Shaw v. Shaw's Administrator

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Clarke

Affirming.

Josiab. Shaw died, December 30th, 1913, a resident of Crawford county, Indiana, possessed of personal property amounting to a little more than $17,000.00, of real estate, located in Crawford county, Indiana, worth about $2,000.00, and of a large tract of land, containing about 1,200 acres, in Meade county, Kentucky, which *400he had acquired in four separate, adjoining tracts. He left a will, naming his widow, Carrie N. Shaw, his daughter, Minnie M. Crimes, and two infant children of his deceased son, Lyman P. Shaw, as devisees of his estate, the widow to take one-third, the daughter, another, and the children of his deceased son, the remaining third, subject, however, to charges for advancements made by him to the daughter and the deceased son. The will named Simon E. Crimes, husband of the daughter, as executor, who, after the will had been admitted to probate, in Crawford county, Indiana, qualified in that county, and afterwards in Meade county, Kentucky, as executor of the estate. The decedent, his executor and all of the devisees, were residents of Crawford county, Indiana.

On the ninth day of July, 1914, Simon E. Crimes, as executor, and in his own right, Minnie M. Crimes, the daughter, and Carrie N. Shaw, the widow, filed this action, in the Meade circuit court, against Ava Loraine Shaw and Lyman P. Shaw, Jr., infants, to sell the Meade county land and divide the proceeds, after equalizing advancements, among the devisees of Josiah Shaw, alleging that the land could not be divided without materially impairing its value. The infant defendants were first constructively summoned by warning order, but were afterwards brought to Meade county by their mother, and regularly served with process, in that county, and, guardians ad litem having’ been appointed,' filed answers, which, however, do not controvert any of the allegations of the petition. The case was referred to the master commissioner to hear proof, and report claims against the estate of Josiah Shaw and the amounts of the advancements chargeable, under the will, to the plaintiff, Minnie M. Crimes, and the infant defendants. After hearing proof, the master commissioner filed his report. Depositions were taken on interrogatories, and cross-interrogatories filed by the guardians ad litem for the infant defendants, and exceptions were filed, by the guardians ad litem, to the master’s report upon the amount chargeable to the infants, and to the" allowance of a board bill filed by Simon E. Crimes and Minnie M. Crimes against the estate of Josiah Shaw. The board bill having been withdrawn, the guardians ad litem withdrew the exceptions they had filed to the report of the amount of advancements chargeable to the *401infants. Upon submission, the court entered a judgment confirming the master’s report, and adjudging the amounts of the advancements chargeable against the devisees under the will; the interest of each devisee in the Meade county land; that the land could not be divided without materially impairing its value; and that the land should be sold as a whole, and the proceeds divided among the devisees, according to their interests therein as fixed by the judgment.

This judgment is, manifestly, a final order, and appealable; but no appeal has ever been prosecuted from that judgment, which was entered on the 5th day of October, 1914, and it is not now before us.

Pursuant to that judgment, the land was sold by the master commissioner, and at the sale, Simon E. Grimes, executor of the estate of Josiah Sbaw, became the purchaser, at the price of $71,000.00; and the master’s report of sale was confirmed without exceptions, and no appeal has been prosecuted from that judgment. Thereafter, the plaintiff, Simon E. Grimes, and Minnie M. Grimes, his wife, filed an assignment from Carrie N. Shaw to them, of her interest in the purchase bonds, and asked credit upon the shle bonds of Simon E. Grimes, the purchaser, for the amount due thereon to Carrie N. Shaw, who had died, also a resident of Crawford county, Indiana, after the execution of the assignment. The guardians ad litem for the infant defendants filed exceptions to the assignment of Carrie N. Shaw, of her interest in the purchase bonds, asserting that it was void, upon the ground that Carrie N. Shaw, who was about eighty years of age when she executed the assignment, a few days before her death, without valuable consideration, and as a gift, did not have sufficient mind to execute the assignment, and further, that the assignment was procured by fraud and undue influence. Issue was joined upon the question of the validity of the assignment, between the guardians ad litem and Simon E. and Minnie M. Grimes, and this issue transferred to the ordinary docket, and a trial had thereon, by' a jury, which resulted in a verdict sustaining the validity of the assignment. Prom the judgment of the court upon that verdict this appeal is prosecuted by the guardians ad litem, and only that judgment is before us upon this appeal.

*402In the exceptions filed by the guardians ad litem of both of the infant defendants, it is alleged, that Carrie N. Shaw died intestate, and that, as her heirs at law,' the infants inherited one-half of her entire estate, including her interest in the proceeds of the Meade county land; and, upon the evident theory that they did inherit and own, as heirs of Carrie N. Shaw, an interest in her property, and that the guardians ad litem could litigate the question in this action, the trial court permitted the issue as to the validity of the assignment to proceed to a final trial, although the assignee of Mrs. Shaw contested the right of the guardians ad litem for the infants to make the question, upon the ground that Mrs. Shaw did not die intestate, but left a will devising her whole estate, with immaterial exceptions, to her daughter, Minnie M. Crimes, and that, even if her will should not be established in the Indiana courts, where its validity was being contested, her personal representative, and not her heirs, was the proper, and only party who had the right, to contest the validity-of the assignment.

