In re Rehearing

98 Fla. 638
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedOctober 17, 1929
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 98 Fla. 638 (In re Rehearing) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Rehearing, 98 Fla. 638 (Fla. 1929).

Opinion

Strum, J.

This is an action in ejectment instituted in the name of Matilda P. Fiehe, an insane person, by her present guardian, Frank A. Bell.

On July 20, 1895, Matilda Fiehe was adjudged insane by an order of the Circuit Court for Hillsborough County and Antone Fiehe, her husband, was appointed guardian of her person. See Chap. 4357, Acts of 1895. On July 14, 1898, said Circuit Court, acting pursuant to Chap. 4359, Acts of 1895, appointed Antone Fiehe guardian of the estate of Matilda Fiehe. Antone Fiehe is now dead and Frank A. Bell has been appointed guardian. Matilda Fiehe remains insane.

At the trial, plaintiff deraigned title to the lands in question from the United States into Matilda Fiehe, introduced certified copies of the appointment of Frank A. Bell as guardian, and rested.

Defendant deraigned title through a guardian’s sale of the lands ordered by the county judge of Hillsborough County on October 5, 1899, and confirmed on October 7, 1899, which sale was made upon the petition of Antone Fiehe as guardian. The title arising from said guardian’s sale passed through mesne conveyances into defendant, and is relied on by defendant in this action.

The sole question is as to the validity of the guardian’s sale and the deed made pursuant thereto, which plaintiff claims are void.

In appointing Antone Fiehe guardian of Matilda Fiehe, the Circuit Court acted, by the express terms of Chap. 4359, supra, in the exercise of its chancery jurisdiction. [643]*643The order appointing Antone Fiehe guardian of the estate of Matilda Fiehe was signed by the Circuit Judge and filed with the clerk on July 14, 1898, and bears the file mark of the clerk as of that date, but was apparently not recorded in the minutes of the court as required both by Chap. 4359, supra, and by See. 1448, Rev. Stats, of 1892.

See. 1448, Rev. Gen. Stats. 1892 ,which was in effect at the time of all the proceedings here in question, provides:

“Decrees in equity may be signed by the Judge when pronounced and shall be recorded upon the minutes of the court without any other enrollment. And no process shall be issued or other proceedings had on any final decree or order until the same shall have been signed and recorded as aforesaid.”

That Section, slightly amended so as to provide that the decree shall be recorded ‘ ‘ in the chancery order book, ’ ’ instead of “upon the minutes of the Court,” is now Sec. 4948, Comp. Gen. Laws 1927.

On December 27, 1907, the Circuit' Court for Hills-borough County entered an order reciting that “through inadvertence” neither the petition of Antone Fiehe to be appointed guardian nor the order appointing him were recorded at the time the order was made; “that said guardian has acted under said appointment, and made disposition of certain property belonging to Matilda Fiehe,” and that “for the purpose of correcting said inadvertence” it is “ordered that said petition and order appointing said guardian be recorded by the Clerk of this Court as of the 14th day of July, 1898, in the minutes of this court nunc- pro- tunc.*’

Plaintiff contends that t'he guardian’s sale is void, first, because it was a “proceeding had” on the order or decree of the circuit court of July 14, 1898, appointing Antone [644]*644Fiehe guardian of the estate of Matilda Fiehe, which order or decree was made in the exercise of the court’s chancery jurisdiction, but was not “recorded upon the minutes of the court” as required by See. 1448, Rev. Stats. 1892, then in effect, prior to the proceedings which culminated in the guardian’s sale. See Sec. 4948, Comp. Gen. Laws 1927. To support this contention, plaintiff relies on Lilmot v. Equitable Bldg. Ass’n, 44 Fla. 815, 33 So. R. 447, and Thompson v. Thompson, 112 So. R. 766. The Wilmot case holds that a writ of assistance issued pursuant to a final decree of foreclosure and sale is a “proceeding had” on such final order within the meaning of Sec. 1448, Rev. Stats. 1892 (Sec. 4948, C. G. L. 1927), and reverses the decree granting the writ of assistance because the final decree of foreclosure had never been recorded, either before the writ of assistance was issued or thereafter. The Thompson case reverses as erroneous a final decree granting a divorce and'declaring a trust in real estate because based upon testimony taken before a special master prior to the time the order appointing the master was “filed and recorded.” The rule announced in the latter case, however, has since been altered by Chap. 11922, Acts of 1927. See Montgomery v. Durrus, 114 So. R. 665.

There are two circumstances which vitally distinguished . this situation from that presented in the Wilmot and Thompson cases, supra. In the first place, this is a collateral attack upon the orders here in question and upon the guardian’s sale. 34 C. J. 522. The scope of the inquiry is therefore limited to jurisdictional matters, a | deficiency in which would render void the orders attacked. I Mere irregularities can not be reviewed in such a proceedjiing. Moffer v. Jones, 169 Pac. R. 562. The action 1’taken in the Wilmot and Thompson cases, mpra, was upon a direct attack by appeal to review the proceedings there [645]*645in question. Such was t'he situation also in Grimsley v. Rosenberg, 114 So. R. 553, also relied on by plaintiff.

This Court has never held that proceedings had uponj an unrecorded decree or order are voici or amenable to' collateral attack, but has held only that such proceedings 'j are inoperative or erroneous when attacked in a direct ^ proceeding. In the Wilmot ease the latter question, as well as the question of the effect of an order name pro tunc, was expressly reserved. The question, however, was settled in McGregor v. Kellum, 50 Fla. 581, 39 So. R. 697, which was a collateral attack upon the validity of a master’s sale in foreclosure, which sale was had pursuant to a final decree which had not been recorded when the sale was made, nor had it yet been recorded when the collateral attack upon it was made. The lower court held that a failure to record the final decree of foreclosure rendered the master’s sale thereunder void. In reversing the circuit court on that point this Court said:

‘ ‘ The failure to record the decree duly passed and signed by the judge and filed by the clerk, does not render subject to collateral attack a sale thereunder formally confirmed by the court. The judgment and. decrees of a court of general jurisdiction as to subject matter and; undoubted jurisdiction over the person are not to- be set' aside .for failure to observe the provisions of a statute, however salutary,- that looks not to jurisdiction but to orderly, safe procedure and the performance of which rests upon some non-judicial officer.” It' was further said in that case that while in the Wilmot case the recording statute had been characterized as “mandatory,” the word “mandatory” was not used as synonymous with or in the sense of “jurisdictional.”

The effect of the doctrine of nunc pro .tunc was not considered in the Wilmot and Thompson cases, supra, as no [646]*646order nunc pro tunc had been made in those eases. On the contrary, the orders there assailed had never been recorded either originally or by a subsequent order nunc pro tunc before they were called into question. In this case, however, the question ordered was duly recorded nunc pro tunc

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