Tucker v. American Surety Co. Of New York

191 F.2d 959, 1951 U.S. App. LEXIS 2664
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedOctober 30, 1951
Docket13703
StatusPublished

This text of 191 F.2d 959 (Tucker v. American Surety Co. Of New York) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tucker v. American Surety Co. Of New York, 191 F.2d 959, 1951 U.S. App. LEXIS 2664 (5th Cir. 1951).

Opinion

SIBLEY, Circuit Judge.

Appellant, Mrs. Adele. Louise Tucker, was adjudged insane by .due proceedings in the Court of Ordinary of Ware County, Georgia on December 18, 1929, and on the same date the Court ordered that “W. W. Sharpe, Sr. be and he is hereby appointed guardian of the person' and property of Mrs. A. L. Tucker and that letters of guardianship issue to the said W. W. Sharpe, Sr. upon his taking the usual oath and giving bond and security as required by law in the sum of Forty Thousand Dollars ($40,000) * * Sharpe, on the same date, took his oath and the Ordinary issued to him letters of guardianship. The letters do not recite the giving of a bond, nor do the minutes, nor is there recorded a bond of $40,000.00 in the bond book required to be kept by the Ordinary. Nothing further was done about the estate in Court till December 23, 1929, when the guardian filed in Court a petition under oath alleging that -he is the duly appointed, qualified and acting guardian of Mrs. A. L. Tucker, that she has a large amount of real estate in Florida which he has sought to take charge of, but has learned his Georgia guardianship is not valid in Florida, and he will not be in charge of the Florida real estate or responsible therefor; that he was placed under a bond of $40,-000.00 in contemplation of his taking charge of said Florida real estate; but the only estate he will have in his hands consists of some jewelry and a monthly income not exceeding $200.00; that funds, in his hands are insufficient to pay a premium on a bond of $40,000.00, and a bond of $2,-000.00 would be amply sufficient. On the same day an order was made: “The above and foregoing petition read and considered. It is ordered that bond in said matter be reduced from Forty Thousand Dollars to the sum of Two Thousand Dollars and that the old bond of Forty Thousand Dollars be •cancelled and that a new bond issue in the sum of Two Thousand Dollars.” On December 26, 1929 a bond in the sum of Two Thousand Dollars with American Surety Company by H. H. Burnett, Agent, as surety was made, attested and approved by the Ordinary, and recorded in the bond book. That bond is now in the files of the Court, as is a Power of Attorney dated December 17, 1929 from the American Surety Company to a local agent, H. H. Burnett, authorizing him to execute “bond in the sum of Forty Thousand Dollars on behalf of W. W. Sharpe as guardian of Mrs. Tucker”. The Guardian made regular annual returns, showing the payment of $12.50 premium for a $2,000.00 bond each year, the first in January, 1930. There is no record of a larger premium paid on a larger bond at any time. The guardian died in 1939, and it is alleged that there has been no representation on his estate.

*961 Mrs. Tucker was adjudged restored to sanity in 1949, and brought in a State Court a suit on an alleged $40,000.00 bond against American Surety Company as surety for W. W. Sharpe, Sr. as her guardian, dated December 18, 1929, alleging a large devastavit. The suit was removed to the Federal District Court. One defense denied that the Company had ever executed a bond of $40,000.00, but that if it had, the bond’for $2,000.00, which it did execute, was validly substituted for it. This defense was ordered tried separately and, as a result, a verdict was directed for the defendant. The judgment entered is without prejudice to a suit on any bond other than the one sued on. On this appeal two questions are argued: Is there any sufficient evidence that American Surety Company ever executed the $40,000.00 bond sued on? Was the judgment of the Court of December 23, 1929 effective to annul such bond if executed ?

