McGale v. McGale

29 A. 967, 18 R.I. 675, 1894 R.I. LEXIS 51
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedJuly 28, 1894
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 29 A. 967 (McGale v. McGale) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McGale v. McGale, 29 A. 967, 18 R.I. 675, 1894 R.I. LEXIS 51 (R.I. 1894).

Opinion

Matteson, C. J.

The commissioner in this case, appointed to make sale of land described in the bill, has applied for an order against Thomas Grimes, the purchaser of one of the lots, to pay the purchase money and take a deed of the lot. The purchaser opposes the application, and has filed a statement of the particulars in which he deems the title to the lot defective. The lot in question is situated in that part of Providence set off from North Providence, and is the same delineated as Lot 69 on the Bellevue Plat, by Cushing & Earnum, 1854, recorded in the land records of Providence on Plat Card No. 306.

The objections to the title are as follows:—

1. That the decree of the Court of Probate of Pawtucket, dated October 21, 1875, authorizing Matthew H. McEvay, guardian of the minor children of Patrick and Catherine McEvay, to sell the lot, was not in conformity to Gen. Stat. P. I. cap. 168, § 11, and was an order beyond the jurisdiction of the Probate Court to make.

Gen. Stat. E. I. cap. 168, §§ 10, 11, 12, 1 were as follows :

*678 “Sec. 10. Such courts (i. e. Courts of Probate) shall have power to examine into and grant the petitions of executors and administrators, for authority and license to sell, at public auction only, the lands, tenements and hereditaments of deceased persons, or growing wood, or timber, or stone, or peat, or coal thereon, to pay the debts of such deceased, the expense of their funerals, of supporting their families, and settling their estates, with incidental charges.
“ Seo. 11. They shall, in like manner, have power to examine into like petitions of guardians to sell, at public or private sale, or to mortgage, like property, or any mixed estates, and all estates of their wards necessary to be conveyed as real estate, to pay their debts, the expenses of supporting them and their families, or for any other purpose whatsoever, including the making of a better and more advantageous investment, and the settlement of their estates, with incidental charges.
“Sec. 12. The petitions in the two sections next preceding mentioned shall be granted under such restrictions and limitations, and upon such conditions, as are or may he imposed by law, or in addition thereto, as the court in granting the same may direct.”

The petition of the 'guardian set forth that there were debts due from his wards to the amount of about $2,300 ; that their personal estate was insufficient for the payment of the debts which they owed ; that they were seized and possessed of two certain lots of land, one of which was the lot in question, and prayed that the guardian might be empowered to sell the real estate or so much as might he necesr sary to pay the debts of the wards, with incidental charges. The petition was presented to_the court on October 1, 1875, and received and referred to October 20, 1875, at 7 o’clock P. M., for consideration, with an order of notice, and on October 21, 1875, an order was made granting leave to the guar-' dian to sell the land at private sale, and directing him to apply, use and invest the proceeds in such manner as should be approved by the court, and to give bond to comply with the order in the sum of $4,800. We fail to perceive wherein *679 this order is not in conformity 'to the section of the statute referred to in the objection.

Was it beyond the jurisdiction of the Court of Probate to make? By Gen. Stat. R. I. cap. 154, §§ 3, 4 1 , it was necessary to give jurisdiction to a Court of Probate to appoint or to approve of the choice of a guardian, that thé minor should reside or have a legal settlement in the town. Prior to the division of North Providence and the annexation of a part of it to Pawtucket and a part of it to Providence, the wards had resided in North Providence. By that division the territory in which they resided was transferred to Providence, so that they became residents of Providence. By the act for the division, Pub. Laws R. I. cap. 365, of March 27, 1874, § 18, it was enacted that all proceedings pending or commenced prior to the adoption of the act by the towns of North Providence and Pawtucket, as provided in it, before the Court of Probate of North Providence, should be transferred to, continued by, and concluded according to law by the Court of Probate of the town of Pawtucket, as organized by the act. The question of the adoption of the act was, by its terms, to be submitted to the voters of the towns of North Providence and Pawtucket on the first Wednesday in April, 1874, and a majority of. the voters qualified to vote on the question having-voted in favor-of the adoption on that date, the adoption must be considered as of that date. The agreed statement of facts shows that the petitions for the appointment of Charles E. Gorman as guardian of such of said minors as were under the age of fourteen years, and to approve of him as the choice as guardian of 'such of said minors as were more than fourteen years of age, were presented to the Court of Probate of North Providence on March 21, 1874, at which date the minors were residents of North' Providence, and by it referred for consideration to April 11, following, with an order of notice. These petitions were not acted on by the Court of Probate of North Providence, presumably because Pub. Laws R. I. cap. 365, was in fact adopted prior to the *680 date to which, they were referred for consideration. Whether this be so or not, the proceedings, not having been acted on, were pending before the Court of Probate of North Providence at the time of the adoption of said chapter, and by § 18 of it were transferred to the Court of Probate of Pawtucket. The latter court, on May 20, 1874, Pub. Laws R. I. cap. 365 having taken effect on May 1, 1874, heard and granted the petitions. There can be no doubt that the Court of Probate of Pawtucket thus acquired jurisdiction over the estates of the minors, and having thus acquired jurisdiction we think theré can be no doubt that it retained it, since there is no provision of law by which that jurisdiction, so acquired, has been taken away and transferred to any other tribunal. When, therefore, Mr. Gorman subsequently, on January 20, 1875, resigned his office as guardian, the Court of Probate of Pawtucket, under Gen. Stat. R. I. cap. 168, § 26, properly accepted the resignation, and took cognizance of the petitions for the appointment and approval of Matthew H. McEvay as guardian in his stead, and having appointed him as such guardian, it had jurisdiction to make the decree in question, on his application to sell the real estate of his wards.

2. That the bond given. by said Matthew McEvay as guardian, under and by virtue of said order, was void, because the same appears on its face not to have been given in compliance with Gen. Stat. R. I. cap. 168, § 15 1 , which was as follows:— *681 posit the same on interest with any institution for savings in this state, or in such manner as the court may direct.”

*680

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Bluebook (online)
29 A. 967, 18 R.I. 675, 1894 R.I. LEXIS 51, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcgale-v-mcgale-ri-1894.