Marquette v. Hathaway

76 So. 2d 648
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedDecember 21, 1954
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 76 So. 2d 648 (Marquette v. Hathaway) 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
Marquette v. Hathaway, 76 So. 2d 648 (Fla. 1954).

Opinion

SEBRING, Justice.

Elizabeth Hathaway and Alfred E. Hathaway, her husband, resided in Lake County, Florida. On April 1, 1950, they executed two warranty deeds conveying two separate parcels of property in Lake County to Mrs. Hathaway’s brother and sister, Norman Marquette and Jessie Green. Contemporaneous with and as a part of the transaction, Norman Marquette and Jessie Green executed an instrument which recited the fact of the execution of the respective deeds to them and provided “that as part consideration for the conveyance of said parcels of land, the said Alfred E. Hathaway, and * * * Elizabeth M. Hathaway, shall have the right to use and occupy said parcels of land, for and [during] their respective lives, free of any cost or expense to them, because of said occupancy.” In May, 1950, the Hathaways executed a trust instrument wherein and whereby they assigned the title to certain stocks and bonds held and owned by them to Jessie Green and one Isabelle Kegley, in trust, however, for certain uses and purposes expressed in the instrument.

The Hathaways went to Ohio in 1952, to reside temporarily at the homes of Marquette and Green. While there, Mr. Hathaway died and Elizabeth Hathaway became the sole owner of her husband’s interest in the properties. In August, 1952, the Probate Court of Ashland County, Ohio, appointed a guardian of the person and property of Elizabeth Hathaway on the ground of incompetency. At a later date Mrs. Hathaway returned to Florida and a curator was appointed under Florida law to take charge of and manage her properties. After this appointment had been made the Probate Court of Ashland County, Ohio, on July 1, 1953, entered an order requiring the Ohio guardian to make and file his final accounting and decreed “that upon approval of the same according to law, said guardianship shall be terminated.” Pursuant to this order the guardian made a final accounting and turned over the assets in his hands to the Florida curator. Subsequently on October 27, 1953, Isabelle [650]*650Kegley, who had become the sole surviving trustee under the trust instrument executed in May, 1950, because of the death of Jessie M. Green, turned over the stocks and bonds that were the subject matter of the trust instrument to George J. White, the Florida “curator of the Estate of Elizabeth M. Hathaway, Incompetent.”

On July 14, 1953, Elizabeth Hathaway instituted suit in the Circuit Court of Lake County, Florida, against Norman J. Marquette and the “Estate of Jessie M. Green, Deceased” to set aside the deeds made on April 1, 1950, on the ground that they had been procured through fraud, in that “no life interest is retained by the grantors in said [deeds] as was represented to the complainant.” At a later date Elizabeth Hathaway filed an amendment to the complaint to include a claim for the return of the stocks and bonds assigned to Jessie M. Green and Isabelle Kegley, as trustees, by the trust agreement of May, 1950; but inasmuch as the record shows that said securities were delivered to the curator during the pendency of the suit they need not be considered in this controversy.

In due course an answer was filed by an attorney for Norman J. Marquette and the “Estate of Jessie M. Green, Deceased, by Isabelle C. Kegley, Executrix,” which, in effect, admitted the execution of the deeds, denied the exercise of any fraud in their procurement, offered to convey a life estate in the real property to the original grantor if the agreement executed on April 1, 1950, did not sufficiently effectuate that purpose, and questioned the right of the plaintiff to maintain the action because of her alleged legal incompetency.

Testimony was taken before a special examiner on the issues made by the pleadings. At final hearing the trial court found, upon the unsupported testimony of the plaintiff, that “the complainant executed said deeds because of the coercion and misrepresentation of the defendants” and did not “understand the purpose or intent of said deeds;” and concluded that the deeds had been procured through fraud and should be cancelled.

On this appeal the defendants question the right of the plaintiff to maintain the suit because of alleged incompetency, and the ruling of the trial court wherein he can-celled the deeds upon the unsupported testimony of the plaintiff.

It is plain from the record that at the time plaintiff instituted her suit against the defendants a curator had been appointed under the laws of Florida to take charge of, manage and conserve her property. Section 747.18, Florida Statutes 1951, F.S.A., provides in respect to the powers and duties of a curator, that “ * * * a curator shall have the powers and be subject to the same duties over and concerning the property of a ward as may be by law had and exercised by the guardians of the property of infants * * and section 744.61, Florida Statutes 1951, F.S.A., dealing with the guardianship of the persons and property of infants provides that “suits to enforce or to declare rights of the ward shall be brought jointly in the name of the guardian and the ward.” (Emphasis supplied.)

While the plaintiff in the instant case has clearly failed to comply with the foregoing provisions, in that the curator was never made a party to the proceeding, that failure would appear to be immaterial under the circumstances. No point has been made of the error, either before the lower court or upon appeal, defendants’ objections to plaintiff’s capacity being based upon certain proceedings in Ohio, now terminated, of a nature similar to the Florida statutory curatorship. See section 10507-1, Ohio Gen.Code. Since our statute places the ward of a curator in this state in the same position as a minor under guardianship, the prevailing rule in respect to the latter situation should control, i.e., that a requirement of joinder of the guardian is not generally regarded as jurisdictional. 25 Am.Jur., Guardian and Ward, Sec. 152; 39 C.J.S., Guardian and Ward, § 175, pp. 315, 319; 43 C.J.S., Infants, § 108, pp. 281, 282. Cf. Lanier v. Chappell, 2 Fla. 621. It would appear from the record that no prejudice resulted from the omission, precluding, in all probability, an ob[651]*651jection by either party upon this ground. See Adams v. Cook, 91 Vt. 281, 100 A. 42; Perkins v. Stimmel, 114 N.Y. 359, 21 N.E. 729.

As to the second question raised, the conclusion of the court below on the invalidity of the instruments involved appears to have been based upon its finding of the existence of coercion or undue influence as well as alleged misrepresentation by the grantees. On the latter issue the plaintiff claimed to have been deceived by the failure to provide in the deeds for retention of a life estate. But that omission, far from requiring or serving as an adequate ground for cancellation of the challenged deeds, was shown to be immaterial as between the parties by virtue of the agreement executed simultaneously by the grantees to provide expressly for such a life estate, and was susceptible of complete remedy in this case by a simple acceptance of the offer in defendants’ answer to convey a life estate to the grantor if the instrument did not, in fact, accomplish this purpose.

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Bluebook (online)
76 So. 2d 648, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/marquette-v-hathaway-fla-1954.