The evidence was, in the main, the records of the Court of Ordinary stated above. All the proceedings occurred during the December Term, 1929. No other orders were made in that term about this estate. The then Ordinary is dead, as is the local agent of the surety company, and the guardian. No one testifies who ever saw a $40,000.00 bond. The attorney who procured the adjudication of insanity as representing a Mrs. Hay, and who also signed as attorney the petition of the guardian to reduce the bond, is in life, but neither side took his testimony. We do not know, nor can we guess, what he knew or remembers. He is not in any way connected with the American Surety Company, nor was he in 1929, and we see no sound basis for an inference against that Company for not producing him. Bank of Emanuel v. Smith, 32 Ga.App. 606, 124 S.E. 114; Brothers v. Horne, 140 Ga. 617, 618(3), 79 S.E. 468. But it appears that American Surety Company, on the day before the guardian was appointed, authorized its local agent to execute a $40,000.00 bond, and this authority went into the Ordinary’s file, and he issued letters of guardianship, which is not usually done till bond is made, and the guardian on December 23 in his petition stated that he is duly qualified as guardian, and wants his bond reduced. The Ordinary’s judgment on that date speaks of “cancelling the old bond for Forty Thousand Dollars” as though it were in existence. Against these things is to be put the absence of the $40,000.00 bond from the files, absence of its approval by the Ordinary which the Statute requires, and of its record in the 'bond book also required (Ga. Civil Code-of 1910 1 Sects. 3047, 3048 and 3090), and the fact that no large premium appears to have ever been paid, the guardian swearing that the estate did not have enough money. It may be that a bond for $40,000.00 was prepared, even signed by the local agent, and was to be paid for by the guardian and approved by the Ordinary so soon as the guardian could go to Florida with his letters and get funds. The letters would be valid without a bond; New York Life Insurance Company v. Gilmore, 171 Ga. 894, 157 S.E. 188. Though Mrs. Tucker has the burden of proof, it may be that on these facts a jury question was presented as to the bond having been fully executed and made effective.

But we think the direction of the verdict was proper because the $40,000.00 bond, if made, fell with the change made in the judgment fixing it before the end of the term. It appears that in Georgia there is no provision of law for reducing or cancelling a guardian’s bond, except that a surety can obtain release by getting another surety to take his place both as to past and future defaults of the guardian. Ga.Civil Code of 1910, Sec. 3052. But the point here is that the change was made within the same term of the Court. Until adjournment sine die or the coming on of another term the judge had full control of the judgment. Citing a multitude of cases, State and Federal, 49 C.J.S., Judgments, § 229 states: “At common law a court has full control over its orders or judgments during the term at which they are made, and may, on sufficient cause shown amend, correct, open, or vacate such judgments.

*962 * * * This power is inherent and exists independently of any statute.” In a case appealed from this Court the Supreme Court in Zimmern v. United States, 298 U.S. 167, 56 S.Ct. 706, 80 L.Ed. 1118, so held, citing its earlier decisions. A few of the many Georgia cases in the State Supreme Court are: Jordan v. Tarver, 92 Ga. 379, 17 S.E. 351; Cooley v. Tybee Beach Company, 99 Ga. 290, 25 S.E. 691, from a City Court; Bowen v. Wyeth, 119 Ga. 687, 46 S.E. 823, where “courts of record” are stated to be within the rule; Perkins v. Castleberry, 119 Ga. 702, 46 S.E.

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Zimmern v. United States
298 U.S. 167 (Supreme Court, 1936)
New York Life Insurance v. Gilmore
157 S.E. 188 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 1931)
East Side Lumber & Coal Co. v. Barfield
18 S.E.2d 492 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 1942)
Great American Indemnity Co. v. Jeffries
16 S.E.2d 135 (Court of Appeals of Georgia, 1941)
Perkins v. Attaway
14 Ga. 27 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 1853)
Dupont v. Mayo
56 Ga. 304 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 1876)
Davis v. Howard
56 Ga. 430 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 1876)
Jordan v. Tarver
17 S.E. 351 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 1893)
Cooley v. Tybee Beach Co.
25 S.E. 691 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 1896)
Stuckey v. Watkins
37 S.E. 401 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 1900)
Bowen v. Wyeth
46 S.E. 823 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 1904)
Perkins v. Castleberry
46 S.E. 825 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 1904)
Brothers v. Horne
79 S.E. 468 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 1913)
Berrien County Bank v. Alexander
115 S.E. 648 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 1922)
Gaines v. Gaines
150 S.E. 645 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 1929)
Kerr v. Kerr
189 S.E. 20 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 1936)
Bank of Emanuel v. Smith
124 S.E. 114 (Court of Appeals of Georgia, 1924)

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191 F.2d 959, 1951 U.S. App. LEXIS 2664, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tucker-v-american-surety-co-of-new-york-ca5-1951.