Powell v. Boon & Booth

43 Ala. 459
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedJune 15, 1869
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 43 Ala. 459 (Powell v. Boon & Booth) 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
Powell v. Boon & Booth, 43 Ala. 459 (Ala. 1869).

Opinions

PECK, C. J.

Lewis Stoudenmire, in his life time, was the guardian of Catharine A. Hoffman, of Autauga county, the plaintiff in this motion.

After his death, the defendants, Boon & Booth, were appointed his administrators by the probate court of said county of Autauga.

On the final settlement of the accounts of said Stoudenmire, as such guardian, made by him in the probate court of said county, the court, by its decree, allowed him a credit for the sum of three thousand nine hundred dollars. This credit was allowed upon the ground that on the third of March, 1864, he had invested that sum, belonging to his said ward, in what were then known and called four per cent, certificates, of the government of the Confederate States.

The ward, by her guardian, objected to the allowance of this credit, for reasons that appear in a bill of exceptions, signed and sealed by the court, at her instance.

Prom this decree of said probate court, allowing said credit, the ward, the said Catharine A. Hoffman, appealed to this court, and assigned the allowance of said credit for error, and insisted the decree should be reversed for that reason.

At the June term of this court, in the year 1868, to-wit, on the ninth day of July of that year, the said appeal was heard and determined, the decree affirmed, and the judgment of affirmance was formally entered upon its records.

At the January term thereof, in 1869, the said appellant, by her counsel, entered upon the motion docket a motion to have this judgment of affirmance vacated and declared null and void, and the entry thereof expunged from the records of the court.

The grounds for this motion, as set out in the same, are the following, to-wit: “ 1st. The said judgment of affirm[468]*468anee and entry thereof, were not, andaré not, the judgment or entry of the supreme court of Alabama, but of A. J Walker, Thomas J. Judge, and Wm. M. Byrd, who were, severally, at the time, incapable, under the then existing law of the land, of holding or exercising the office, or functions, or powers of the supreme court of Alabama, or of affirming any judgment; and who, at the time, had no power or authority as judges of said supreme court, or otherwise, to affirm any judgment, or to make, or cause to be made, any entry of a judgment of affirmance in or for the supreme court of Alabama.

2d. The said judgment of affirmance and entry were made without any lawful authority, and contrary to law, and are utterly void.”

With the papers filed in this motion, is an agreement of the parties, signed by their respective attorneys, which it is not thought necessary to set out in this opinion. I also find with the papers, a copy of, the opinion of the court affirming said decree of the probate court.

In this connection, it may be properly stated that it no where appears that the plaintiff in this motion, either in the probate court, or in this court, made any objections to the competency or jurisdiction of either court, but, on the contrary, after the decree in the probate court, the said plaintiff became the actor, and prayed the court to reverse said decree for the errors assigned by her.

I have examined that opinion carefully, and with all respect for the court, whose opinion it is, and for the learned chief-justice who delivered it, I cannot approve of either the reasoning or conclusion of said opinion. The decree should have been reversed, and not affirmed. The judgment affirming said decree is based upon the act of the ninth of November, 1861 (Pamphlet Acts, p. 53), entitled An act to authorize executors, administrators, guardians and trustees to make loans to the Confederate States, and to purchase and receive, in payment of debts due them, bonds and treasury notes of the Confederate States, or the State of Alabama, and coupons which are due on bonds of the Confederate States, and of said State.”

It is worthy of note that this act is permissive merely; [469]*469the language is, the parties named may make loans, &c.} but the act nowhere, either directly or by implication even, requires such loans or investments to be made. I do this to show that all such investments were purely voluntary, and that such parties cannot plead or set up any plausible justification or excuse, on the ground that they acted under the influence of force, or the power of the vis major.

No one, it seems to me, who reads this act, can fail at once to see and understand the manifest purposes and object of it; that they were to encourage and give aid to the rebellion, then existing in what are now called the rebel States, against the government of the United States. The act, therefore, was in the most flagrant sense, not only in conflict with the constitution of the United States, but also a grave violation of public policy, and, therefore, null and void.

The act being void, it can afford parties no legal justification or excuse for such investments. They should be held to be made at the peril of the parties making them, and leave them to account to tbeir cestuis que trusts for the sum or sums so invested.

The decree, therefore, should have been reversed and remanded, with instructions to the probate court to charge the guardian with the amount of said investment, with the interest on the same. It is hard to conceive; and I am unable to conceive it as credible, that any prudent man, acting in a fiduciary character, could, in good faith, make such an investment at the time this investment was made. "Why, Confederate bonds and treasury-notes were then worth less than five cents on the dollar, and in less than twelve months, were worth nominally less than two cents on the dollar, but, in reality, worth nothing. Such an investment strikes the mind with amazement, as an enormity, and excludes the idea of good faith. But the errors of this judgment of affirmance afford this court no reason or authority, on this motion, to declare it void, or to set it aside, or to expunge the entry of it from the records.

There is no doubt that not only this court, but also every court of record, hath the inherent power for the purpose of protecting the integrity, and preserving the purity of their [470]*470records, to strike out and expunge the entry of any order, judgment or decree made without their authority, or that in any way, or by any means, improperly finds a place upon their records.

This motion, however, does not present such a question, for the reason that the entry of this judgment was made by the order and authority of this court, as then organized.

If this court, as then organized, had the authority to entertain the appeal, and to hear and determine it, the fate of this motion is settled ; it must, in that case, be overruled.

In my judgment, it had such authority, as I will try to show before I close this opinion.

But whether it had such authority or not, there is a rule of practice, even if it had not such authority, that renders it improper for this court, now, to entertain this or any other motion, at the instance of this plaintiff, to set aside said judgment, or to expunge the entry thereof from the records, upon the ground of the incompetency of the court, or its want of jurisdiction.

As I have before stated, it no where appears that any exception or objection, even, was made in the probate court, or in this court, as to the legal competency or jurisdiction of either court.

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43 Ala. 459, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/powell-v-boon-booth-ala-1869.