In the Matter of the Guardianship of Firmin

161 So. 555, 119 Fla. 396
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedMay 20, 1935
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 161 So. 555 (In the Matter of the Guardianship of Firmin) 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 the Matter of the Guardianship of Firmin, 161 So. 555, 119 Fla. 396 (Fla. 1935).

Opinion

Ellis, P. J.

Robert Ellsworth Firmin is a mentally incompetent World War veteran, W. J. Sanborn was his guardian.

On September 28, 1928, Sanborn filed in the office of County Judge an annual return or account of the receipts and disbursements of his ward’s estate. It embraced a period from September 28, 1927, to and including August 3, 1928. The account showed, a total of $9,107.40 received and $9,058.54, disbursed leaving a balance of $48.86 on hand. Among the items which appeared on the credit side of that account were $55.00 paid to Duncan and Hamlin, Attorneys, and $8,600 invested on an order of the Probate Court in a real estate mortgage on improved property. The $8,600. investment was in a note of W. J. Sanborn, the guardian, secured by a first mortgage upon improved real estate.

Another annual account was filed covering a period from August 3, 1928, to and including August 3, 1929. The debit side of that account showed receipts including the balance of $48.86 amounting to $1,807.12. The credit side showed disbursements amounting to $1,730.43, leaving a balance of $76.69 caried forward.

Mr. Sanborn deposited his ward’s money in the Bank of Mt. Dora to his individual or personal account, commingling the funds of his ward with his own. The account was not carried separately in the depositor’s representative capacity. The bank failed and Mr. Sanborn in his annual account filed with the Probate Court credited himself with the balance of $48.86 and the sum of $500.00 which was also lost in the bank failure.

*399 There were two other items entered upon the credit side of the acount: one amounting to $50.00, August 3, 1929, which Mr. Sanborn allowed to himself for especial services' rendered in 1926 in transferring the estate matters from Cuyahoga County, Ohio, to Lake County, Florida, and an item of $108.42 which Mr. Sanborn allowed to himself as commission on money received and as full pay for “handling of the estate.”

Mr. George E. Ijams, Acting Director, United States Veterans’ Bureau, Veterans’ Administration, as next friend of Firmin, and Mr. George W. Burke, Regional Attorney United States Veterans’ Bureau, filed a petition in the Probate Court on October 20, 1932, in which it was prayed that the two accounts be reopened for consideration of the items allowed as above mentioned on the guardian’s account and to falsify or avoid the account in those particulars.

The petition was overuled by the County Judge and the answer of Mr. Sanborn was sustained. An appeal was' taken from that order to the Circuit Court and the Circuit Judge, Honorable J. C. B. Koonce, affirmed the judgment of the Probate Court.

In view of the conclusion reached by the Honorable Circuit Judge we deem it to be instructive to quote the language used by him which reveals the theory upon which he justified the order of the Probate Court in not falsifying the account of the guardian in the particulars mentioned, especially the items of $48.86 and $500.00 which were lost to the estate by the failure of the bank. The judge said:

“The principal objection presented to this Court by the appeal is the allowance of a credit to the guardian of five hundred dollars lost in the closing of the Bank of Mt. Dora. It is insisted by appellant that where a guardian deposits funds of his ward with his own, or commingles the funds *400 of his ward with his own, he thereby becomes personally liable for any loss which may come while the funds are so deposited. This court must concede as an abstract proposition of law the contention of appellant is supported by the great weight of authorities. It unquestionably seems to be a correct statement of the law. However, appeals from County Judge’s Court in probate matters are addressed to the equity side of this Court, and it is the opinion of this Court that, while ‘Equity follows the law’ nevertheless, a court of equity will not permit a strict adherence to technicalities to work an injury to anyone, but will endeavor to ‘temper justice’ so that a reasonable and fair consideration may be given all concerned.

“It appears to this Court that had the funds of the guardian’s ward been deposited in a separate account, the result would have been the same — upon failure of the bank, the money would have been lost. There is no charge, or no evidence that the guardian had any reason to suspect the bank to be in a precarious condition, and evidently he acted in good faith in leaving the money there, for he had a sizeable account of his own with the bank at the time.

“It is further insisted by the appellant that the funds of the ward should have been invested by the guardian so as to increase the estate. But it also appears that this deposit in the Bank of Mt. Dora was rather of a temporary nature, pending a transfer of funds from the Probate Court in Ohio.

“In this case it is also clear to the court that the circumstances are somewhat singular; the ward is hopelessly insane, his only heir is his mother who is wife of the guardian. It is a sad fact that the ward can never benefit by any increase in his estate. It is unlike an estate of a minor or infant who, upon reaching majority, would be entitled *401 to receive the benefit of prudent care by his guardian. It often happens that guardianships are entrusted to those who are not versed in the law, and who are performing their duties more-as a labor of love. This court is impressed with the idea that such is true in the instant case, and feels that it would be an unmerited punishment to a good-intentioned guardian to reverse the judgment of the lower court. Undoubtedly, the Probate Judge who was familiar with all the facts and circumstances of the case, and whom this court knows to be most careful and cautious in his deliberations and judgments, must have entertained the views expressed above.”

Mr. Ijams and Mr. Burke took an appeal from that order.

The questions presented and argued in appellánt’s brief involve the legality of those items of credit appearing in the guardian’s account which show a loss to the estate on account of the bank’s failure where the moneys of the ward’s estate were carried in the private or personal account of the guardian and not to his account in his representative capacity.

Another question challenged an allowance in the guardian’s account of more than a commission of five per cent, for services and whether the order of the County Judge allowing or approving the account was res adjudicate and binding on the ward, who is mentally incompetent, where the accounting had remained on file for a certain period of time without exception or objection.

The approval by the County Judge of the Guardian’s annual account is not the equivalent of a judgment which may not be collaterally attacked by the ward or some one in his behalf. The rule is that annual or partial accounts of a guardian, although approved by the court, have not *402 the force and effect of a final judgment and are in no sense conclusive of the correctness thereof unless made so by statute. See 28 C. J., 1239.

. Annual accounts are, however, prima facie evidence of their correctness, if made in conformity with the statute.

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Bluebook (online)
161 So. 555, 119 Fla. 396, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-the-matter-of-the-guardianship-of-firmin-fla-1935.