Howard v. Bishop

7 Tenn. App. 347, 1928 Tenn. App. LEXIS 51
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedMarch 23, 1928
StatusPublished

This text of 7 Tenn. App. 347 (Howard v. Bishop) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Howard v. Bishop, 7 Tenn. App. 347, 1928 Tenn. App. LEXIS 51 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1928).

Opinion

HEISKEBL, J.

On January 15, 1927, W. N. Howard filed his petition addressed to the chairman of the county court of Jefferson county in which he stated as follows:

“Your petitioner, W. N. Howard, would respectfully show unto your honor that Mrs. W. N. Howard' his wife, was at the time of her death on January 12, 1927, the guardian of Hollis Roy Bishop, a minor, under appointment of this court and that she was the grandmother of the minor, Hollis Roy Bishop and that he is the grand *348 father of said minor. He would further show unto your honor that he has raised this boy from a baby and that he feels toward him as he would his own and has the best interest of the child always at heart.
“Further, that the mother of this minor is also dead and that he is the nearest living relative to said minor and as such has and should have the right to be his guardian or to select one whom he believes would be a good guardian for him, in preference to any other person.
“Also that on this day at Dandridge application was made to this court for papers of appointment as guardian for this minor by J. J. Bishop, and that representations were made to the clerk of this court that he had been selected by your petitioner as such guardian when such representations were false and that petitioner had not in fact selected or had any talk with the said J. J. Bishop about his appointment as such guardian and that such is not his wish now and never was and that he relies upon his rights to select a guardian and this he wishes to do.”

Petitioner further states that papers appointing Bishop and bond have not been completed, and asks that the order appointing Bishop be set aside and that he, W. N. Howard, be appointed. This was afterwards amended so as to ask that J. R. Howard the son of W. N. Howard, be appointed guardian.

• On January 20, 1927, J. J. Bishop filed with the clerk of the county court, the request of Eva Bishop, the paternal grandmother of the minor, that he be appointed guardian and moved to dismiss the petition of W. N. Howard because it showed no ground for cancelling and revoking the letters of guardianship of J. J. Bishop.

The matter was heard before the chairman of the county court on January 22, 1927, and an order entered setting aside the appointment of J. J. Bishop and appointing J. It. Howard guardian for said minor. From the action of the county chairman, J. J. Bishop appealed to the circuit court, where the matter was heard without a jury and the court held that no ground was shown for removing Bishop as guardian, dismissed the petition of Howard and remanded the case to the county court with directions to allow Bishop to make bond as guardian, giving him reasonable time to do so, and that thereupon he be recognized as guardian of said minor.

From the judgment of the circuit court W. N. Howard has appealed to this court and assigned errors.

The second and third assignments set up that the circuit court erred in treating this case as one to remove a guardian, when the proof showed that it was agreed before the county chairman that he might hear and determine the matter as if no letters had been granted to J. J. Bishop. In other words, as if upon the two pending petitions for appointment of a guardian.

*349 If such an agreement was made in tbe county court and tbat court by virtue of that agreement so considered and acted upon the case, then the decision was the exercise of the discretion of the chairman as between two applicants, and the burden would be upon Bishop to show an improper exercise of discretion in appointing Howard. There is no such contention, therefore, if the agreement is made out the decision of the lower court is erroneous. But if there was no such agreement and the case is to be considered as a petition to remove a regularly appointed guardian, the burden rested upon Howard to show grounds for such removal and the action of the circuit court must be affirmed. The case turns, therefore, upon the proof as to said agreement, the question being made in the motion for a new trial in the circuit court as well as in the assignments of error.

The petition of Howard sets out these facts which are not denied by the defendant. The wife of petitioner was guardian of the minor Hollis Roy Bishop. She died on January 12, 1927, and on the 13th J. J. Bishop appeared and asked to be appointed guardian. "W. N. Howard was the maternal grandfather. He and his wife, the maternal grandmother, had raised the boy from a baby. It is alleged in the petition and shown in proof that when J. J. Bishop appeared before the chairman of tlié county court and the clerk that he stated, that he wanted to be appointed guardian and that his appointment would be satisfactory to all interested, so far as he knew. That therefore he was appointed and to save him a trip back to Dand-ridge, he was sworn as 'guardian and letters issued to take effect when he executed bond. This, the clerk testifies was on January 13th, the day after the guardian, Mrs. Howard, died. All the circumstances indicate that Bishop knew ’ his appointment would be objectionable to Howard and therefore that he deceived the court. It appears that when Mrs. Howard was appointed guardian, Bishop had tried to have himself appointed and failed. No doubt the same considerations influenced the appointment of Mrs. Howard at that time as controlled the chairman in appointing according to the insistence of Howard instead of that of Bishop in the last appointment. The fact that the Howard grandparents had raised and had custody of the boy, no doubt determined the action of the county court in both instances. Before Bishop executed his bond, the petition of Howard was filed and the chairman, feeling no doubt that he had been misled by Bishop and that Bishop had been guilty of unseemly haste in appearing the day after the death of Mrs. Howard and asking for the appointment, and preferring no doubt, to let Howard designate the guardian, as he had raised and had custody of the minor, it is probable that he would in this situation ask the parties and counsel to consent that the matter might be treated as upon two pending applications.

*350 When the Circuit Juclge had held that the petition of Howard must be dismissed because no ground was shown for removing Bishop, the bill of exceptions contains this:

"Thereupon, W. H. Conatser, one of the attorneys for the petitioner, Howard, stated to the court that on the trial in the county court, before the chairman of said court, who tried this contest over the guardianship of Hollis Bishop, that the same was tried by said chairman by agreement of himself and Mr. Rankin for Bishop as though no letters of guardianship had been issued to J. J. Bishop; that said J. J. Bishop had obtained the appointment as guardian and letters of guardianship had been issued to him, in the anticipation that proper guardian bond would be made with the United States Fidelity and Guaranty Company as sureties, but no bond had been made, filed or approved when W. N. Howard filed his petition contesting the appointment of J. J. Bishop and urging the appointment of his son, J. R. Howard, when Mr. Rankin, attorney for J. J.

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7 Tenn. App. 347, 1928 Tenn. App. LEXIS 51, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/howard-v-bishop-tennctapp-1928.