Polk v. Polk

41 So. 2d 150, 1949 Fla. LEXIS 731
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedMay 27, 1949
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 41 So. 2d 150 (Polk v. Polk) 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
Polk v. Polk, 41 So. 2d 150, 1949 Fla. LEXIS 731 (Fla. 1949).

Opinion

Suit by Olive Polk against Cecil Polk and wife to set aside consent to appointment of guardian, removal of guardian, for an accounting, and other relief. From a decree dismissing the bill of complaint, the plaintiff appeals.

Affirmed. On June 26, 1948, a bill of complaint was filed in the Circuit Court in and for Hardee County, Florida, in which bill the appellant Olive Polk stated that she was the wife of O.B. Polk, who owned real estate in the bill of complaint described, the same being the home place; that on December 27, 1947, O.B. Polk suffered a stroke of paralysis, thereby becoming incapacitated, and on January 12, 1948, the County Judge of Hardee County, Florida, upon a petition to him presented, declared O.B. Polk to be an incompetent person and appointed as Guardian of his person and property one of the defendants, namely, Cecil Polk, the other defendant being the wife of Cecil Polk.

She further stated that with said petition was presented an answer, waiver and consent to the appointment of Cecil Polk as *Page 151 Guardian which paper bore her name and signature, but she asserted that the paper was presented to her as being merely a consent to the sale of citrus fruit, she not knowing that she was being made a party to any guardianship proceedings or agreeing to anyone being guardian for her husband, and saying that had she so known she would not have signed the paper, and had she known that a guardian had to be appointed for her husband, she would have contended for her own appointment.

She also alleged that as provided by Section 744.53, F.S.A., it was the duty of the Guardian within sixty days after his appointment to file with the County Judge a complete verified inventory of the real and personal estate of the incompetent, but that this he had failed and neglected to do, by reason of which she charged the Guardian, Cecil Polk, with a failure to discharge the duties of a guardian as provided by law.

She then stated that about the middle of January the defendant, Cecil Polk, and his wife, Margaret Polk, accompanied by their three children, moved into the dwelling of plaintiff and the incompetent, O.B. Polk, taking over complete control and supervision thereof, and that a course of conduct began then which culminated in the month of June in a brutal assault upon her by the defendant Margaret Polk, aided by the defendant Cecil Polk, and that they from thenceforth made life in her dwelling unbearable for her; that she tried to get help from the Sheriff of Hardee County at a time when the County Judge, being the only committing magistrate thereof was absent, and that when the County Judge returned to the County she, accompanied by her counsel, went before the County Judge, made a complaint about the assault and battery and requested the issuance of a warrant, which was refused by the County Judge, he telling her he would not issue the same unless told so to do by the State Attorney of the Tenth Judicial Circuit of the State of Florida, who resided in Hardee County, to whom she went, and was advised by him that whatever was done was up to the County Judge and he would not instruct him to do anything, and that by reason of all of the foregoing facts it was necessary for her to leave her dwelling house; that she was without funds with which to maintain and support herself and had no shelter under which to live, the defendants having invaded and occupied, and by their actions and conduct forced her to leave, her dwelling house, and that she could not get help from either the Sheriff or the County Judge or the State Attorney having jurisdiction in Hardee County, Florida.

The prayers of Olive Polk were that the Circuit Court in the exercise of its supervisory jurisdiction over the Court of the County Judge in guardianship matters declare her waiver, answer and consent to the appointment of Cecil Polk as Guardian to have been fraudulently obtained, that the Circuit Court order and direct the said County Judge to appoint Olive Polk, the wife of the incompetent, as his Guardian, that it further order Cecil Polk to forthwith render an accounting of his guardianship of O.B. Polk, that it order and direct the County Judge out of the assets of the guardianship estate of O.B. Polk to cause to be paid to her under appropriate order a sufficient amount of money to maintain and support her, that it enjoin and restrain the defendants from in anywise interfering with, molesting, bothering or committing assaults or assaults and batteries upon her, and restrain them from further occupying her dwelling house, and that pending a final determination of the equities of the cause a temporary restraining order be issued in that behalf.

Notice of hearing thereon having been given, temporary restraining order granting the relief against further assaults or assaults and batteries was entered by the Chancellor on June 30, 1948.

On August 10, 1948, motion to strike was filed by the defendants. On the same date motion to dissolve temporary restraining order was filed. On July 7, 1948, motion to dismiss was filed.

On October 4, 1948, order was filed dissolving the temporary restraining order and dismissing the bill of complaint. From this appeal was taken. On November 23, 1948, Assignments of Error were filed in which there was assigned as error the dissolution of the temporary restraining order *Page 152 and the dismissal of plaintiff's bill of complaint.

Broadly speaking, the question for our consideration is whether the bill of complaint contains equity. The appellant contends that the Circuit Court should entertain this cause under the supervisory jurisdiction prescribed and provided in and by Article V, Section XI of the Florida Constitution, F.S.A. She further relies upon sub-section 3 of Section 744.06, F.S.A. Counsel quotes from Article V, Section XI of our Constitution as follows: "Supervision * * * of matters arising before County Judges pertaining to their probate jurisdiction, or to the estates and interests of minors, and of such other matters as the Legislature may provide." It is their contention that sub-section 3 of Section 744.06, F.S.A., is pertinent. They set it forth as follows:

"No court of equity shall be deprived of its inherent jurisdiction to appoint or to remove guardians or to require of them accountings of their trusts or to administer the estates of wards in cases in which equitable intervention is necessary forcomplete and adequate relief." (Italics supplied)

The case of Pitts v. Pitts, 120 Fla. 363, 162 So. 708, and other cases of similar import, including American Surety Co. v. Andrews, 152 Fla. 638, 12 So.2d 599, are stressed as authority for appellant's position. These cases and many others hold that an order of County Judge sitting as a court of probate may be "attacked and set aside as invalid, either on direct appellate proceedings, or by certiorari or by bill in equity as filed in this case, where the invalid order was made without jurisdictionin the probate court to enter such an order at the time it wasactually entered * * *." [120 Fla. 363, 162 So. 711] (Italics supplied.)

Counsel for appellant in his brief failed to include in his quotation from the Pitts v. Pitts case the concluding underscored portion. This omitted language is explanatory of the use of the words "invalid order" and indicates clearly that the jurisdiction of the Circuit Court may be invoked by a bill in equity only in those cases where the order was made by the probate judge without having jurisdiction of the subject matter or of the parties.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
41 So. 2d 150, 1949 Fla. LEXIS 731, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/polk-v-polk-fla-1949.