Title Guaranty & Surety Co. v. Cowen

177 P. 563, 71 Okla. 299, 1916 Okla. LEXIS 1360
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJuly 11, 1916
Docket7598
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 177 P. 563 (Title Guaranty & Surety Co. v. Cowen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Title Guaranty & Surety Co. v. Cowen, 177 P. 563, 71 Okla. 299, 1916 Okla. LEXIS 1360 (Okla. 1916).

Opinions

Opinion by

EDWARDS, C.

John R. Cow-en was appointed guardian of Charles Cowen and Myrtle Susie Cowen, minors, by the United States Court of Indian Territory, prior to statehood. He executed a guardian’s bond, with the plaintiff in error as surety.’ In 1908 the said John R. Cowen filed his resignation as such guardian, which was accepted by the court, and the said Cowen ordered to file his final report, and one R. A. Price, Jr., was appointed guardian for the said minors. The said Price served but a few months and resigned his guardianship, which resignation was accepted, and the said John R. Cowen was reappointed guardian of said minors and gave a new bond upon which bond, the plaintiff in error was not surety. The court was unable to get a re-* port from the said John R. Cowen as guardian and in May, 1911, he was required, to reinquish the guardianship of said minors* and A. Neely was appointed their guardian. In June, 1913, said Cowen was finally compelled by the court to make a final report of his doings as such guardian. The said report covered the time of both periods in which he acted as guardian, and is detailed and itemized to show the transactions covering the periods of time included under both his first and second service as guardian. After the filing of said report the county court, after due notice, made and entered an order-approving same; such order being filed in each ease. The said report discloses a liability from the said John R. Cowen to said minors. The guardian, A. Neely, thereafter and during the year 1913, filed separate suits upon the bonds for each of said minors, for the amount as shown to be due by said report, for transactions occurring during the first period of the guardianship of John R. Cowen. The actions of the two minors were consolidated and tried to the court without a jury, and judgment was entered for said minors. The court made specific findings upon all matters embodied in said report, that the amounts for which the judgment was rendered we're for transactions occurring under the first- period of-guardianship of said John R. Cowen. The plaintiff in error in due time filed an appeal in this Court.

*300 The plaintiff in error argues two propositions for the reversal of this ease: First. That there has never been a valid, legal, binding, and conclusive final settlement of the account of John R. Oowen under his first appointment, and in the absence thereof no action can, be maintained against the surety on his bond. Second. That the resignation of said John R. Oowen in 1908, having been accepted by the court, fixed the liability of the surety on the bond, requiring only the final report to determine the amount, and, the action not having been in.stituted within five years thereafter, that the suit is barred by the statute of limitations. These propositions will be considered in their order.

Under the first proposition the plaintiff in error admits that a final report of a guardian and the order of the county court settling the account and directing the payment of the balance found due will conclude the sureties on the guardian’s bond, whether they are parties to the hearing or not. But it is earnestly contended that as the two appointments of John R. Cowen were separate and distinct, that is, as there was a hiatus in his term of service during the time that Price was guardian, and that as the report as finally made 'by the said Cowen was made under the last appointment, that the sureties on the bond covering the guardianship under the first appointment are not bound by such report, nor by the order of the court approving same, no matter what may be shown by such report, nor what order the court made thereon.

We cannot assent to this proposition. It appears to us that the entire guardianship matter in the county court is, as to eách minor, one case or proceeding, and that the mere resignation or removal of a guardian and the appointment of a successor, does not render'it a new case, but is a mere incident of the pending case. In Brown et al. v. Fidelity & Deposit Co. (Tex. Civ. App ) 76 S. W. 944, the court said:

“Where an application for the appointment of a guardian of the estate of a minor has once been made, and notice thereof duly given, no further application or notice is required, to warrant the appointment of a successor to the guardian first appointed and then removed for cause. Such is our construction of the statute regulating the appointment of guardians. The probate court undoubtedly had jurisdiction of the estate of the Campbell minors when Ida L. Campbell was removed from the guardianship, and had not lost that jurisdiction when Massie was appointed, and the settlement with him approved.”

In De Berry v. Wootters (Tex. Civ. App.) 57 S. W. 885. it is held:

“We are of the opinion that the order of the county court maue m 1881, approving the final account of the guardians, and discharging them, was a final adjudication of all the items contained in said account, and of the balance due the guardians, and that the guardianship cannot be reopened, and the account was filed for both the guardianship and t,he estate, and that they were considered together, can make no difference. All the transactions, except as some insignificant amounts, belonged to the guardianship. The order that was entered closed the guardianship and discharged the appellee air his wife of their trust as guardians.”

So we conclude that, while it would have been the proper practice to file a separate report covering the two periods of the guardianship of John R. Cowen, yet the filing of the report covering the entire guardianship, though such guardianship is under two separate and distinct appointments, and broken by the guardianship of a third person, is not reversible error.

Upon the second proposition, that the action is barred by the statute of limitations, we find section 6582, Revised Laws 1910, as follows:

“No action can be maintained against the sureties on any bond given by a guardian, unless it be commenced within three years from the discharge or removal of the guardian ; but if at the time of such discharge the person entitled to ¡bring such action is under any legal disability to sue, the action may be commenced * * * within three years after such disability is removed.”

In the case of Grimsby v. Hudnell, 76 Ga. 378, 2 Am. St. Rep. 46, the court holds:

“The first assignment of error is that the court held that defendant in error was not barred by the statute of limitations, because she was an infant when her right of action accrued, and her action was brought within four years atter attaining her majority, although she had a guardian during her minority, and this ruling is the main error complained of. The right of action in this case was in the infant, and although her guardian might maintain the action in the infant’s name, the title or right was in her. If the legal title had been in the guardian, and the infant had the beneficial interest in the cause of action, then perhaps, as the guardian would have been barred, the infant would also have been barred. This is the rule applied in case of executors, administrators, and trustees, the beneficial interest being in *301 infants. Wingfield v. Virgin, 51 Ga. 142. * * * We see nothing in this, case to take it out of the exceptions as laid down in sections 2926 and 2927 of the Code.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
177 P. 563, 71 Okla. 299, 1916 Okla. LEXIS 1360, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/title-guaranty-surety-co-v-cowen-okla-1916.