Guardianship of Taylor

3 Coffey 105
CourtSuperior Court of California, County of San Francisco
DecidedJuly 22, 1886
DocketNo. 1,946
StatusPublished

This text of 3 Coffey 105 (Guardianship of Taylor) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of California, County of San Francisco primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Guardianship of Taylor, 3 Coffey 105 (Cal. Super. Ct. 1886).

Opinion

COFFEY, J.

John Tucker bases his application for letters of guardianship upon three grounds:

1. He is a relative, and as such is entitled to the letters: Civ. Code, sec. 246, subd. 3, par. 4.
2. He is one who was clearly indicated by the wishes of the minor’s deceased mother, as her choice of guardian in case of her death: Civ. Code, sec. 246, subd. 3, par. 2.
3. He is one of the next of kin of minor, and as such has a natural right to the guardianship, at common law: Reeves’ Domestic Relations, 315.

The testimony shows that Tucker is competent to act as guardian, and that it is for the best interest of the ward that he be appointed. He has not surrendered his right, and it has not been taken away from him by the judgment or order of any court.

Counsel opposing Tucker’s application has referred to a previous order of this court appointing Nathaniel Hunter guardian. He has not expressly urged the proposition that a stranger to a record in judicial proceedings can have his future rights taken away from him; nor has he contended that Tucker was estopped by proceedings of which he had no notice.

He has referred to section 253, Civil Code, and asserts that Hunter could not be removed except for the causes therein mentioned. It is unnecessary to cite authorities that all sections of the code must be read together, and that all must stand if possible.

By the construction contended for, if parents should be absent from the state temporarily and leave their children with friends, and such friends should procure letters of guardianship, the letters could not be revoked on the ground of the superior rights of the parents. The parents would be bound by a record to which they were not parties, and would be compelled to show the incompetency of the guardian who claimed that their rights were taken away from them “without due process of law.”

Tucker’s right has not been taken away from him by due or any process of law. He has not relinquished it, and now for the first time he appears in this court on equal terms with Hunter, and the previous order, as to Tucker, is as if it had not been.

[107]*107The parents may or may not have been estopped by it, bnt there is no more estoppel as to Tucker than if the records were blank.

We have searched the books, and we cannot find a single case where counsel have urged the proposition that a person is bound by a record to which he is a stranger, when such record purports to devest him of a right, or where a text-writer or court have ever considered such a question.

The courts in New York, where the law of guardianship is similar to ours, and where a section of their code exists similar to section 253, Civil Code, have uniformly disregarded orders appointing guardians where notice is not given to relatives, if the orders are attacked by the persons not notified and who have a right to the appointment.

Their code is broader in its language than ours as to the discretion of the court in ordering notices to be given; yet it is said that it is a legal and not an arbitrary discretion.

We cannot find an instance where the position urged here was ever presented before the New York courts: Matter of Feeley, 4 Redf. 306; Underhill v. Dennis, 9 Paige, 208; Moore-house v. Cooke, Hopk. Ch. 258; Rickards’ Case, 15 Abb. Pr., N. S., 7.

Testamentary guardians are held by our supreme court to be on the same footing as probate guardians.

In Lord v. Hough, 37 Cal. 657, the mother had notice of the appointment of the testamentary guardian, yet the supreme court did not consider the question here urged, but in substance followed the reasoning of the New York courts and other courts of last resort throughout the United States. ■'

Tucker’s right accrued on the death of Mrs. Taylor, and whether Tucker had or had not notice at the time Hunter was appointed is alike immaterial.

In Lord v. Hough, 37 Cal. 657, on the application by the mother for guardianship, the same position was taken by the guardian already appointed as is here taken by Mr. Hunter, but the court decided, in substance, that the mother was entitled to the trust; being competent she could not be devested of this right, and the precedents of a semi-barbarous civilization were scouted by the court, and the position taken by counsel here was declared to be not the law.

[108]*108It is urged, however, that Tucker was requested by the mother of this child in 1880, and also after the seizure of the minor by Hunter, to assume the guardianship, and that he did not do so. Counsel for Hunter has given a good reason why he did not do so. The father was living at this time.

The request of the mother while the father was living was of no legal effect under section 197, Civil Code, and conferred no rights whatever and imposed no duties upon him, as counsel correctly urged, any more than the request of the father in that respect in relation to Hunter.

The request of the mother at that time in relation to Tucker, and that of the father relative to Hunter, are absolutely void, except as circumstances showing the mother’s continued and long entertained desire.

If, morally, any duty was imposed on Tucker during these years, he explained his action consistently with the highest principles of honor and right feeling.

This court had adjudged the parents unfit to care for the child.

If Tucker, as a relative of the deceased mother and also her friend and the friend of its father, had secured letters of guardianship, could he have resisted the longing and importunities of the child’s mother to have the care of her offspring ?

The responsibility would have been a divided one, and he would have been in a perpetual war between the kindliest feelings of his nature and the orders of this court.

Tucker was of opinion that after her husbánd’s death the mother was conquering her disposition to drink, taught her and forced on her by Taylor, and that the child was better with her; as a gentleman he could not place himself in antagonism with either the court or his better nature. Had he accepted the guardianship and refused the care of the child torts mother, his relative and friend, it" would have shown in him a hardness of heart which would have been conclusive evidence of his unfitness for this trust.

Another portion of the testimony might be here referred to: Tucker has testified that he is the owner of income bearing property sufficient for all his needs, and that h¿ is in such a financial position that he does not seek contracts in his line of business other than those in which there is ample remunera[109]*109tion for the exercise of his highest skill. That on his own account he cares nothing for the guardianship, and that he is making the contest solely in compliance with the request of his dying relative—his promise to her, and for the good of the child.

This motive, from the argument of counsel, is not understood by Mr. Hunter. Because Tucker is actuated by purer motives than men frequently are in such matters is no reason why his rights should be disregarded, or that he is the less in earnest concerning them.

Gain is not Mr. Tucker’s motive for appearing before this court; the good of the minor is his motive.

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Related

Lord v. Hough
37 Cal. 657 (California Supreme Court, 1869)
Underhill v. Dennis
9 Paige Ch. 202 (New York Court of Chancery, 1841)
Johnson v. Kelly
44 Ga. 485 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 1871)
In re Feely
4 Redf. 306 (New York Surrogate's Court, 1880)
Allen v. Peete
25 Miss. 29 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1852)

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Bluebook (online)
3 Coffey 105, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/guardianship-of-taylor-calsuppctsf-1886.