Counsel for appellants attempt, upon this appeal, to attack the judgment entered in this action, on October 5th, 1914, and the judgment confirming the sale; but, as • heretofore explained, those judgments are not here and cannot now be considered by us. As appellants are infants, they may yet prosecute an appeal from those judgments, if they so desire; but the right of the guardians ad litem to do so has expired, as the judgments were ’entered more than two years ago. See section 745 of the Civil Code of Practice; Reynolds v. Steele, 170 Ky. 153; and Park v. Barnes, 173 Ky. 589. If, however, those judgments are void, as is now urged upon us, before taking the appeal, the infants must, of course, make a motion in the lower court to have them set aside, as is provided in section 763 of the Civil Code of Practice.

"We come now to a consideration of the question, whether or not the guardians ad litem had the right, on behalf of the infant defendants, to question the validity of the assignment of Mrs. Carrie N. Shaw of her interest in the sale bonds for the Meade county land. This action was filed to determine the' interests of the devisees of Josiah Shaw, under his. will, in a tract of land in Meade county and, upon the ground that it was indivisible, to sell same and distribute the proceeds thereof *403among the devisees, according to their interests therein as finally determined in this action: The guardians ad litem were appointed to represent the infant defendants in that litigation, and, in so far as their interests were involved, had the power, and it was their duty, to represent and bind the infants, subject, however, to the right of appeal from any judgment of the lower court, upon such matters as were involved in the action, by the guardians ad. litem, for a term of two years after the rendition of a final judgment, and thereafter, by the infants, until one year after they attained their majority; but the power of the guardians ad litem to represent and bind the infants was necessarily limited to the mat-. ters involved in the litigation in which they were appointed, and they had no right whatever to represent the infants, except in that litigation. Their powers were strictly limited to the matters therein involved, and their acts with respect to the infants’ rights concerning any other matters were unauthorized. 22 Cyc. 661 and 669; Waterman v. Lawrence, 19 Cal. 210; Hubbard v. Chicago & Northwestern Ry. Co., 104 Wis. 160.

The matters involved in the action with reference to which they were authorized to act under their appointment were, the interests of the infants in the Meade county land, as devisees of Jtfsiah Shaw. When the court determined and adjudged those interests, and directed a sale of the land and a distribution of the proceeds according to the interests as fixed in the judgment, the matters therein involved were finally determined, and the duties of the guardians ad litem terminated, Subject to their rights to appeal on behalf of the infants from those judgments, within the time allowed to them by law. Their appointment as guardians ad litem to represent the infants, as devisees of Josiah Shaw, in an action to determine their rights, under his will, to his lands, gave them no right or power to represent the infants, as heirs or devisees of Carrie N. Shaw, in the distribution or preservation of her estate. Unless the judgment of the lower court, fixing the interests of Carrie N. Shaw in the Meade county land and adjudging to her a definite amount of the proceeds of such sale, is set aside or modified, that judgment vested in Carrie N. Shaw the title to so much of the purchase money as was adjudged to her, which was personal property, and not real estate; and that judgment, so long as it stands undis*404turbed, excludes every interest of the infants in the fund adjudged to Carrie N. Shaw-, so far as this litigation is concerned. In attempting to set up a right in the infants to an interest in the property of Carrie N. Shaw, as her heirs, the guardians ad litem were attempting to litigate on behalf of the infants, rights that were not involved in this litigation, and concerning which the guardians ad litem were not appointed to represent the infants. "Whatever, if any, rights these infants may have in the estate of Carrie N. Shaw were in nowise involved in this case, and the guardians ad litem did not have the power to bring such a matter into this action, so as to give them the right, upon behalf of the infants, to litigate the matter. It is certainly obvious that, under our laws, they could not have instituted an action on behalf of the. infants, to determine their interests in the estate of Carrie N. Shaw, nor could they, with any better right, bring such matters into this litigation, so as to give them the power to represent the infants in reference thereto. The infants were not in court, upon that matter, and are not bound, in any way, by such action by the guardians ad litem, or by the judgment of the court resulting therefrom. Since the guardians ad litem did not have the right, or the power, to question, on behalf of the infants, the validity of an assignment by Mrs. Carrie N. Shaw, of property adjudged to her by a final order of the court, it results, of course, that they cannot prosecute this appeal, in their behalf, from the judgment of the lower court upon that question.

■Wherefore, the appeal is dismissed.