Hunt ex rel. Phillips v. Hunt

412 S.W.2d 7, 56 Tenn. App. 683, 1965 Tenn. App. LEXIS 235
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedSeptember 3, 1965
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 412 S.W.2d 7 (Hunt ex rel. Phillips v. Hunt) 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
Hunt ex rel. Phillips v. Hunt, 412 S.W.2d 7, 56 Tenn. App. 683, 1965 Tenn. App. LEXIS 235 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1965).

Opinions

0ABNEY, J

The appellant, Mrs Dorothy Ann Hunt Phillips, brought suit as next friend of her brother, Charles Emerson Hunt, Jr, a non compos mentis, to annul his marriage to the defendant, Marie Sommers Hunt. The marriage was solemnized on July 18, 1958, at Belle-vue Baptist Church Chapel in Memphis, Tennessee. The bill for annulment was filed November 21, 1963. His Honor the Trial Judge, without a jury, held: (1) That Mrs. Phillips as next friend had no standing to bring the [687]*687suit since there was a legal guardian, defendant A. Y. McDowell, authorized to act in behalf of the non compos mentis, Charles Emerson Hunt, Jr., and he had not joined in the suit seeking to annul the marriage; (2) that Mrs. Phillips’ action was barred by laches and estoppel; (3) that on the merits of the case, the ward, Charles Emerson Hunt, Jr., had lucid moments at the time of his marriage in July, 1958, and thereafter and that he sufficiently understood the contract of marriage which he entered into and that the marriage was valid. Mrs. Phillips has appealed and has made some nineteen assignments of error.

Solicitors for appellant quite candidly state that the two principal questions to be decided by this court on this appeal are: (1) Was Charles Emerson Hunt, Jr., mentally incompetent to enter into a valid marriage with the defendant, Marie Sommers, on July 18, 1958; and (2) may an insane person maintain a suit by next friend to annul his marriage where his regular guardian refuses to act?

Charles Emerson Hunt, Jr. is approximately 50 years of age and is now in Western State Hospital at Bolivar, Tennessee, a mental institution. Mr. Hunt sustained a prenatal or natal injury resulting in what the doctors call a chronic brain syndrome. He is a spastic with deformed feet, hands, face and tongue. He walks and talks with difficulty.

His father was engaged in the retail furniture business in Memphis, Tennessee, as well as in other West Tennessee towns. He had two children, Charles Emerson Hunt, Jr. and the next friend, Dorothy Ann Hunt Phillips. Charles Emerson Hunt, Jr. attended school until about the tenth grade He stayed around his father’s furniture store until after his father died in 1945. His mother died [688]*688in 1951. Charles Emerson Hunt inherited and received by-gift from his father and mother approximately $40,000. He managed his own financial affairs without legal guardian until April 11, 1961, when the Chancery Court of Shelby County, Tennessee, adjudged him an incompetent and appointed the First National Bank of Memphis as conservator.

The application for a conservator was made by the defendant, his wife, Marie Sommers Hunt. Prom July 18, 1958, until May 17, 1962, Charles Hunt lived at his home on Summer Avenue in Memphis, Tennessee, with his wife, Marie Sommers Hunt, and her children by a former marriage. On May 17,1962, upon application of his next friend and sister, Mrs. Dorothy Ann Hunt Phillips, Charles Hunt was committed to Gailor Psychiatric Hospital by the Probate Court of Shelby County, Tennessee, where he remained until August 10, 1962, at which time he was adjudged to be fully non compos mentis with paranoid tendencies and committed to Western State Hospital at Bolivar', Tennessee. He was confined at Bolivar at the time of the trial on October 27,1964. However, from time to time Charles Hunt is permitted to leave Western State and go to Memphis to visit his wife for week ends, etc. Oftentimes he makes the trip alone by bus. He was confined primarily because he wrote a number of pornographic letters to the President of the United States.

On September 9', 1963, upon the petition of Mrs. Dorothy Ann Hunt Phillips as next friend, A. Y. McDowell, a member of the Shelby County Bar, was appointed regular guardian of Charles Emerson Hunt, Jr. by the Probate Court of Shelby County, Tennessee. Mr. McDowell assumed full possession of all the property of his ward, Charles Emerson Hunt, Jr., which amounted to approxi-[689]*689raately $125,000. Mrs. Phillips requested the guardian to file suit for annulment of the marriage of Charles Emerson Hunt to defendant Marie Sommers Hunt. The guardian refused to do so. Thereupon on November 21, 1963, Mrs. Phillips, as next friend, filed the original bill for annulment in the Circuit Court of Shelby County making Marie Sommers, wife of Charles Emerson Hunt, a defendant and also naming- A. Y. McDowell, guardian of Charles Emerson Hunt, Jr., party defendant. The guardian filed a formal answer admitting the mental and physical disabilities of the ward but stating in substance that he did not know whether Charles Emerson Hunt, Jr. was competent or incompetent to make a valid marriage and that the question should be determined by the court and not by the guardian.

We turn first to the assignment of error challenging the decision of the lower court that Mrs. Dorothy Ann Hunt Phillips could not legally bring this suit as next friend of her brother, Charles Emerson Hunt, because there was a regular guardian, the defendant A. Y. McDowell.

Concerning suits by next friends Mr. Gribson has the following to say:

“Sec. 111. Next Friends, G-enerally Considered. — A next friend, or, as he is frequently termed, a prochein ami, is a sort of self-appointed guardian who assumes the duty and responsibility of bringing a suit in behalf of a person under some disability, legal or natural. The person thus under disability, is generally (1) a minor, or (2) a person of unsound mind. These persons not being able to hind themselves by contract for costs of suit, and, in case of minors and persons of unsound mind, not being of sufficient mental capacity and business experience to comprehend their rights and how to [690]*690protect them, it becomes necessary for some friend to intervene in their behalf, whenever their interests require the interposition of a Court. This friend is called the next friend, because formerly he was the nearest (or next) kinsman of the person under disability. But, now, any person may act as next friend, provided he is acting in good faith, and secures costs.
The object of the rule requiring a next friend in the prosecution of suits for the benefit of persons under disability, is to have someone responsible for costs and liable to judgment therefor; and to have someone upon and against whom the Court may make and enforce its orders, and who will be subject to punishment for contempt in case of disobedience to, or violation of, the mandates of the Court; and for the more especial purpose of having someone before the Court capable of looking after and caring for the interests of those incapable of understanding and defending their own rights.
It is the duty of a next friend seduously to watch and protect the interests of his ward involved in the litigation. He is, in the conduct of the suit, subject to the control of the Court; and if he fail to do his duty, or if any other sufficient ground be brought to the knowledge of the Court, as, if he have an interest in the litigation antagonistic to the interests of his ward, the Court not only has the power, but it is its duty, to remove him, and appoint another, who may be more faithful, or not subject to a similar temptation.
"Were the rule otherwise, the ends of justice might be defeated, and iniquities perpetrated by a party, whose interests are antagonistic to those of his ward, assuming the office of next friend, and bringing his ward [691]

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Bluebook (online)
412 S.W.2d 7, 56 Tenn. App. 683, 1965 Tenn. App. LEXIS 235, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hunt-ex-rel-phillips-v-hunt-tennctapp-1965.