Naylor, Next Friend v. Naylor

128 S.W. 475, 60 Tex. Civ. App. 606, 1910 Tex. App. LEXIS 591
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 4, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 128 S.W. 475 (Naylor, Next Friend v. Naylor) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Naylor, Next Friend v. Naylor, 128 S.W. 475, 60 Tex. Civ. App. 606, 1910 Tex. App. LEXIS 591 (Tex. Ct. App. 1910).

Opinion

RICE, Associate Justice.

On the 16th of January, 1909, Mrs. Cora Naylor, in her own proper person, and as next friend of her ■minor child, James Parker Naylor, Jr., aged seven years, together with a number of other parties as plaintiffs, brought a friendly suit for partition against Otho Miller and quite a number of other defendants in the District Court of McLennan County for partition of 100 acres of land, with the usual averments, alleging that it would be impracticable to partition said land, praying for judgment establishing the interests of the various parties as set out in the petition. A decree was entered establishing the interest of said parties in said land in accordance therewith, including that of said minor, his interest being adjudged to be one-half of one-eighth of one-half of said land, and the court finding that the same was incapable of partition in kind, ordered it sold for the purposes of partition, and appointed a receiver to make such sale, and who thereafter reported to the court *607 that he made sale of said land as ordered, which was by the court approved, and he was ordered to make a deed to the purchaser upon his complying with the terms of the sale, and paying the purchase money into the registry of the court, the clerk being ordered to distribute said money among the several parties, plaintiffs and defendants, in accordance with their respective interests in said land as established by the judgment of partition, except that of the minors who had no guardians, and as to such minors to retain their proportion thereof in the registry of the court. The interest in the said land of the said James Parker Naylor, Jr., minor, was sold for the sum of $496.43, which was by the clerk retained in the registry of the court for him, and still remains therein.

The appellant, Luther Naylor, as next friend for said minor, on the 30th of April, 1909, filed his application in said court, asking that he be authorized by the court to take charge of said sum of money belonging to said minor by virtue of article 3498w of the Revised Civil Statutes, setting out in his petition that he was a suitable person to take said money and invest the same for the best interests of said minor, showing that said minor had no guardian, either of his person or of his estate, and in connection with said application presented to the court a good and sufficient bond in double the amount of said money.

The court found as a fact that said minor had no guardian of his estate; that Luther Naylor was a suitable and proper person to be appointed by the court to take charge of said funds, if the court was authorized by law to turn same over to him; and further found that the bond presented by him, both in amount and as to the sureties, was a good and sufficient bond, and in all respects complied with the statute, but declined to approve said bond and enter the order allowing said money withdrawn, because under his construction of the law the court had no authority to do so.

The learned trial judge filed the following conclusions of law in support of his ruling refusing to permit said funds to be withdrawn from the registry of the court:

“The Legislature, by an Act passed in 1895, page 3, authorized suits to be brought by next friends for minors, who had no legal guardian, the several sections of said Act being articles 3498u to 3498y, inclusive, of the' Revised Statutes. The first section of said Act simply authorized minors having a sufficient cause of action and no legal guardian to bring suit by next friend. The second, section of said Act 3498v reads as follows:
“ 'Such next friend or the attorney of record of such minor may enter into such agreed judgment or compromise in such suit as the court may approve, and the decree entered upon such agreement or compromise, when approved by the court, shall be forever binding on said minor, and can divest title out of the minor or vest it in him, when the court is satisfied such decree is for the best interest of the minor, under all the circumstances; and the court may hear evidence touching upon such agreement or compromise before approving the same/
*608 "Section 3 of the Act, article 3498w, Rev. Stats., and the one under which this application is presented, reads as follows:
“‘Whenever in any suit pending in this State any minor recovers a personal judgment for money or other personal property, in which the interest of the minor does not exceed the value of $500, and said minor has no guardian, such next friend, or any person authorized by the court to do so, by an order entered of record, may take charge of said money or property for the benefit of said minor, upon giving bond in such sum as shall be ordered by the court, which shall not be less than double the value of the property, conditioned that he will pay over said money and lawful interest thereon, and deliver said property and its increase to the minor when he becomes of age, or to his legally qualified guardian, when demanded, and that he will pay or deliver the same to such person appointed by the court, when ordered by the court to do so, and that he will use such money or property for the benefit of the minor as ordered by the court.’
"It will be observed that the foregoing statute limits the right to have such order entered to cases where the ‘minor recovers a personal judgment for money or other personal property.’ In the section first quoted it will be observed that the court can enter a compromise judgment, divesting title out of the minor or vesting it in him, and in lieu of the recovery of the title1 approve a compromise wherein the minor would recover a personal judgment for money or other personal property, and authorizing the settlement by compromise of damage or other suits for personal property.
"It will also be observed that by the third section of said Act, article 3498w, Rev. Stats., the court can only enter an order authorizing any other person, except a legally .qualified guardian, to take charge of money or property in possession of the court for the minor, in cases where the minor has recovered a ‘personal judgment for money or other personal property.’
“It seems clear that the Legislature had in mind a suit for the recovery of property, either real or personal, and where the right of the minor to such recovery was denied by adverse claimants, such as suits for land, or what are termed damage suits, and that it was never contemplated by the Legislature that that section should be used for any other purpose. In this case, and in fact in all partition suits where no question of title is involved, the suit is not to recover the property. The right of the plaintiff in such cases is admitted, the only purpose of the suit being to set apart to him his interest in severalty, and the judgment which is recovered is one for real estate, and the order of the court directing that the property be sold for partition is a mere incident to a partition, and the minor in such cases in no sense of the term recovers a judgment for money or other personal property.

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Bluebook (online)
128 S.W. 475, 60 Tex. Civ. App. 606, 1910 Tex. App. LEXIS 591, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/naylor-next-friend-v-naylor-texapp-1910.