the amended petition was not erroneous. The amendment did not make a new case. It merely supplied the defects in the case [622]*622previously made, as to allegations and parties ; which may be done in the probate, as well as in the chancery court. Martin v. Martin, 22 Ala. 86.

The object of the petition was the removal of the infant’s property to another State. The amended petition disclosed in what the property consisted, and that the administrator was interested in the proceeding, because he still had in his hands undistributed assets, which would be within the operation of the order sought by the petition. The making the administrator a party, upon this amendment, is sustained by its perfect analogy to the case of frequent occurrence and undisputed legality, where in the chancery court an amendment points out an interest in the subject-matter of the original bill in some new party, and makes him a defendant.

The' administrator was interested in the proceeding, for the reason above stated. The guardian was interested, whether he had in his hands the money recovered in the decree against the administrator or not, because the success of the application would transfer to another his right to receive the property of the infant. The administrator and guardian, being both interested in the proceeding, were proper parties, and were properly joined as defendants. The Code (§ 2038) must not be understood, in prescribing notice to the “administrator or guardian,” to prohibit the bringing of them both before the court, where they are both interested. The statute (Code, § 2033) makes the order, in which the successful prosecution of the application must terminate, an authority to the guardian to sue for and recover the property of the ward in his own name, for the use of the ward. The order has thus the effect of transferring to the non-resident guardian the right which before pertained to the resident guardian. To a proceeding, ending in such an order, the guafdian was properly made a party, whether he had any of the property in his possession or not.

The following positions, in addition to those already incidentally passed upon, are taken in support of the demurrer to the petition : 1st, that the proceeding should have been in the name of the ward, by the guardian; [623]*6232d, that tbe petition does not disclose with sufficient certainty that Mrs. Tuttle was the natural mother of the infant, and had a right to change the infant’s domicile from this to another State ; 3d, that Mrs. Tuttle’s guardianship was terminated by her subsequent marriage; 4th, that the husband of Mrs. Tuttle was improperly joined -with her-as a petitioning party; 5th, that the juris7 diction of the Perry probate court over the matter of the guardianship could not be divested.

The first of those positions is met by the statute itself. Section 2032 of the Code authorizes, in certain prescribed contingencies, an order for the removal of the ward’s property to the State of his residence, “upon the application of the guardian.” The application here is by the guardian, and is therefore, in that respect, strictly conformable to the statute.

The original petition distinctly and repeatedly characterizes the ward as the son of Mrs. Tuttle, and the amended petition calls him her “infant child.” It is thus shown with sufficient certainty that she is the natural mother of the infant. The language used is appropriate to the designation of her as the natural mother, and not the stepmother, This court does not decide, in Martin v. Martin, 22 Ala. 86, that the averment that the petitioner for dower is the toidoio of the deceased does not amount to a sufficient assertion of her marriage ; but simply remarks, arguendo, that it “is a mode of pleading not to be encouraged.” This will be seen by looking beyond the head-note, to the opinion itself.

Mrs. Tuttle, being the natural mother of the ward, had a right, after the death of the father, and during her widowhood, to change his domicile; he being at the time under the age of seven years, and there not appearing any fraudulent design to alter the succession upon the infant’s death, and there being no guardianship in this State.— Potinger v. Wightman, 3 Merivale, 67; 1 Jarman on Wills, 10; Reeve’s Domestic Delations, 298; Cumner Parish v. Milton Parish, 3 Salk. 259.

Mrs. Tuttle having been appointed guardian in Connecticut, when she was unmarried, her subsequent mar[624]*624riage would not terminate her guardianship. Such marriage may have had the effect to authorize proceedings for her removal, and the appointment of a new guardian; but it would not, ipso facto, terminate the guardianship. If it be conceded that the husband’s assent to the continuance of the guardianship was indispensable, such assent must be presumed in the absence of all evidence to the contrary. — White & Tudor’s Lead. Cas. in Equity, 2 vol., 2d part, 146; 4 Com. Dig. 610, Guardian, E, 2; 1 Bright on H. & W. 17; Palmer v. Oakley, 2 Doug. 471; Adair v. Shaw, 1 Sch. & Lef. 243; Macpherson on Infants, 89, 111; Jones v. Powell, 9 Beavan, 345; In re Gornall, 1 Beavan, 347; 4 Bacon’s Abr. 554.

Upon the marriage of a feme guardian, her husband becomes guardian with her during the coverture. The effect of the marriage of an administratrix is to make the husband co-administrator with her. — Pistole v. Street, 5 Porter, 64 ; Kavanaugh v. Thompson, 16 Ala. 817; Williamson v. Hill, 6 Porter, 184. The same reasons exist for assigning to the husband, upon marriage, the attitude of an associate with his wife in her pre-existing guardianship, as in her pre-existing administration; and they should be allowed the same effect in both cases.

There is an authority, which holds, that the guardianship of & feme sole is not, upon her marriage, transferred to her husband. — 2 Com. Digest, marg. page 384. This is not inconsistent with the proposition, that the husband is joined with the wife in the guardianship during the coverture. Such joinder of the husband with the wife in the guardianship does not involve the idea of a transfer of the guardianship from the latter to .the former. In Osborne v. Carden, 1 Plowden, 292, it is said: “When the wife, being guardian, took husband, the husband had an interest in the wardship, in right of the wife; for the husband partakes with the wife in all her prerogatives; and therefore, when the wife had the wardship of the infant, and the husband had the wardship and direction of the wife, therein he had the wardship of all those things of which the wife had the wardship before ; for the law does not deprive the husband of any interest, prerogative* [625]*625or tiling which the wife had, bat vests the interest in him with his wife, because they are but one in law.” In Bacon’s Abridgment, (Guardian, F,) we find the law thus stated : “If a feme guardian in socage marries, the husband becomes guardian in right of his wife; but if she dies, the guardianship ceases as to him, and shall go to the next of kin to the infant.”

In all proceedings by the wife, who was guardian before coverture, the husband must be joined. — McGinty v. Mabry, 28 Ala. 672; 2 Bacon’s Abr. 56, Baron § Feme, K.; Byrne v. Van Hoesen, 6 Johns. 66.

Upon the marriage of Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
30 Ala. 613, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carlisle-v-tuttle-ala-1857.