Foote v. Chittenden

184 N.W. 167, 106 Neb. 704, 1921 Neb. LEXIS 252
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 20, 1921
DocketNo. 21495
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 184 N.W. 167 (Foote v. Chittenden) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Foote v. Chittenden, 184 N.W. 167, 106 Neb. 704, 1921 Neb. LEXIS 252 (Neb. 1921).

Opinion

Clements (E. J.), District Judge.

This is an action to determine adverse claims to two city lots situated in Kearney, Nebraska. The plaintiffs claim title through the will of Sarah B. Leffingwell, who died February 17, 1896, seised of said property. The defendants claim title to or interest in said lands from the [705]*705same source, under a sale by the guardian of the plaintiffs, who were then.nonresident minors, under a license from the district court for Buffalo county, Nebraska. Walter W. Barney, .the guardian who made the sale, was appointed by the county court of said county on July 23, 1903, at which time plaintiffs were aged five, ten, and fourteen years, respectively, and resided in the state of Pennsylvania. The plaintiffs assail the validity of the appointment of sáid guardian by the county court, but stipulate in the record that the proceedings in the district court with reference to said guardian’s sale were complete and regular in all respects; that said sale was confirmed and the guardian was ordered to and did execute a deed to the purchaser, Samuel J. Pair; that said purchaser took possession of said premises under said deed on May 10, 1904, and he, his grantees, and those subsequently succeeding to his right and title therein, including the defendants herein, have ever since remained in peaceable and adverse possession thereof; that they have made valuable improvements on said premises and have páid all the taxes and assessments levied against same.

There is nothing in the record which tends to show that the appointment of Mr. Barney as guardian, or the sale of said property so made by him, was unnecessary, or that same was not made in good faith for the purpose of protecting the interests of the minors; nor that the price paid by the purchaser for said lots was not all they were worth. No one questions the good faith or honesty of the guardian in anything he did. It appears that all the proceedings of the courts and acts of the guardian were for the best interests of the plaintiffs, and that the purchaser at the guardian’s sale and all subsequent grantors claiming through him are purchasers for full value, without any actual knowledge of any defect in any of said proceedings or in their title to said property. Under these circumstances there appears to be no reason, which appeals to a’ court of equity, which is a court' of conscience, why all of said proceedings should be declared [706]*706void, and the property in question taken from the defendants by plaintiffs in an action commenced more than fifteen years after said sale, more than eleven years after the eldest, and more than two years after the youngest of the plaintiffs became of age. Plaintiffs come into a court of equity and insist that they are entitled to recover, not because of any Avrong or injury which has been done them, but because they contend that a technical rule of law has been violated which gives them the legal right to do so. If their contention be correct, plaintiffs must prevail, for' courts of equity, as well as courts of law, are bound by legal principles; but the law Avill not: be construed so as to Avork injustice if such a result caii be avoided without the violation of established legal principles or rules.

In their petition plaintiffs plead only íavo grounds or reasons for their claim that the appointment of Mr. Barney as guardian is void, Avliich are: (1) That no notice was given to plaintiffs of the application for such appointment; and (2) that the bond in the’proceedings for the'sale was approved by the clerk, and-'not by the court.'' The second of these grounds has beéñ' Avholly •abandoned and only the first remains. No other1'is’presented or argued in plaintiffs’ original brief' here'in; but; in their reply brief, counsel’for plaintiffs haAm1 Attempted to introduce and insist upon 'two other asserted, grounds or reasons, viz., (a) that the application1 for the appointment Of said guardian was not made' by any one author1 ized to do so; and (b) that said application 'failed to state that' plaintiff's Avere minors, were residents of Buffalo county, or had real estate therein.

; The rule" is elementary that the allegations and the proof must agree. “A party is not alloAvefl to allege in his petition one cause of action and prove ‘another Upon the trial." Imhoff v. House, 36 Neb. 28. “A party will not be permitted to plead one cause of action and upon the trial rely upon proof' establishing a different cause.” Luce v. Foster, 42 Neb. 818. Counsel’s attempt to pre[707]*707sent to this court for the first time in their reply brief causes. of action not pleaded in their petition nor presented to the trial court is a violation of such rule and is not -.entitled to consideration. We will therefore confine ourselves to the consideration of the cause of action presented by the pleadings.

In the record of the county court of Buffalo county in said guardianship proceedings, introduced in evidence by plaintiffs, is an instrument labelled, “Order 'for Hearing and Notice,” in which order the time for hearing of the application for guardianship of plaintiffs is set, and said order, concludes with these words, “and that no notice herein be given, the same being waived.”

County courts in Nebraska have exclusive original jurisdiction of guardianship and probate proceedings. They are courts of record, and as to such matters they are courts of general, superior, and not inferior, jurisdiction. Scott v. Flowers, 61 Neb. 620; Genau v. Roderick, 4 Neb. (Unof.) 436. Their records import verity, and their proceedings possess, as a-general rule, the . same presumptions of jurisdiction and regularity possessed by courts of superior common-law jurisdiction. Where a county court possesses general jurisdiction of a given class of subject-matter, the possession of jurisdiction assumed to be exercised in a particular case falling within that class is, in a collateral proceeding, presumed. All matters necessary to give the court jurisdiction, upon which the record is silent, are presumed. Davis v. Hudson, 29 Minn. 27; Shroyer v. Richmond, 16 Ohio St. 455. The reasons for the foregoing rule are clearly stated in Davis v. Hudson, supra, which case is cited in plaintiffs’ brief on another point. Of course, such presumptions will not be permitted to contradict statements in the record which, as we have seen, import verity.

That part of the record «above quoted therefore shows that no notice of the hearing on said application was given for the reason that the same was waived. The record being silent as to who waived notice and how it [708]*708wag done, we must, under the foregoing rule, presume that all parties who were entitled to notice waived same and that such waiver was in the form and manner required. This presumption applies to the father, mother, and all persons sui juris to whom notice should have been given. The right of such a person to waive notice of any proceeding to which he is entitled is unquestioned. .The Nebraska statutes provide that no receiver shall be appointed until after notice of the time and place of the application is given to all parties to be affected thereby, and that “every order appointing a receiver without such notice shall be void.” Yet this court has repeatedly held that such notice may be waived. Farmers & Merchants Bank v. German Nat. Bank. 59 Neb. 229; Veith v. Ress, 60 Neb. 52; Murphy v. Fidelity Mut. Fire Ins. Co., 69 Neb. 489; 34 Cyc. 125.

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Bluebook (online)
184 N.W. 167, 106 Neb. 704, 1921 Neb. LEXIS 252, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/foote-v-chittenden-neb-1921.