168 Ind. 645 | Ind. | 1907
A sufficient reason for a guardian’s not suing in such a ease as this appears in Lombard v. Morse (1891), 155 Mass. 136, 29 N. E. 205, 14 L. R. A. 273, wherein it was held that a guardian was not entitled to maintain a bill in equity to avoid certain conveyances made by his insane ward. The court said: “The title to the property of the
Our cases recognize the right of the guardian to sue for debts (as an implication from his duty to collect), to secure by petition a distributive share of the estate of the ward in the hands of executors or administrators, and also to maintain actions for an interference with his (the guardian’s) possessory rights (Shepherd v. Evans [1857], 9 Ind. 260; Miller v. Duy [1871], 36 Ind. 521; Boruff v. Stipp [1890], 126 Ind. 32; Kinsley v. Kinsley [1898], 150 Ind. 67), but there is, nevertheless, a line of authority in this State which denies to the guardian the right to maintain actions not expressly provided for by statute and not pertaining to his duties as fixed in the guardianship chapter. In Wilson v. Galey (1885), 103 Ind. 257, this court held that the guardian of a minor having an estate in remainder could not maintain an action for waste • against the holder of the particular estate. The holding was largely based upon the fact that the statute gave the right of action to the person seized of the estate in remainder, but the court declared that it was the general rule under the code that an infant should sue by prochein ami. In Spencer v. Robbins (1886), 106 Ind. 580, it was held that a guardian ad litem for certain minor defendants in a partition proceeding could not file a cross-complaint to quiet title, Mitchell,' J., saying: “They can prosecute only by next .friend, as provided by statute.” This case was followed in Tucker v. White (1902), 28 Ind. App. 328, the court holding that a guardian who had never had possession of the real estate involved could not maintain a suit to quiet title.
Counsel for appellant contend that Kinsley v. Kinsley, supra, in effect overrules the prior decisions of this court before referred to. The case does not profess to have that effect, and, in the light of principle, we do not perceive that there is any ground for questioning said rulings. The
Judgment affirmed.