Motley v. Motley

45 Ala. 555
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedJanuary 15, 1871
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 45 Ala. 555 (Motley v. Motley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Motley v. Motley, 45 Ala. 555 (Ala. 1871).

Opinions

PETERS, J.

This is a suit in chancery by a ward against his guardian and the sureties on tbe guardian’s bond, to set aside a receipt and discharge given by the ward to his guardian after he became of age, upon the ground of fraud.

The answers of the defendants deny all the allegations of fraud, and demur to the bill for want of equity. The cause was heard upon the bill, exhibits, answers and proof in the court below. The demurrers were overruled, the receipt and discharge were set aside, and the guardian was ordered and decreed to account with his ward for the estate of the ward that had come into his hands. From this decree the guardian and his sureties appeal to this court, and assign the decree of the court below as error.

The bill • alleges that Thomas J. Motley was appointed guardian of his brother, Robert Motley, by the probate court of Autauga county, in this State, on December 21, 1857; that he accepted the appointment, gave bond, and undertook the discharge of the duties of guardian under it, until the ward became of age, in September, 1861. It is also alleged that the estate of the ward which came into the possession of the guardian, or for which he was liable to account, was worth, at the filing of the bill, about nine thousand dollars. All the property of the ward was derived directly or indirectly from his father’s estate, which was administered by the ward’s mother, in the said county of Autauga. The father died in 1846, and left a will, with his widow as his executrix, who made final settlement of her executorship on May 24,1859. The guardian returned an inventory of the property of the ward received by him. This was done on March 10, 1858. After this, there were no other inventories returned by him, and no annual or other settlements of his ward’s estate were .made by him. After the return of this inventory, the ward obtained a [557]*557judgment against his mother, as the executrix of his father’s will, on May 24,1859, for $1,806 02. At that time the mother was solvent, and this judgment might have been collected, but no effort was ever made to do so. This judgment was of record in the probate court of Autauga county aforesaid. It also appears that the ward was also entitled to the sum of $2,126 50 on a division of notes for lands sold in 1857. This was also a matter of record in the court of probate in said county of Autauga. Besides these items, it is also alleged that the ward was entitled to some hire of slaves and some rent of lands, and that these demands were based upon matters of record in said probate court. It is further shown, that on the 12th day of July, 1869, between eight and nine years after the ward became of age, he and his guardian made a “ compromise” of the claims in favor of the ward, when the latter executed and delivered to the former an instrument in writing, which is in the following language, to-wit:

“ Shelby County, July 12th, 1869.
Received of T. J. Motley the sum of ($800 00) eight hundred dollars, as a compromise and payment in full for all claims against him as guardian.
Robert Motley.
Witness: P. H. Whetstone.”

There can be no doubt that this instrument, if it was made in good faith, and procured without fraud by the party in whose favor it was executed, is valid, and must be enforced according to the intention of the parties to it. The instrument explains its own meaning. It was, then, a “ compromise and payment in full of all claims ” in favor of the ward against the guardian. Such an instrument falls within the provision of the Code, which is in these words: “All receipts, releases and discharges, in writing, whether of a debt of record or a contract under seal or otherwise, must have effect according to the intention of the parties to the same.” “All settlements, in writing, made in good faith for the composition of debts, must be taken as evidence, and held to operate according to. the intention of the parties, though no release under seal is [558]*558given, and no new consideration has passed.” — Rev. Code, §§ 2686, 2687.

This was a release of all claims” in favor of the ward against his guardian. This language is as broad as it can be made. — Coke Litt. 291, b. Such an instrument can not be altered by parol proof. If must stand upon the writing alone. — Hart v. Freeman, 42 Ala. 567, 570.

This was, then, not a sale in which the adequacy or inadequacy of the price could be looked to as a badge of fraud, or its absence. It was a receipt and settlement in writing for the composition or compromise of certain preexisting liabilities, about which both the parties had ample ^opportunities to learn all the facts. The usual purpose in such a case is to forego the rigid legal rights of the parties, and to accept, in lieu of those, something else, or something less than the thing itself is nominally worth. It is a composition, not a sale, or a full payment. In such a transaction, good faith is the ruling element. The consideration may be great, or small, or merely nominal, as the parties choose to make it. — Kirby v. Taylor, 6 John. ch. 242, 247; Billingslea v. Ware, 32 Ala. 415, 419. The statute gives the receipt the force of a defeasance at common law which was of a technical character and required to be under seal and executed at the same time with the instrument creating the obligation. — Fowel v. Forrest, 2 Saund. 48, case No. 6; Freeman v. Baldwin, 13 Ala. 246.

Then, were the allegations of fraud in the bill, so far as they are admitted or sustained by proof, sufficient to show bad faith on the part of the guardian in this instance ? I think not. The transaction was between brothers. It was a.n affair of long standing. It had been a subject of conversation between the brothers once at least, if not oftener, before its final settlement. The ward was a man of mature age, between twenty-seven and twenty-eight years old when he executed the receipt. There is no pretense or allegation that he was not at that time a person of sound sense, or capable of attending to his own affairs, or that he was in any degree under the control or domination of his older brother, who had been his guardian. One of the debts constituting a considerable portion of the ward’s es[559]*559tate, was a debt due from the ward’s mother. And another was one on which the guardian himself had been the surety for its payment. Both these debts had been lost by the insolvency of the parties, occasioned by the results of the late war. It does not appear that the guardian had used any of the ward’s estate for his own profit. It was quite as much the misfortune of the guardian as it was his fault that the ward’s property under his control had been lost. And, as between the brothers themselves, without looking beyond, to the sureties on the guardian’s bond, the composition was a fair one. It was quite as much, and possibly more, than the guardian, without assistance, was able to pay. And this was well known to the ward.

Besides this, the principal items of the ward’s estate were matters of record in the probate court of Autauga county, where hehad formerlyresided, and which were easily accessible to him. This had been the case for above eight years after he had attained his majority. He had also engaged the services of an attorney to examine into his claims against his guardian for him, some five or six months before the execution of the foregoing receipt.

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Bluebook (online)
45 Ala. 555, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/motley-v-motley-ala-1871.