Fridge v. State ex rel. Kirk

3 G. & J. 103
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedDecember 15, 1830
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 3 G. & J. 103 (Fridge v. State ex rel. Kirk) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fridge v. State ex rel. Kirk, 3 G. & J. 103 (Md. 1830).

Opinion

Bu ch a v ax, Ch. J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The suit is by the State on a guardian’s bond, for the use of a female ward, instituted after she attained the age of sixteen, but before she arrived at twenty-one, against one of the sureties in the bond. It is insisted on the part of the defendant below, First, That if Eliza Ann Kirk, for whose use the action was brought, had a natural guardian at the time of the appointment by the Orphans Court of Baltimore county, of Owen Dorsey, the principal in the bond as her guardian, the court exceeded its jurisdiction in making the appointment, that the bond is void, and the action cannot be maintained. Secondly, That if Owen Dorsey, the person appointed guardian, was at the time of making the appointment, sitting as a judge of the court, with only one other judge, the appointment was invalid, and the bond void. Thirdly, That supposing Owen Dorsey to have been regularly appointed guardian, if after Eliza Jinn Kirk attained the age of sixteen years, he offered to pay, and counted out to her the sum of four or five hundred dollars, which she refused to receive, and afterwards took the note of Dorsey in preference, such offering and counting out the money, was an extinguishment of her claim, to the extent of the sum so offered and counted out. Fourthly, That if after Eliza Ann Kirk attained the age of sixteen years, she executed to Dorsey a release of all claims and demands, with a full understanding of its import and effect, the aetion cannot be maintained. Fifthly, That if she was under the ago of twenty-one years at the time of instituting the aetion, it cannot be maintained; and evidence of the facts upon which these questions are raised, was offered to the jury, and is set out in the record.

[112]*112First then, suppose Eliza Ann Kirk had a natural guardian at the time of the appointment of Owen Dorsey as her guardian, were that appointment and the bond given in pursuance of it void, for want of jurisdiction in the Orphans Court?

By the Act of 1798, ch. 101, sub-ch. 12, sec. 1, the several Orphans Courts, had the power to appoint a guardian to an infant until the age of twenty-one years if a male, and until the age of sixteen years if a female, if such infant has no natural guardian, nor guardian appointed by last will. And by the 3d sect, of the same sub-ch. 12, on the application of any friend of an infant, &c. to call on any natural guardian, or guardian appointed by last will, to give bond for the performance of his or her trust; and on failure or neglect of such guardian, to appoint another guardian. The distinction between an erroneous judgment by a tribunal having jurisdiction of the subject matter, and the judgment of a tribunal having no cognizance of the subject, is well known and acknowledged. If the mother of the infant in this case, who is claimed to have been her natural guardian, had asserted her rights as such, and taken upon herself the management and conduct of the infanUs estate in the Orphans Court; or being called upon, had given bond for the performance of her trust, the Orphans Court, with a knowledge of the existence of such a guardian acting in pursuance of her trust, could not properly during the continuance of her authority, have appointed another guardian, and thereby have divested her of her rights. And as the rights, and authority, and power over the property and person of the infant, would be incompatible in two, such an appointment would have been void. If the natural guardian had assumed and entered upon her trust, and as such, taken upon herself the management of the estate of her ward in the Orphans Court, the appointment of Owen Dorsey, would have been an act not within the jurisdiction of that court, no more than would be the appointment of a second guardian, while the prior appoint [113]*113ment of another by the same court, was remaining in full force and unrevoked. Unless the natural guardian had failed or neglected to give bond for the performance of her' trust, on being called upon to do so, in pursuance of the 3d section of the 12th sub-chap, of the Act of 1798, ch. 101, or had been removed for cause, under the provisions of the 12th section of the sub-chap. 15, it would not have been the case, of an erroneous judgment by a court of competent jurisdiction, but the act of a tribunal having no cognizance of the subject, and therefore unauthorised and void, the Orphans Court having no power to create a guardian of its own appointment, in the case of an infant having a known, authorised, and qualified acting natural guardian. Rut though in relation to such a case, of a known, natural guardian asserting and exercising his rights, the Orphans Court is without jurisdiction; yet the appointment of a guardian, being a subject ordinarily cognizable in that court, and only excluded from its jurisdiction, by the circumstance of there being a natural guardian, or a guardian appointed by will, it does not follow, that the mere existence of a person ordinarily entitled to assume the office and trust of a natural guardian, is alone sufficient to divest it of its jurisdiction. That person, though known to the Orphans Court, may nevertheless reject or abandon the trust; in which event, a case in which a guardian may be appointed, a case within the jurisdiction of the court, is presented. That, may have been the case here; the mother of the infant, who might have assumed the office of natural guardian, may have rejected or abandoned the trust; or on being required to give bond for the performance of her trust, may have failed, or neglected to do it; and if so, in either case, the Orphans Court have the power to appoint another guardian. It does not indeed appear in this record, whether there was or not, such an abandonment of the trust, or failure or neglect by the natural guardian to give bond for the performance of it ;• but the Orphans Court having appointed another guardian, and there being nothing to show the absence of authority to-[114]*114do so, it is to be taken, that it acted within the sphere of its ordinary jurisdiction, and that what was done, was rightly done. And it not appearing to this court, to be the act of a tribunal, having no cognizance of the subject matter, it cannot be impeached here, coming thus incidentally in question.

And secondly, with respect to the appointment of Owen Dorsey as the guardian, he being present and sitting as one of the judges of the court, supposing it be so, yet being the act of a court of competent jurisdiction, whether that act was correct and regular, or not, still it was the judgment, the act of that court, the correctness or regularity of which, it is not for this court collaterally to inquire into. The question of jurisdiction, is a question that may be examined into, and the acts of a tribunal having no jurisdiction may be reviewed by another court; but the judgment of a court of competent jurisdiction is, as to all matters decided by it, conclusive, and cannot be afterwards questioned by any other tribunal, when coming in incidentally. This is a doctrine too well established to admit of being enlarged upon. Besides Owen Dorsey having given his bond, in which he is stated to be the guardian of E. A. K.,

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Bluebook (online)
3 G. & J. 103, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fridge-v-state-ex-rel-kirk-md-1830.