Hall v. Hall

43 Ala. 488
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedJune 15, 1869
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 43 Ala. 488 (Hall v. Hall) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hall v. Hall, 43 Ala. 488 (Ala. 1869).

Opinion

PETERS, J.

In courts of chancery, it is upon the allegations of the bill and the answer that the parties are to be relieved or defended. Upon these alone the chancellor predicates his decree. In this case the answer is in the nature of a cross-bill, and asks, in effect, the ratification and approval of the acts of the guardian, by which the estate of his wards has been wholly lost. Then, it should show such a narrative of facts as would have justified the allowance of such ratification, should the same have been set up in a bill for relief, under like circumstances. — Adams’ Eq. p. 343, marg.

A guardian is a trustee appointed by law, and his powers are limited by the law prescribing his duties. . If he transcends the. limits thus imposed in his dealings with the ward’s estate, he takes upon himself the responsibilities [495]*495incurred by his acts. If they are hurtful to his ward’s estate, he must answer for the injury, out of his own pocket, and not impose it upon his ward. The law regulating the ordinary duties of guardians is found in the Code. If there is need to go beyond what is there laid down, he must resort to a court of chancery for advice and direction, if the powers of the court of probate are insufficient to afford the required assistance. He must manage his ward’s estate according to law. If he acts without authority of law, he takes the peril upon himself, and must suffer the consequences, if his acts are destructive to the ward’s estate. He is appointed, not to destroy the ward’s estate, nor to injure it, but to preserve it and improve it.—Revised Code, § 2426, et seq.; 2 Kent, 229-231, and notes; 2 Story’s Eq. § 977; Allen v. Martin, 36 Ala. 330.

Where the law has prescribed rules for the management of the ward’s estate, as it has done in this case, neither public opinion nor the advice of friends is sufficient authority to disregard the law. In West, Oliver & Co. v. Ball & Crommelin, which was a case in principle quite similar to this, Chief-Justice Collier declares, that “ it has been repeatedly decided, that the usage of no class of men can be supported in opposition to established law.”—12 Ala. 340, 347. And that case was stronger than this; because usage is sometimes treated as law, but public opinion and advice of friends never is. Usage has something fixed and regular in its action, and men consent to it as a law; but public opinion and the advice of friends are as variant as people’s faces, and as unstable as the winds; Public opinion sometimes approves and disapproves the same thing, almost before the breath is cold that expresses its vascillating judgments. Besides, men who are deliberating to do wrong, or to pursue a doubtful course, are not apt to ask advice of such friends as disapprove their purposes. Such direction is, therefore, too one-sided and too much subject to the grossest errors to excuse the violation of a legal duty. The law of this case required the moneys of the wards to be annually loaned out on mortgage or bond, with sufficient security ; and, when it was possible, the interest should [496]*496have been collected and compounded.—Rev. Code, §§ 2426, 2427; Allen v. Martin, supra.

And if the money could not be so loaned, it was the duty of the guardian to keep it safely without change, as he would any other property of the wards in his hands, or invest it, under an order of the proper court. — Revised Code, §§2429,2436, 2437. The guardian here wholly failed to do this, or to make any effort to do it. He did not even obey the requisitions of the enactment to which his co-defendant now appeals for his justification. He neither asked authority to make the investment in “ interest-bearing bonds of the Confederate States,” nor after it was made, did he report his action to the proper court for its approval, as required by the enactment above referred to. Pamph. Acts, 1861, No. 54, p. 54; Act Dec. 9, 1861. The result is, that he is liable to make good the loss occasioned by his misconduct. The fourth section of said enactment required the investment to be reported within a certain time, and refuses credit for it, unless this is done; or a sufficient reason must be shown for the neglect to report.

Moreover, in this case the guardian himself does not pretend that he acted under any law, or that any existed, which authorized him to deposit his wards’ moneys in the Bank of Mobile, in the manner that he did. He alleges, that he made the deposit, and “ was forced by public opinion, and from his own best judgment of what was best, to take Confederate treasury-notes” for the deposit thus made. And after thus taking the Confederate treasury-notes from the bank, he “hesitated for a long time what he should do with the money, and after consulting many friends — good business men — and exercising his own best judgment, he concluded to invest in interest-bearing Confederate noteswhich he thinks was done some time in 1862. These “ notes” were safely kept by him until they were destroyed by the burning of his house, in 1865. Such excuses are wholly insufficient to justify the guardian’s conduct. They are not sanctioned by any law. These Confederate treasury-notes were never a legal tender for the payment of debts. They were never lawful money, and could not be made so by any legislature of this State, the [497]*497laws of which, have recognition in this court.—Chapman, Lyon & Noyes v. Cowles, 41 Ala. 103, 112; West, Oliver & Co. v. Ball & Crommelin, 12 Ala. 340, 345; Const. U. S., Art. 1, § 10; Pasch. Ann. Const. U. S. 153, 154.

Young C. Hall, the co-defendent of the guardian in the court below, alleges, upon information, in his answer to complainants’ bill, that the funds of the wards were deposited in the Bank of Mobile, “for safe keeping, for the benefit of said wards.” But the testimony does not support this allegation. On the contrary, it shows that the information on which it was based was not true. The proof shows that the funds were deposited by the guardian in his own name, and for his own use, and he accordingly “ checked ” them out as such. His account with the bank does not show that the wards were at all known in the transaction. There was no sum of money deposited there for them, or sum corresponding in amount with the sum that belonged to them.

The same defendant also alleges, that when the guardian attempted, in 1862, to withdraw the funds thus deposited, “ the bank refused to pay in gold or silver, or in current bank-notes, but tendered him Confederate treasury-notes, then equal in value to the bills deposited ” by the said guardian, which were received by him, “ for said deposit or for said debt; that immediately afterwards, said Hall invested the same in Confederate interest-bearing treasury-notes, for the use and benefit of his said wards, under and by authority of several acts of the general assembly of the State of Alabama, on this subject.” But no reference is made to any law, with specific title and date of approval; nor is any such law known to this court, as a law of the State of Alabama, as now organized.

There is but one State of Alabama known to this tribunal, by its laws ; that is the State of Alabama — a member of the Union — acting under the constitution of the United States, and in conformity to its requisitions. Any other State of Alabama is an usurpation, unconstitutional, illegal and void; and the acts of its general assembly partake of its own defects. They have no legal standing in this court, [498]

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Bluebook (online)
43 Ala. 488, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hall-v-hall-ala-1869.