Ferrie v. Trentini

149 A. 664, 111 Conn. 243, 1930 Conn. LEXIS 114
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedMarch 31, 1930
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 149 A. 664 (Ferrie v. Trentini) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ferrie v. Trentini, 149 A. 664, 111 Conn. 243, 1930 Conn. LEXIS 114 (Colo. 1930).

Opinion

Hinmaxt, J.

The first two assignments of error relate to the sustaining of the plaintiff’s demurrer to the return. Most of the allegations of the return pertain to issues relevant to and involved in the appeal from the action of the Court of Probate in removing the respondent parents as guardians of the person of the minor and appointing the plaintiff as such guardian, in that they contemplate a retrial of issues, such as the suitability of the parents to retain their natural guardianship, and the welfare of the minor, determinative of the action of the Court of Probate, and not appropriate to or available in the present action. This is not applicable, however, to that portion of the return (paragraph four) which amounts to an allegation that the decree of the Court of Probate appointing Ferrie as guardian, which is the basis of the issuance of the writ, is void because, after a first choice by the minor had been disapproved, she was not given opportunity to choose some other person. Whether such a defect as so alleged renders the decree a nullity, and therefore the defendants were not bound to recognize and comply with it, is a question which was fairly raised by the allegation and the demurrer. The *246 sustaining of the demurrer imports a ruling that this, like the other issues sought to be raised by the return, was a proper subject of review on the appeal from the decree of the Court of Probate and not appropriate to the present action.

The applicable statutory provisions present no difficulties of construction. Section 4861 of the General Statutes provides that if both parents or the sole living parent of a minor shall be removed the Court of Probate “shall thereupon appoint a guardian of the person of such minor unless it shall appear that such minor is fourteeen years of age or over, in which case such minor shall be given an opportunity to choose his guardian as hereinafter provided.” The provision for choice so referred to is § 4864, which reads as follows: “If any minor child fourteen years of age or over has no parent or guardian of his person the Court of Probate for the district in which such minor resides may notify him to appear and choose some person to be guardian of his person, and if said court shall approve of the person so chosen it may appoint him, but if it shall disapprove of such person or if such person fail to accept and qualify, the minor may choose some other person to be approved and appointed as aforesaid; but if such minor shall refuse or neglect to make choice of a person approved of by said court who will accept and qualify said court may appoint such person as it may deem proper.”

The purpose of the present statute is the same as that of its predecessors, which were similar in all essential respects, and like conditions apply thereto. “Guardians must be appointed. Some persons would carry out the object of the law, and some would not. How shall the selection be made? The common law gave the selection to the minor, when of sufficient age to act. with discretion in the matter. But experience *247 proved that minors, although of proper age to choose their guardians, sometimes were governed too much by their feelings, and improper selections were made. The statute in question sought to improve upon the common law. It is equally desirous to leave the selection to the minor, when of sufficient age to exercise judgment and discretion, so far as it can safely be done for the good of the minor, and devised the mode therein prescribed to make the appointment. The selection shall first be made by the minor; then, if in the judgment of the judge of probate the party selected is not a proper person to be the guardian, the judge may require that another selection be made. But if the judge of probate has the power to disapprove of the selection made by the minor whenever the judge sees fit so to do, whether the selection is a proper one to be made or not, the minor, in effect, has no agency in the matter, and the appointment might as well be left to the judge in the first instance, as to go through with the farce of one selection after another, till the will of the judge of probate shall finally be accomplished by the selection of the person that the judge had in view at the commencement. . . . We have no doubt that the statute means, if a minor of lawful age shall make a proper selection of a person to be his or her guardian in the judgment of the judge of probate, the judge has no discretion in the matter, but the duty of the judge is to approve of the choice made, and make the appointment accordingly. It follows therefore that the judgment of a judge of probate, in disapproving of the choice made by a minor under this statute, must be based upon facts shown, or facts within the knowledge of the judge.” Adams’ Appeal, 38 Conn. 304, 306; Hamilton v. State, 94 Conn. 648, 652, 110 Atl. 54; White v. Strong, 75 Conn. 308, 311, 53 Atl. 654.

*248 In Adams’ Appeal, supra, the Court of Probate disapproved the first choice made by the minor and requested her to choose some other person, which she refused' to do, and the court then made an appointment. The statutory requirement of an opportunity to the minor to make a second choice having been complied with, the sufficiency of the facts supporting the disapproval of the minor’s first choice was held to be a proper subject for determination on appeal. Here, however, it is alleged, and admitted by the demurrer, that irrespective of the merits of the disapproval of the minor’s first choice, opportunity to make or to refuse to make the second choice, which the statute requires be given her, was withheld from the minor. The appellants claim that the consequence of failure to comply with the statute in this respect deprived the court of jurisdiction to make an appointment and that its decree is open to attack, as void for that reason, in the present proceeding. The appellee contends that failure to accord the minor a second opportunity to choose a guardian raises a question reviewable only on appeal from the action of the Court of Probate in making the appointment.

The line separating want of jurisdiction from an erroneous exercise of jurisdiction is not always a plain one. Terry's Appeal, 67 Conn. 181, 185, 34 Atl. 1032. Cases under similar statutes, involving this question and not complicated by other elements, such as lack of service or notice, are few. Sherman v. Ballou, 8 Cowen (N. Y.) 304, 307, concerned a statute (1 R.L. 454, § 30) which authorized the surrogate “to allow of guardians, who shall be chosen by infants of the age of fourteen years; and to appoint guardians for such as shall be within that age.” It was held that the surrogate, being an officer created by statute, possessed no powers except such as are given him thereby. *249 “By this act, the surrogate is not to appoint a guardian for infants over fourteen; but his allowance or approbation gives efficacy to an act of such infant, which otherwise would be nugatory and void. There is no act to be done by the surrogate, until an election of guardian shall have been made by the infant. If, then, the infant does not choose a guardian, any act of allowance by the surrogate is merely void.

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Bluebook (online)
149 A. 664, 111 Conn. 243, 1930 Conn. LEXIS 114, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ferrie-v-trentini-conn-1930.