135 Mass. 69 | Mass. | 1883
This case is submitted upon an agreed statement of facts. The law of Mississippi is a fact to be shown, and the agreed facts contain no statement of what that law is. We do not judicially know what it is, or that it differs from the law of Massachusetts. Mary L. Tobin was appointed guardian by the Probate Court of the county of Middlesex in this Commonwealth, where she and her wards resided. She was also subsequently appointed guardian by a chancery court in Mississippi, by ancillary letters of guardianship, and, as such, collected in
On general principles of law, the courts of Mississippi have full jurisdiction over the allowance of her accounts as guardian appointed in that State, and over the administration of the property of her wards situated therein. Woodworth v. Spring, 4 Allen, 321. It may be that she was not required to charge herself in Massachusetts with the money collected by her in Mississippi, in her capacity of guardian appointed in that State, until she had settled her accounts in Mississippi, and had been ordered by the courts of that State to transfer to herself as guardian appointed in Massachusetts, where her wards resided, the money remaining in her hands, after paying the claims, charges and expenses which had been allowed by the courts of Mississippi. Jennison v. Hapgood, 10 Pick. 77. Clark v. Blackington, 110 Mass. 369. Emery v. Batchelder, 132 Mass. 452. But she has voluntarily transferred the money collected in Mississippi to herself as guardian appointed in Massachusetts, and included it in her inventory filed here, and a decree has been entered against her by the Probate Court for the county of Middlesex, which it is agreed “ is now in full force.” If the defendant Tobin was aggrieved by that decree, she should have appealed from it; so long as it remains in force, there is a breach of the condition of the bond. In accordance with the agreement of facts, judgment must be entered for the plaintiff for the penal sum of the bond. So ordered.