New York Life Insurance v. Gilmore

157 S.E. 188, 171 Ga. 894, 1931 Ga. LEXIS 483
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedJanuary 17, 1931
Docket7497
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 157 S.E. 188 (New York Life Insurance v. Gilmore) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
New York Life Insurance v. Gilmore, 157 S.E. 188, 171 Ga. 894, 1931 Ga. LEXIS 483 (Ga. 1931).

Opinion

*897 Russell, 0. J.

(After stating the foregoing facts.) TJpon careful examination, we are of the opinion that this case raises two questions, into which all other and minor issues of law dealt with by the Court of Appeals are absorbed or'merged. A legal determination of this certiorari turns upon only two points. The letters of guardianship, which formed the judgment of the court of ordinary appointing J. M. Gilmore guardian of the property of Nannette and Winnifred Gilmore, were as follows:

“ State of Georgia, Appling County. To all whom it may concern: Whereas application has been made in proper form for the appointment of a guardian for the person and property of Nannette Gilmore and Winnifred Gilmore, residing in said county, children of the late H. C. Gilmore of said county, deceased, and J. M. Gilmore has by order duly passed been appointed guardian and as such' has qualified: Now know ye, that the said J. M. Gilmore is by these presents authorized, empowered, and directed to receive, collect, and take charge of the estate, both real and personal, of the said Nannette Gilmore and Winnifred Gilmore, and to do all other things which are required of him by law as said guardian of said minors, with all of the authority and powers usual in said cases.” Dated May 3, 1910.

It appears from the record, that, as preliminary to this judgment, ,T. M. Gilmore had filed the customary application for letters of guardianship, in which is was recited, as a reason why he should be appointed guardian, that by the will and testament of the father of the two named minors, H. C. Gilmore, he had already been ap-. pointed testamentary guardian; and that upon this application the ordinary had passed the following order: “The foregoing application read and considered. It appearing that the facts stated therein are true and correct, and that the said children have no guardian, and that J. M. Gilmore has been appointed testamentary guardian by the father of said minor children, it is further ordered and adjudged that the said J. M. Gilmore be and is hereby appointed guardian of the said children, upon his taking oath as required by law.”

The first question to be considered is whether the judgment of the court of ordinary appointing J. M. Gilmore guardian of the property of Nannette and Winnifred Gilmore, supplemented by the letters of guardianship, authorized the insurance company to pay *898 the amount of the policy to J. M. Gilmore as guardian, so that the obligation of the insurance company was discharged. In other words, was the appointment of J. M. Gilmore as guardian, as evidenced by the grant of letters of guardianship, such a judgment as authorized and required the company to pay over the proceeds of the policy to the person appointed as guardian in accordance with the judgment rendered in the court of ordinary; or, was the insurance company bound, at its peril, to inquire whether there were defects in matters of pleading, proof, and procedure antecedent to the final judgment, which' would make it doubtful or unsafe for the company to make payment to this guardian ? This raises a second question. Was the insurer in this case required to go behind the judgment and satisfy itself that all the proceedings in the court of ordinary were lawful, and that the court of ordinary and its officers or appointees liad done and performed every act which the laws of Georgia required, precedent to the order for the letters of guardianship, so as to authorize the insurer to pay the named guardian the proceeds of the policy, before the insurer would be discharged from further liability? The undisputed evidence showed that the plaintiff in error relied upon the proofs of death and the certified copy of letters of guardianship, and accordingly took a receipt “in full payment and satisfaction of all claims and demands under policy 3231464 on the life of Henry C. Gilmore, deceased.”

If J. M. Gilmore was in fact guardian for tlie plaintiffs, the payment of the value of the policy to their guardian would entitle the insurance company to a full receipt, and to be discharged from any further liability. The Court of Appeals, in affirming the judgment of the judge of the city court of Baxley directing a verdict in favor of the plaintiff Winnifred Gilmore, held that the defendant insurer was still liable, because the court of ordinary had no jurisdiction to authorize Gilmore to collect the insurance without requiring citation to issue and without requiring a bond, that the issuance of letters of guardianship was null and void, and that the payment made by the company to Gilmore in 1910 was a nullity and void and did not discharge the obligation of the company arising from and dependent upon the contract of insurance. We are of the opinion, that, even if the ordinary should have issued citation or required a bond before authorizing the collection of this issuance, *899 nevertheless the judgment of the court of ordinary in issuing letters of guardianship, which authorized the collection of the insurance, was not null and void. The court of ordinary is a court of general jurisdiction, and the judgment of a court of competent jurisdiction may be relied upon in making payment of the obligation. It is not disputed that the insurance company paid the full amount of insurance under its contract, in good faith, relying upon the order and judgment of the court of ordinary; and this judgment should be protected. It can not be doubted that the court of ordinary was clothed with jurisdiction as to the matter. The court of ordinary had jurisdiction to give letters of guardianship. To use the substantial language of Chief Justice Warner in Cuyler v. Wayne, 64 Ga. 79, “Whether a guardian was required to give bond and security, especially when the clerk of the superior court is appointed a guardian of minors by the ordinary, or whether it is discretionary with the ordinary to require bond and security. . . The law requires that bond and security shall be given in all cases on the appointment of a guardian by the ordinary; but the grant of letters of guardianship by the ordinary without taking bond, though erroneous, would not make the grant of letters void as against a bona fide purchaser who had no notice that bond had not been given." In this case the ordinary did not appoint -Gilmore testamentary guardian. As a matter of law the ordinary can not appoint a testamentary guardian ipso facto, though he might under certain circumstances designate a substitute for one who had been appointed by the testator in his will. The mere naming of a testamentary guardian (or a guardian appointed by will) excludes the appointment of a guardian as such by the ordinary. For this reason, any discussion as to whether Gilmore was legal guardian of Nannette and Winnifred Gilmore as to airy property outside of that devised by their father’s will is precluded. The will of II. C. Gilmore named his brother, J. M. Gilmore, as testamentary guardian; but the fact that the wards owned other property which' was not included within the will did not prevent him from acting as guardian as to property of the ward (obtained in any manner except by the will). As appears from the order of the judge of the court of ordinary, the guardian, Gilmore, was a brother of the father of the female wards. As such he was named tlieir testamentary guardian, and was put in charge of any property devised to the wards by the *900

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Bluebook (online)
157 S.E. 188, 171 Ga. 894, 1931 Ga. LEXIS 483, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/new-york-life-insurance-v-gilmore-ga-1931.