State Ex Rel. Lile v. Glenn

131 S.W.2d 473, 23 Tenn. App. 299, 1938 Tenn. App. LEXIS 89
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedOctober 22, 1938
StatusPublished

This text of 131 S.W.2d 473 (State Ex Rel. Lile v. Glenn) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Ex Rel. Lile v. Glenn, 131 S.W.2d 473, 23 Tenn. App. 299, 1938 Tenn. App. LEXIS 89 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1938).

Opinion

KETCHUM, J.

The appellees move to dismiss complainant’s appeal in this case because the motion for a new trial was not filed with the clerk and master and submitted to the court within fifteen days after the rendition of the verdict, as required by rule 31 of the chancery court.

This objection to the consideration of the motion for a new trial was not interposed until after the chancellor had heard the argument and overruled the motion for a new trial. The chancellor did not invoke the rule himself, and declined to deny the complainant the right of an appeal for failure to comply with it, because the rule was not seasonably invoked.

In this we think he was right as the rule was adopted for the convenience of the chancery court, and the chancellor had the right, in his discretion, to waive the benefit of it if he saw proper to do so.

The motion to dismiss the appeal in this court is therefore denied.

Opinion.

This is a suit against the sureties on a guardian’s bond executed by James D. Lile as guardian for his infant son, Perry Lile, to recover the sum of $1,000 which came into the hands of the guardian at or about the time of his appointment, “with interests and increments thereon.”

Perry Lile became of age on September 3, 1936, and filed this bill on June 23, 1937. His father, the guardian, died in October, 1932.

The records in the office of the probate court show that James D. Lile qualified as guardian for Perry Lile on October 29, 1920, and that he executed a guardian’s bond in the penalty of $2,000 on that date with the defendants as sureties thereon, and that he filed his inventory on the 9th day of May, 1921, from which it appeared that there had come into his hands as such guardian the sum of $1,000, the proceeds of an insurance policy on the life of Charles Lile, an uncle of said Perry Lile. He filed no other account, made no settlement of his guardianship, and did not renew his bond as required by *302 tbe statute (Code 1932, section 8483) ; and there is no evidence that be invested or loaned ont tbe money belonging to bis ward.

The defense to tbe bill is that tbe said James D. Lile was a farmer of limited means with a large family, and that tbe entire fund which came into bis bands as such guardian was consumed in tbe necessary support, maintenance and education of bis ward. There is no claim that tbe other children were charged with anything for their support, maintenance and education or that Perry received any consideration that the other children did not receive; and the sole contention is that because the guardian was a man of limited means he had the right to charge Perry for his board and clothing 'and set these items off against the amount due him in his settlement as guardian. It is not alleged or proved that he ever made any charge against Perry for his support and maintenance, and he did not file any bill in the chancery court asking leave to encroach on the corpus of his ward’s estate for his support, maintenance and education.

The proof is that he was 55 years of age when Perry Lile was born; that he owned a farm of about 160 acres near Locke, in Shelby County, about one-half of which was in cultivation, and that his farm was mortgaged; that he had a family of twelve, consisting of his wife and himself, two sisters and eight children; that he sold his farm in 1926, and moved to Memphis where his wife ran a boarding hou.se. Perry was reared and treated just exactly as the other children were treated, went to the public school at Locke until the family moved to Memphis, and then to the Bruce School and the Bellevue Junior High School in Memphis.

The defendants demanded a jury and the ease was submitted to the jury on the following issues:

“1. Was J. D. Lile, father of Perry Lile, during the time that he was guardian of Perry Lile, financially unable to support his son, Perry Lile f

“2. Did J. D. Lile, during the time he was guardian of Perry Lile, expend, in necessary and proper support, maintenance and education of Perry Lile, as much as the total of Perry Lile’s funds in the possession of J. D. Lile as guardian?”

The jury answered both these issues affirmatively.

There are four assignments of error in this court, one of •which is that the chancellor erred in refusing the complainant’s motion that he withdraw the issues from the jury and decide the case himself in favor of the complainant, on the undisputed facts.

We think this motion should have been granted. Perry was treated exactly as the other children were treated and there was no evidence that expenditures made for his benefit were ever charged against him by his father, and the claim now made by the sureties has all the earmarks of being an afterthought. It is not the claim of the *303 guardian, but a claim set up by the sureties years after the death of the guardian, as a defense to the complainant’s suit.

It is, of course, the duty of the parent to support and maintain his minor child, and there is nothing in this record to indicate that James D. Lile did not recognize this obligation. No distinction was made in the treatment of his children. No account was kept against Perry in which he was charged with board and clothing, and no application was made to any court for leave to encroach on the corpus of the estate for his support and maintenance, and no reason or excuse is now shown why such application was not made.

One of the sureties did offer to testify that after Mr. Lile moved to Memphis he went with Lile to see Judge Guthrie, Judge of the Probate Court, and asked to be relieved as a surety on the bond, and he says that Lile then asked Judge Guthrie if he could use the funds in his hands for the support of his ward, and that Judge Guthrie told him he could; but the chancellor properly excluded this testimony, and the defendants are not now assigning any error upon his action in this regard. This same surety offered to testify that the guardian at one time showed him a little red book which he said contained the charges made against his son, Perry, but the book was not produced, and no other witness testified to having ever seen such a book. The chancellor excluded this testimony also, and no error is assigned upon his action in excluding it. In fact, no exception was taken at the time.

It is the contention of the defendants that in view of the financial condition of the guardian, and his inability to support and maintain his large family, they are entitled to set up the reasonable cost of the support and maintenance of the ward as a defense to the complainant’s suit. There are cases in which this may be done, even to the complete exhaustion of the entire estate of the award, (1) where the circumstances are such that a court of chancery would have authorized an encroachment upon the corpus in advance, and (2) where a sufficient and satisfactory excuse is given for the failure to make application in advance for leave so to encroach upon the corpus.

The English rule and that laid down in the early cases in this state, was that the unauthorized acts of a guardian in encroaching upon the corpus of a ward’s estate, without the previous sanction of the chancery court, would not be ratified or confirmed by the court. Phillips v. Davis, 34 Tenn., (2 Sneed), 520, 62 Am. Dec. 472; Cohen v.

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13 S.W.2d 800 (Tennessee Supreme Court, 1929)
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Bluebook (online)
131 S.W.2d 473, 23 Tenn. App. 299, 1938 Tenn. App. LEXIS 89, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-lile-v-glenn-tennctapp-1938.