Wood v. Truax

39 Mich. 628, 1878 Mich. LEXIS 384
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 1, 1878
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 39 Mich. 628 (Wood v. Truax) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wood v. Truax, 39 Mich. 628, 1878 Mich. LEXIS 384 (Mich. 1878).

Opinion

Campbell, C. J".

Wood filed his bill to foreclose a mortgage made by Lucinda C. Truax as guardian of the other defendants, setting forth also a bond made for the same purpose. Having exhausted the land, he procured a decree for the deficiency against all of the defendants personally. Defendant Irene Hibbard appeals from this personal decree.

There is nothing in the bill to maintain such a decree. There is neither statute nor common law which can sustain the personal liability of an infant on a bond made by her guardian. The illegality of the mortgage in this case having been declared as to her original interest the defendant has not appealed from the decree of foreclosure which reserved the other' equities. But inas[630]*630much as the bond described in the bill is void upon its face, — not being an infant’s possibly voidable contract but one beyond a guardian’s authority, it would require a distinct promise on a sufficient consideration, in the„ shape of a new contract, to bind Mrs. Hibbard, and no such contract is averred in the bill. We do not think there is any evidence of such a contract written or verbal on which complainant could recover, even if the bill had set forth the matters- relied on in the testimony. If there was any understanding, complainant was a stranger to it and could not sue upon it, whether bind-ing her to the other defendants or not. There has been no conveyance to her of any part of the mortgaged property made in such a form as to bring her within any of the decisions which give a mortgagee recourse to purchasers from the mortgagor.

Herbert L. Baker for the motion. Charles A. Kent against.

Without, therefore, attempting to discuss the questions of fact concerning the mutual equities of defendants, we think the personal decree unwarranted.

The decree must be reversed, as to Mrs. Hibbard, with costs of both courts.

The other Justices concurred.

Motion for rehearing. Submitted November 19. Decided November 21.

Campbell, C. J.

This court having at the last adjourned day announced an opinion and directed the entry of an order reversing the decree rendered against Irene T. Hibbard, a motion is now made for a rehearing on the ground of misapprehension of facts. • •

The appeal being from a personal decree in which it was sought to charge Mrs. Hibbard for money alleged to have been advanced on her account and from which she is claimed to have received a personal advan[631]*631tage, the other matters involved in the suit were not important to be considered, and some errors appear in their statement. The form of the securities being somewhat ambiguous, and the complainant having testified to dealings with Mrs. Truax as guardian of both the other defendants, it was incorrectly assumed that the mortgage was thus executed, when in fact Charles was of age. But no misapprehension existed concerning any of the facts relating to the supposed liability of Mrs. Hibbard to respond personally to complainant, — which . was the only matter before us, and the only one on which it was necessary to go through the record.

We did not consider it worth while to discuss at length the reasons for arriving at our conclusions,- for we regarded the rules as elementary, and no authority was cited which in our opinion gave color to any other holding on such a case as was before us. We do not propose now in making a final disposition of the case to do any more than point out why the supposed difficulties which counsel have inferred from what they assume to have been misconstrued in the record, do not exist.

The original bill was an ordinary foreclosure bill which in its framework treated all these defendants as sui juris at the time of filing, and prayed relief against all alike personally. By an irregular practice the guardian ad litem joined with the other defendants in an answer and made some admissions, not now complained of, but which as a guardian he had no lawful authority to do, but denying the legal existence of the mortgage as against the minor.

In November, 1876, a document called a supplemental bill was filed devoted entirely to the averment of certain transactions in partition by reason of which it was claimed Mrs. Hibbard had bound herself equitably to pay the debt due to complainant and also averring some recognitions by her.

It not only did not appear (as it was not true in [632]*632fact) that she had become of age, but nothing whatever was set up as having occurred since the filing of the original bill, although it was averred complainant'had received his information since it was filed. This was not supplemental matter and should have been put in as an amendment. But inasmuch as Mrs. Hibbard was still a minor, the entire case was immaterial in any point of view and this pleading was a practical nullity. The answer of the guardian ad litem to it could not have bound her in any way, and may also be disregarded.

On the 31st of December, 1877, a stipulation was filed which, so far ás the record shows, was unauthorized by Mrs. Hibbard, who had just come of age, which permitted facts occurring since the filing of the original ■and so-called supplemental bills, to be introduced in evidence as if a new supplemental bill had been filed. '•This stipulation is also inoperative, — not only as apparently attempting to bind without authority an infant just come to maturity concerning transactions during minority, whereon neither guardians nor attorneys can •have any implied power, — but also because it does not even indicate what kind of facts are to be given in evidence as grounds of recovery. As already mentioned, the so-called supplemental bill set up no facts as having occurred during the suit, and even if a stipulation might authorize pleadings to be changed nunc pro tunc, yet in this case we are not informed what facts it was intended to set up. It is fatally ambiguous, and could not justify any decree based upon it.

But the facts actually given in evidence and claimed to have been under stipulation are not in our opinion sufficient to authorize any relief on any allegations and therefore would give no reason for allowing amendments or other changes, however seasonably applied for.

Upon the most favorable view which we are able to take of them, no more is proved than this:

The original loan was made to two persons of full [633]*633age in their own right, and to one of the two in her character as guardian, and the securities were given in the same way. It is not claimed that this created in itself an obligation binding on the ward which was valid in law. It was unquestionably void. It cannot be claimed that either equitably or in any other way a guardian, even if she had authority to bind the ward by a Joan, which she certainly had not, could make the ward liable jointly with any one else who was to have a part of the money borrowed. By these transactions Charles Truax and Lucinda Truax in their individual capacities were principal debtors and debtors on their own account. A creditor who under the fullest legal authority had advanced money on any such securities would be bound to see to the apportionment of the money if he could look to the minor’s estate for any portion of his advances. It certainly could not be made security for the debts of others for the money not advanced to the minor’s account.

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Bluebook (online)
39 Mich. 628, 1878 Mich. LEXIS 384, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wood-v-truax-mich-1878.