Prudential Ins. Co. v. Gleason

187 So. 229, 185 Miss. 243, 1939 Miss. LEXIS 133
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 20, 1939
DocketNo. 33445.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 187 So. 229 (Prudential Ins. Co. v. Gleason) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Prudential Ins. Co. v. Gleason, 187 So. 229, 185 Miss. 243, 1939 Miss. LEXIS 133 (Mich. 1939).

Opinion

*268 Griffith, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

Oliver Eastland died intestate in Sunflower County in December, 1919, leaving as his only heirs his widow and five minor children. The oldest child, Betty O. East-land, now Gleason, was at that time twelve years of age. Mr. Eastland owned in fee simple a plantation of about 612 acres, in four neighboring tracts. Two of these aggregating approximately 112 acres are practically adjacent and are referred to in the record as “the Home Place.” The other two tracts, aggregating approximately 500 acres, are sufficiently close together to be considered one tract. He owned also a half-interest in 2.34 acres, referred to in the record as the gin site.

After Mr. Eastland’s death the widow, with the voluntary aid of Woods C. Eastland, a brother of the deceased, continued to operate the plantation. In January, 1922, the widow married Pentecost, and it was thereafter deemed advisable that the property be divided in kind between the former widow and her children, so that the *269 portion to which the children would be entitled should be set apart to them separately from that of their mother.

In the attempt to carry out this plan, a petition was filed on October 14,1924, to remove the disabilities of the minority of Betty C. Eastland, then seventeen years of age, and on that date a decree was rendered removing her disabilities specially but not generally. On the same day a petition was filed praying the appointment of Betty C. Eastland as guardian of her four younger brothers and sisters; and a decree was made appointing Betty as guardian, and she gave bond, received letters and proceeded to discharge the duties of a guardian.

Less than two months thereafter, on December 8, 1924, Mrs. Pentecost, and Betty C. Eastland in her own behalf and as guardian for her four minor brothers and sisters, filed an ex parte petition for the partition of all the lands above mentioned, and prayed that the 112 acres be set apart in severalty to Mrs. Pentecost as her share, and that the remainder be allotted in solido to the five children as their aggregate share. The prayer of this petition was granted, and it was ordered that Betty C. Eastland for herself and as guardian for her minor tenants in common make a deed to Mrs. Pentecost for the Home place of 112 acres, and that the latter execute a deed to the children for the remaining land, which was accordingly done.

Mrs. Pentecost having taken exclusive possession of the 112 acres allotted to her, later gave, as if the sole owner of the said 112 acres, a deed of trust thereon to appellant, the Prudential Insurance Company, which deed of trust was validly foreclosed by a sale in pais on July 20, 1935, at which sale the insurance company became the sole purchaser, and received the trustee’s deed. The remaining lands allotted to the children were divided in kind among themselves by partition in pais and by deeds in pursuance thereof, executed during the months of December, 1933, and January, 1934, the disabilities of those who were then still minors having been removed *270 for that purpose, and each entered into possession of his severed portion.

Sometime during the year 1935, the children or some of them having learned, for the first time, of the real facts touching all the steps theretofore taken, and as have been above briefly outlined, and that all said proceedings had in fact been invalid, the four children, other than Betty, filed their bill on December 17,1935, against Betty and against Mrs. Pentecost, and the insurance company, praying that the ex parte judicial partition proceedings above mentioned be declared void; that the 112 acres allotted to Mrs. Pentecost be partitioned in kind, and that they recover their interest of one-sixth each in the said 112 acres. Betty C. Eastland answered, admitting the allegations of the bill, and suggested that she also was entitled to her one-sixth interest in said 112 acres. The insurance company answered denying that the judicial partition proceedings were void, and filed its cross-bill averring that the proceedings were valid, or, if not, that the children, by their subsequent partition of the remaining land in pais among themselves, had ratified the judicial partition, and if mistaken in both of the foregoing contentions then in the alternative that the insurance company was, in equity as the assignee of Mrs. Pentecost, the owner of an undivided one-sixth interest in the entire property of more than 610’ acres, and demanded a partition thereof between appellant and the other tenants; and if still mistaken, the cross-bill prayed for general relief.

It is to be noted that the children in attacking the original partition did not bring back into the factual equation the whole tract of 612 plus 2.34 acres, but make the effort to hold on to the portion received by each of them in severalty and at the same time to obtain an undivided one-sixth in the portion assigned in severalty to Mrs. Pentecost and by her alienated to the insurance company. They demurred to the cross-bill, the demurrers *271 were sustained, the cross-bill was dismissed, and a partition was ordered solely of the 112 acres.

• The above thumbnail sketch, together with such further of the facts as will be later mentioned, will furnish, as we think, a sufficient statement of the facts to bring out the legal questions which we are called on to decide.

Although the statutes are silent on the subject, a minor •.cannot be appointed guardian of another minor, for this would not be within the purposes for which a guardian is appointed. A guardian, as the name implies, is a person appointed by the court to guard the interests of another person who, by reason of infancy, lunacy, or the like, is incapable of guarding his own interests without aid. It would be an anomaly that a minor, disabled by reason of his infancy, should have another infant likewise disabled and incompetent, to take care of him as guardian. Moreover, a guardian before being allowed to receive letters must execute a guardian’s bond, and an infant has no capacity to execute such a bond as a binding instrument.

It is unnecessary to decide whether an infant whose disabilities of minority have been generally and-fully removed in a judicial proceedings and by a final judicial decree to that effect may be appointed guardian; because here the decree removing the disabilities of minority was special and limited as follows: “It is therefore ordered and adjudged and decreed that the disability of minority of the said Betty C. Eastland be and the same is hereby specially removed; that said Betty C. Eastland is hereby empowered to do any and all acts in reference to her property that meets with the approval of her uncle, W. C. Eastland, and which approval must be in writing.” Her authority under that decree was a conditional power to deal with her own property, whereas a guardian deals with the property of another and a different person,— treating, for the purposes of this case, but not as decision, the recital in regard to the necessity of approval by her uncle as surplusage. We say nothing of the effect of *272 the acts of a minor, as guardian, who, although a minor, has been appointed guardian.

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Bluebook (online)
187 So. 229, 185 Miss. 243, 1939 Miss. LEXIS 133, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/prudential-ins-co-v-gleason-miss-1939.