Ward v. Stallworth

11 So. 2d 374, 243 Ala. 651, 1942 Ala. LEXIS 336
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedNovember 27, 1942
Docket2 Div. 181.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 11 So. 2d 374 (Ward v. Stallworth) 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
Ward v. Stallworth, 11 So. 2d 374, 243 Ala. 651, 1942 Ala. LEXIS 336 (Ala. 1942).

Opinion

*655 FOSTER, Justice.

The main question argued in this case relates to the legal effect of the conveyance by a person residing in Florida of her real property situated in Alabama, when she had been declared by the Florida court to be insane, and an ancillary guardian appointed in Alabama; but at the time of the conveyance, the Florida cdurt having jurisdiction had decreed that she was restored to sanity, but the Alabama guardianship had not been discharged, assuming that she was in fact incompetent to transact that sort of business some three months after the Florida decree.

The contention seemed to prevail below that the full faith and credit clause of the Federal Constitution (section 1, Article 4) requires all the courts of Alabama to accept, without question, the fact of the competency of the grantor and her status of sanity at the time of the conveyance executed after the rendition of the Florida decree, and that plaintiff’s right to recover was established by that holding, notwithstanding the land was in possession of defendant as an ancillary guardian under appointment in this State still undischarged.

Our statute on the subject of an ancillary guardianship is section 21, Title 21, Code of 1940, as follows: “Nonresident persons of unsound mind. — The court of probate of a county in which a person of unsound mind residing without the state may have property, real or personal, requiring the care of a guardian, may appoint a guardian for the property of such person which may be within this state, if such person has been declared of unsound mind by a court having jurisdiction in the state of his residence.”

This does not involve an inquiry into the mental soundness of the ward in such proceeding. .

There is no express provision of Alabama law for revoking letters of ancillary guardianship or discharging the guardian for any reason except as section 20, Title 21, Code of 1940, may be so construed. Whereas if a resident of this State has been in this State duly adjudged of unsound mind, express provision is made for revocation, when the same court shall adjudge that the ward had become of sound mind. Sections 16, 17, 18, 19 and 20, Title 21, Code of 1940.

The guardianship of an incompetent may be • terminated when it is no longer necessary by reason of the ward’s restoration to competency. 25 Amer.Jur. 37, section 53(7).

The adjudication of a competent court in his domicile, within its jurisdiction and powers properly invoked, that one was restored to sanity would not ipso facto, and without an order of the probate court in Alabama, appointing the ancillary guardian, serve to revoke his letters of guardianship or discharge the power of such Alabama guardian or restore the Alabama property to the custody of the ward, but would be a proper ground for an order of revocation and then for requiring the guardian to make settlement under section 134, Title 21, Code of 1940. But the guardianship in Alabama is effective until it is discharged by a competent court in Alabama. 33 Corpus Juris 676, § 336, p. 677, notes 33, 34 and 35; 28 Amer.Jur. 671, section 23, notes (3) and (4); 102 A.L.R. 450.

*656 In Gasquet v. Fenner, 1918, 247 U.S. 16, 38 S.Ct. 416, 417, 62 L.Ed. 956, it was held that a decree of a court of Tennessee adjudicating one to be sane who had been declared incompetent by a prior decree of a Louisiana court, his former residence, could at most furnish grounds for a conclusive right to have the interdiction decree (on account of insanity) removed in Louisiana. The alleged sane person, after having procured the decree adjudicating him sane in Tennessee (where he became domiciled), notwithstanding the decree of interdiction in Louisiana, brought suit in Louisiana as a sane person to recover from the executor of his mother’s will property to which he would be ultimately entitled as a beneficiary, and contended that by the dismissal of his bill recognition and full faith were denied to the decree of the Tennessee court. The court said:

"Whatever may be the conclusiveness of the Tennessee decree it cannot operate upon the interdiction directly. At most it can only furnish ground for a conclusive right to have the interdiction removed." (Italics supplied.) See, also, Interdiction of Gasquet, 147 La. 722, 85 So. 884.

To like effect is the case of Jones v. Golden, 66 N.D. 185, 263 N.W. 160, 102 A.L. R. 441.

It is the duty of a guardian until his letters are revoked to manage the estate of the ward. Section 42, Title 21, Code of 1940. And this duty applies to the estate of a non compos mentis. Ramsey v. McMillan, 214 Ala. 185, 106 So. 848. This is also true as to the lands of the ward, including the right to lease them (sections 45 and 53), to repair them (section 55), to keep the farming operations together and going when prescribed by order of court (sections 56 and 57), to sell the land under court orders for the purposes specified in the statute (sections 73, 76 and 81).

We do not doubt that a ward either a minor or a non compos mentis, having become sui juris can make a binding contract as to his property rights then in the custody of the guardian, subject to the power of the court over the same necessary to a final settlement of the guardianship. But even so, neither the ward nor a purchaser of the land from him when it is in possession of the guardian legally charged with the duty of its management can recover at law such possession from the guardian while the duty and authority as such continue in him. Lee v. Lee, 55 Ala. 590, 595; Chapman v. Chapman, 32 Ala. 106; 25 Amer.Jur. 97, 98, sections 157, 158. That is the status of this suit, and is conclusive against the right of plaintiff to recover the land in this suit as now set up, but not of the ultimate rights of the parties. It is immaterial that defendant is not sued as guardian. If he is: entitled to retain possession of the land on any account, plaintiff cannot recover it of him, since plaintiff must show a right to the immediate possession. Cofer v. Schening, 98 Ala. 338, 13 So. 123; Olive v. Adams, 50 Ala. 373.

The argument of counsel and incidents of the trial convince us that the judgment below was rendered on the theory that the Florida judgment was conclusive of the sanity of the grantor at the time of executing the deed, and that her purchaser acquired a title by the deed which he conveyed to the plaintiff and which justified a recovery against one who was the guardian in possession during the continuance of his status as such. We think that he cannot recover in this action, and that his right to the land is not concluded by the Florida decree, nor by the result of this suit, but upon a proper application of section 41, Title 9, Code of 1940, for reasons now to be stated.

In our case of Pope v. Bolin, 224 Ala. 322, 140 So. 382, we gave approval to the obvious legal effect of a finding of insanity and then of sanity in the same court, holding that it was res adjudicata of that status at the time of the adjudication as between the parties to such proceeding; that a revocation of a guardianship causes the previous adjudication to cease to be evidence of a continuing status of mental incapacity to manage her own estate. (Citing 32 Corpus Juris 646, § 225).

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Bluebook (online)
11 So. 2d 374, 243 Ala. 651, 1942 Ala. LEXIS 336, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ward-v-stallworth-ala-1942.