Foley v. Mutual Life Insurance

34 N.E. 211, 138 N.Y. 333, 52 N.Y. St. Rep. 860, 93 Sickels 333, 1893 N.Y. LEXIS 845
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 6, 1893
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 34 N.E. 211 (Foley v. Mutual Life Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Foley v. Mutual Life Insurance, 34 N.E. 211, 138 N.Y. 333, 52 N.Y. St. Rep. 860, 93 Sickels 333, 1893 N.Y. LEXIS 845 (N.Y. 1893).

Opinion

Earl, J.

Mrs. Foley had no power by her will to constitute her husband guardian of her minor children, and while he assumed to act as such it is now conceded that he was not their testamentary guardian, and that he derived no power under the will of his wife to act as such. But they took under the will of their mother real estate, and hence it is claimed on behalf of the defendant that he became the guardian in socage of his minor children under the provisions of the Revised Statutes where it is provided in section 5 (4 R. S. [8th ed.] 2418), as follows: “ Where an estate in lands shall become vested in an infant, the guardianship of such infant, with the rights, powers and duties of a guardian in socage, shall belong (1) To the father of the infant. (2) If there be no father, to the mother. (3) If there be no father or mother, to the nearest and eldest relative of full age, not being under any legal incapacity, and as between relatives of the same degree of consanguinity males shall be preferred.” Section six provides that, “ To every such guardian, all statutory provisions that are, or shall be in force relative to guardians in socage, shall be deemed to apply.” As a guardian constituted by this statute is clothed with the rights, powers and duties of a guardian in socage, it becomes important to know what were the powers, duties and authority of a guardian in socage at common law prior to the Revised Statutes.

*339 Guardianship in socage was an incident of the feudal tenures, existing under the English common law of real estate, and existed only where an infant under fourteen years of age was. seized of real estate. Ho person could be a guardian in socage who could inherit from the infant; but the right of guardianship was in such of the infant’s next of kin as could not take by inheritance from him the socage estate in respect of which the guardianship arose; and if there was one or more in common degree of relationship, he who first obtained possession of the infant generally had the custody of him. The guardian in socage was recognized as having an estate in the land of his ward, and he could maintain in his own name any appropriate action to recover the rents and profits and to recover damages for trespass or waste upon the land, and to recover possession of the land itself. As the common-law socage tenure was swept away by the Revised Statutes, the statutory guardianship was constituted by those statutes to take the place of the common-law guardianship in socage, and it may for convenience he called by the same name. The guardianship there constituted was like the guardianship in socage at common law, except that it continued until the infant reached the age of twenty-one years, and relatives who could inherit from the infant were not excluded. It is claimed by the plaintiffs that Foley as guardian in socage under these provisions of the Revised Statutes had no power to surrender the insurance policy. The defendant, on the contrary, claims that he did have such power, and the counsel on both sides have, with great diligence and industry, examined and brought to our attention numerous authorities which are claimed to bear upon this controverted question. We have carefully examined them all and are satisfied that as such guardian Foley had no power to surrender the policy.

It is claimed on the part of the plaintiffs that guardians in socage at common law had to do only with the real estate of their wards, and, we think, that is substantially true. Such a guardian could have no being whatever, except when the infant was seized of real estate in socage tenure, and as that was essential *340 it may be inferred that his powers and duties related to the real estate on account of which his guardianship was constituted. In the early history of the common law there was very little, personal property, and the guardianship of the infants and of their real estate was very naturally the main object of the law. It is probable that as the guardian in socage was entitled to the possession of the real estate, he also took possession of the animals, implements and other personal property connected with the real estate, and having possession, he could probably maintain an action for any interference with such personal property without right or authority by a mere stranger, and that he thus had the control of such personal property as well as of all the real estate. Our own researches, aided by the industry of counsel, have not brought to our attention a single case in England or in this country where the question has directly arisen as to the power of a guardian in socage over the personal property of his ward; and it has never been decided or intimated in any judicial opinion that such a guardian could reduce to possession the choses in action of his ward, or release, discharge or dispose of them. In Coke upon Littleton (1 Am. ed., Butler & Hargraves’ Hotes, 88 B), the learned editors say: “But whether the guardian in socage is entitled to take into his custody the infant’s personal estate, we have not yet been able to ascertain by any express authority.” But they also say that they are inclined to think that the personalty was under the control of the guardian in socage, except where by the custom of the' particular place it happened to be liable to a different custom; and they claim that their views are strongly confirmed by the manner in which the Act 12 Charles II, chap. 24, regulated the powers of a guardian which it enabled the father to appoint. That act authorized the father by will or deed to appoint a guardian for his minor children, and the guardian thus appointed was authorized to take the custody of the infant’s personal estate as well as his real estate, tenements and hereditaments, and bring such actions in relation thereto, as a guardian in common socage might do.” And the reasoning of the learned *341 editors is- that these words necessarily import that the personal estate of infants was equally with their real estate subject to the custody and control of the guardian in socage. The provisions of that statute were substantially enacted in this state by chapter 47 of the Laws of 1787, and they have continued ever since and are now found in the Revised Statutes (4 R. S. 2612); and the provision now is in section 3, that the guardian thus appointed by the father shall “ take the custody and management of the personal estate of such minor, and the profits of his real estate during the time for which such disposition shall have been made, and may bring such actions in relation thereto as a guardian in socage might by law.” We think the inference to be drawn from this statute, that a guardian in socage had the control and possession of all the personal estate of his ward and could bring any action in reference thereto as he could in reference to any of the real estate, is very uncertain and unsatisfactory. As before stated, it is probably true that a guardian in socage, having the possession of the personal property of his ward, Used on and connected with his land, could bring actions in reference to the same. But we do not think it is a legitimate inference from these statutes that a guardian in socage had the control at common law of all the personal property of his ward, and that he could use, manage and dispose of it like a general owner possessing the title to the same. There was no reason for giving such a power to the guardian in socage growing out of the feudal tenure or the policy of the common law.

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Bluebook (online)
34 N.E. 211, 138 N.Y. 333, 52 N.Y. St. Rep. 860, 93 Sickels 333, 1893 N.Y. LEXIS 845, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/foley-v-mutual-life-insurance-ny-1893.