Williams v. Williams

81 So. 41, 202 Ala. 539, 1919 Ala. LEXIS 308
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedJanuary 16, 1919
Docket6 Div. 803.
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 81 So. 41 (Williams v. Williams) 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
Williams v. Williams, 81 So. 41, 202 Ala. 539, 1919 Ala. LEXIS 308 (Ala. 1919).

Opinion

MAYFIELD, J.

.The bill in this case is filed undey sections 3914 and 3916 of the Code of 1907, to correct errors of the probate court in the settlement of the accounts of appellee as guardian of appellant.

The alleged errors consist in allowing the guardian $12 per month out of the estate of the ward for his maintenance, from December, 1914, to December, 1916, amounting in all to $295.98.

The sole ground alleged to show the allowance to be error is that the guardian was the foster father of the ward, and therefore should have maintained him out of the guardian’s estate and not that of the ward.

The trial court sustained a demurrer to the original bill. The complainant amended his bill five times, a demurrer being sustained to the bill after each amendment. From the decree sustaining the demurrer to the bill as last amended the complainant prosecutes this appeal.

*540 The substance of the amendments was to allege, in terms more or less general, that the allowance was procured by fraud on the part of the guardian, by false swearing, by concealing from the court the fact that the guardian was the foster parent of the ward, made so by adopting the ward as his child. The ward was ignorant of the fact that his guardian had adopted him, and that the adoption was had in order for the guardian to get possession of the person and estate of the ward. His entire estate was shown to be only $332.50.

The real equity of the bill was not very much strengthened, if any, by any or all of the amendments. Much of the matter added by the amendments was irrelevant and immaterial in this or a similar proceeding. If this had been an application to appoint the guardian, or had been an original hearing on a partial or final settlement of the accounts of the guardian, the matters added by amendments might have been important and material; but not in a bill like this, merely to correct errors in the settlement of the accounts.

A number of cases have been brought to this court which involved a construction of one or both of these sections of the Code. Many, if not all, of the cases have been recently collected, cited, and ably and thoroughly reviewed by Justice Thomas in the case of Evans v. Evans, 76 South. 95-103. 1 it is therefore useless to again review the decisions so construing the statute.

[1-4] It is conceded the bill must be sustained by virtue of these statutes or not at all. Erom these cases cited and reviewed by Justice Thomas the following principles may be deduced as to the purpose and effect of the two sections of the Code: (1) The statutes were never and are not now intended to provide a new trial de novo in the chancery court. (2) Nór were they intended to furnish a mode of reviewing and revising in the chancery court judgments and decrees of the probate court by correcting errors which could and should have been corrected or prevented in the probate court; that is, the statutes are not tantamount to, nor in lieu of, the right to appeal. (3) That the statutes do confer the right to correct errors as for which relief could not otherwise be obtained, and relief is not to be denied merely because it could be obtained by appeal or otherwise. (41 The statutes were not intended to provide for the total cancellation or annulment of judgments or decrees in the probate court, but only to correct or modify them to the extent that they were infected with error.

[5] The real trouble with complainant’s bill is he does not show, construing his allegations against him, as we must do on demurrer, that there were any “errors of law or fact in the settlement of the accounts of the guardian.” The main, if not the sole,, question and issue before the probate court was whether or not the items complained of were proper charges against the estate of the ward, there being no question as to the reasonableness of the amount.

[6] The theory of the bill is that the items were not properly chargeable against the ward’s estate, because the guardian was his foster parent, and this fact was concealed from the probate judge. This fact, if true, would not conclusively make the charge improper or illegal. A natural parent, who is also the legal guardian, may, in proper cases, maintain the child and ward out of the corpus of its estate, if the interest or income thereof is not sufficient or adequate, and the parent is not financially able to maintain the child according to its station in life and necessities.

[7-9] The following relations and duties existing between the parent and child have been frequently declared by this court: A father is primarily bound by the laws of the land, of nature, and of morals to support and educate his children during their minority; but, when he has not the ability so to do in accordance with their station in life, assistance will be granted him from their private estates, if such they have. Beasley v. Watson, 41 Ala. 234; Alston v. Alston, 34 Ala. 15; Greenwood v. Coleman, 34 Ala. 150; Watts v. Steele, 19 Ala. 656, 54 Am. Dec. 207. To this end, and for this reason, the parent is entitled to the service of the children during minority, and i,t is therefore likewise the duty -of the child to support the parent if the parent is unable to support himself and the child is able so to do. If the child has an estate and the parent none, the child should be supported out of its own estate. Stewart v. Lewis, 16 Ala. 734; Bellamy v. Thornton, 103 Ala. 409, 15 South. 831; Code, § 1614; Louisville & N. R. Co. v. Jones, 130 Ala. 456, 30 South. 586; Myers v. Myers, 2 McCord Eq. (S. C.) 214, 16 Am. Dec. 648; Cooley v. Stringfellow, 164 Ala. 467, 51 South. 321.

TIO] It is true this bill alleges that the foster parent was able to support and maintain the child and ward, and hence it was error to make the support and maintenance a charge against its estate. The trouble with this allegation and insistence is that other parts of the bill show that this very question was adjudicated and decided by the probate court contrary to the allegation. Courts cannot give more credence to ex parte allegations of a pleader than to the solemn Judicial decrees and judgments of courts of record. It is true, as before stated, the bill alleges, in general terms, that the relation of the ward and guardian was fraudulently concealed from the probate judge; but, if *541 the relation had been revealed, there is nothing to show that the charge or account was erroneous. We must presume the probate court inquired into the relation between the ward and the guardian. The guardian ad litem denied each item of the account, and hence the very questions here complained of were made an issue, were litigated, and determined. The decree of the probate court prima facie not only decided that it was not the duty of the guardian to maintain the ward out of the guardian’s estate, but that there was no natural or legal parent whose duty it was to pay the expenses for the maintenance of the ward, and that it should be paid out of the corpus of the ward’s estate.

In other words, when the guardian filed his account he in law affirmed that he, and no other person, ought to pay for this maintenance, but that it was a proper charge against the ward’s estate. The guardian ad litem denied this.

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Bluebook (online)
81 So. 41, 202 Ala. 539, 1919 Ala. LEXIS 308, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/williams-v-williams-ala-1919.