Gilbert v. Gilbert

7 Ohio Cir. Dec. 58
CourtCuyahoga Circuit Court
DecidedDecember 12, 1896
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 7 Ohio Cir. Dec. 58 (Gilbert v. Gilbert) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Cuyahoga Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gilbert v. Gilbert, 7 Ohio Cir. Dec. 58 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1896).

Opinion

Hale, J

The case of William A. Gilbert v. E. C. Pope, submitted on a petition in error.

The defendant in error, Pope, obtained a judgment in his favor, against the plaintiff in error, in the court of common pleas, which the latter seeks to reverse.

The case has been most thoroughly prepared, and has received the best attention that the court could give it. It presents some hardships, perhaps, whichever way it shall be decided; and we shall as briefly as may be, announce the conclusions which we have reached. I have not rime, and shall not attempt to review the authorities cited.

The essential facts are these: George Gilbert, on the 8th day oí June, 1874, was, by the probate court of Cuyahoga county, appointed guardian of his son, William A. Guilbert, then a minor. On ¿he :ame day, the guardian commenced proceedings in the probate court to obtain an order authorizing him to sell certain real estate to which the ward held the legal title. The sale was ordered, appraisal sale made and approved on the same day, all on the 12th day of June, four days after his appointment. The guardian received for the sale made the sum of eight thousand ($8,000.00) dollars. By order of the court at the time the sale was ordered, the guardian was required to give an additional bon1 to that which he had given on his appointment, in the sum oí twelve thousand ($12,000.00) dollars. This bond he gave with the defendant Pope as surety. William became twenty-one years oí age on the 12th day of June, 1875, bnt continued to reside in his father’s family until some time in 1876, when the father abandoned his home in this county, and removed [59]*59to the state of Illinois, where he has ever since resided. The guardian filed no account with the probate court. On the 28th day of August, 1893, eighteen years after William became of age, he filed a complaint against his former guardian, it is said, to compel an accounting by his guardian in the probate court. The court thereupon issued a citation or notice to George Gilbert. That citation required Gilbert to appear in the probate court on the 14th day of September, 1893, to answer to the complaint of William A. Gilbert 'or failing to file his final account as such guardian, and make such distribution of the balance in his hands. “And said George Gilbert is hereby ordered to show cause, if any, why said complaint should not be hea; r. and the prayer thereof granted.” On the back oi that citation is an affidavit : flowing that a copy thereof was served upon Gilbert personally in the city of Chicago. No other, or further notice was served either upon George Gilbert, the principal in the bond, or Pope, the: surety. In fact, the surety had no knowledge whatever of the proceedings in the probate court, although a resident of this county. There was no appearance in the probate court at that hearing of either Gilbert or Pope. On the 14th day of September, the day named in the notice for the hearing of said complaint, the probate court entered judgment against the former guardian for the sum of f8,000 and interest from the 12th day oi June, 1874. The court found the facts substantially as I have stated — the sale of the land and the receipt of the money by the guardian, the fact that he was a nonresident, and then entered and ended the judgment as follows: “It is therefore considered by the court that said guardian is indebted to his said ward in the sum of $8,000 with interest thereon from the 12th day of Tune, 1874; and said guardian is ordered tc pay forthwith said sum with interest, to said William A. Guilbert, for which, together with the costs to be taxed, execution is awarded.” An execution was issued as authorized by this judgment, against George Gilbert, who, as the judgment shows, was a nonresident of this state, and returned wholly unsatisfied. Thereupon an action upon the bond was instituted in the court of common pleas against Gilbert the principal and Pope the surety, to recover the amount of the penalty in the bond, being less than the amount found due from the former guardian to his ward. After the usual number of motions and demurrers had been interposed, and after an answer had been filed, an amended petition was filed upon which the case was finally tried. To this petition the defendant Pope interposed an answer in which he states seven separate defenses.

The first defense makes certain admissions and denies all other allegations of the petition. The second ie:ens*' relates to the jurisdiction of the court to render tue judgment. The third defense is one of payment. The fourth defense presents the statute of limitations, claiming that the action was barred. The fifth defense sets up the fact of laches on the part of plaintiff in bringing this action. The sixth defense charges that the land was not in fact the property of the ward at all, but that the title was held in the bey’s name for the benefit of his father. And the seventh sets up the fact of bankruptcy — that Pope was discharged in bankruptcy in the year, of 1876, and therefore released from the payment of this claim.

A demurrer was interposed to each defense of that answer, and sustained as to three of the defenses, the second, fourth and seventh, and a reply was filed to the other four.

The cause came on for trial before the court and jury. The trial court ruled that the probate court had no jurisdiction to render the [60]*60judgment of September 14, 1893; excluded all evidence tending to establish that judgment, and'as there was no other evidence offered by the plaintiff, directed a verdict for the defendant, to which the plaintiff excepted. Exceptions were also noted by the plaintiff to the overruling of a motion for a new trial.

The evidence offered was not a record of the entire proceedings in the probate' court. It consisted of the citation that I have quoted, and of certain docket entries which is denominated Docket D, probate court, page 131, as follows:

“June 8, 1874, George Gilbert, guardian for William A. Gilbert, age twenty years. Bond, $>500.00. J. M. Richards and E. M. Brown, sureties. Bond filed and letters issued, 42. April 23,1883, citation to file account issued. April 30, 1883, citation returned not served. August 28, 1893, complaint by former ward filed, set for .hearing September 14, 1893, at 10 a. m., and citation ordered, etc., Journal 41-44. Citation issued.” The complaint itself was not produced, and it does not appear from this record what it was other than appeared from the journal entry and these brief docket entries. Upon this evidence the plaintiff rested his case.

The plaintiff contends that that judgment is a final and conclusive determination of the account due William Gilbert from his father and former guardian, and by that judgment both the principal and surety who signed the bond are bound; while the defendant asserts that such adjudication was and is absolutely void.

, The determination of this question in favor of either party determines the case. The other questions are of comparatively small importance, for if that judgment was conclusive upon the surety, logically I do not see why that does not end the case. All the defenses sought to be made here, should have been plead when the judgment was taken. If it was not conclusive, but absolutely void, the judgment of the court of common pleas was right; because there was no evidence other than that offered to sustain that judgment, and if that judgment was void, then the judgment of the court of common pleas is correct.

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7 Ohio Cir. Dec. 58, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gilbert-v-gilbert-ohcirctcuyahoga-1896.