Howe v. North

37 N.W. 213, 69 Mich. 272, 1888 Mich. LEXIS 732
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedApril 6, 1888
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 37 N.W. 213 (Howe v. North) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Howe v. North, 37 N.W. 213, 69 Mich. 272, 1888 Mich. LEXIS 732 (Mich. 1888).

Opinion

Long, J.

The situation and surroundings of the parties to this controversy, and the property involved, are so fully set out in the opinion in the case of North v. Joslin, 59 Mich. 624 (26 N. W. Rep. 810), that we refer to that case for the history and some of the facts, which it will be unnecessary to state here. In that case this Court ordered that—

“All the proceedings had in both the circuit and probate courts for the county of Washtenaw in the premises be reversed, annulled, and set aside, and Mrs. North be restored to the possession and control of all her property, including that of which she has been deprived under said proceedings, and all accumulations thereon which would have accrued to her had no proceedings in the case been instituted, and her estate must not be charged with any costs, charges, fees, or expenses in consequence of such proceedings.”

This order was made on the tenth day of February, 1886. Instead of such order being complied with, and said property restored, on the seventeenth day of February, 1886, Elmira. P. Howe, the plaintiff in this cause, again filed her petition, in the probate court for Washtenaw county for the appointment of a guardian of her mother, Eiiza North, and alleged therein—

“ That she is a daughter and an heir at law of said Eliza. [274]*274North, and interested in her estate as a creditor and in expectancy.
“ That said Eliza North is of the age of eighty-four years and upwards, and an inhabitant; of or resident in Kansas City, in the state or Missouri, and is possessed of real and personal estate, situate and being in said county of Washtenaw, and the estimate value of the personal estate is the sum of $20,000, and of the real estate the sum of $4,500, or thereabouts; * * * that it is necessary that a guardian be appointed of the person and estate of said Eliza North, for the following specific reasons, viz.: because the said Eliza North, by reason of extreme old age, is mentally incompetent to have the charge and management of her property.
That the names and residences of the next of kin of said Eliza North, and other persons interested in said estate, are as follows: John D. North, Jackson, Michigan; Elmira P. Howe, Pittsfield, Washtenaw county; Mary E. Baker, Polo, Illinois; Hannah E. Gibson, Kansas City, Missouri,— sons and daughters of said incompetent person,” etc.

Petitioner then prays that a day be fixed for the hearing of said petition; that notice be given to all persons interested, requiring them to appear and show cause why a guardian should not be appointed; and prays the appointment of Leonard Gruner as such guardian.

Such proceedings were afterwards had in the probate court of said Washtenaw county that, on the eighth day of May, 1886, Leonard Gruner was by said court duly appointed guardian of said Eliza North on condition of his giving bond in the sum of $36,000.

Proceedings were, soon after, commenced in this Court by filing petition for mandamus to compel the guardian to pay and deliver over the, property and effects of said Eliza North to her, and to vacate and set aside the order of the probate court appointing such guardian, when on the twenty-second day of June, 1886, astipulation was filed in this Court, signed by the attorneys of the respective parties, upon which an order was duly entered in this Court wholly vacating and setting aside the order of the probate court made on the eighth [275]*275■day of May, 1886, by which Leonard Gruner was appointed such guardian, and this order was duly certified to said probate court to be made of record of that court.

It also appears that on the eleventh day of February, 1886, the day succeeding the date of the filing of the opinion by this Court in the case of North v. Joslin, plaintiff commenced this suit in the Washtenaw circuit court by summons, and filed her affidavit in the cause for writ of garnishment against Leonard Gruner, in which affidavit it is alleged that defendant Eliza North was indebted to plaintiff in the sum of $3,319, and that Leonard Gruner had property, money, goods, chattels, credits, and effects in his hands aDd under his custody and control belonging to said Eliza North. Upon this affidavit being filed, a writ of garnishment was duly issued .and served upon said Leonard Gruner, who had, up to February 10, 1886, when removed by this Court, pintended to be acting as the guardian of Mrs. North upon the petition of the plaintiff in this case, and who had received and taken into his possession all the property and effects of his ward, and wrongfully continued to hold the same under proceedings commenced by plaintiff in said probate court by her again filing petition for the appointment of guardian of Mrs. North .after the opinion was filed in the case of North v. Joslin.

The garnishee made his disclosure in writing, and filed the same in said court on March 22,1886, showing a large amount —several thousand dollars — of personal property in his hands belonging to Mrs. North.

On the twenty-first day of June, 1886, and on the day before the order was made in this Court, under stipulation of the respective parties, setting aside and vacating the order appointing Leonard Gruner guardian made by the probate court above referred to, the plaintiff, in continuation of this present suit, sued out of said circuit court a writ of attachment, and alleged in her affidavit upon which such writ issued, that defendant was a non-resident of this State, and [276]*276had not resided in the State of Michigan for three months immediately preceding the time of making this affidavit. This writ of attachment was levied upon the Pittsfield farm. The present cause came on for trial in the circuit court for Washtenaw county at the May term, 1887.

Upon the trial of the cause, plaintiff, being called as a witness in her own behalf, was asked upon her cross-examination if she made a certain affidavit which appeared in the printed record in the case of North v. Joslin. She was shown the original affidavit, and admitted that it was her signature, and the affidavit was sworn to by her. This affidavit sets out the claim she then made in reference to this unfortunate family controversy as follows:

This deponent further states that she is the daughter of the said Eliza North; that said Eliza North is nota businesswoman, and never was; that she never did or controlled any business; that she does not now, nor ever did, have any knowledge of or experience in business; that she is eighty-four years of age, and wholly incompetent either to take care of herself or her property, or any portion thereof; that for some time she has not been able to be trusted with any currency, as she would forget where she had put it, or what she had done with it.

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Bluebook (online)
37 N.W. 213, 69 Mich. 272, 1888 Mich. LEXIS 732, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/howe-v-north-mich-1888.