152 Mo. 576 | Mo. | 1899
This is an action of ejectment, coming from the circuit court of Lincoln county.
The plaintiff claims the land in suit as sole heir of his deceased infant child, who was the sole heir of her deceased mother, who was the wife of plaintiff. Defendant claims under a deed from the child’s curator made under judgment of the probate court of Howell county. The case turns on the question as to the validity of that deed.
There is an equitable defense set up in the answer, but as the case will be disposed of before we reach that defense it will be unnecessary to set it out in this statement.
The land came from Joseph Hunter, who was the great-grand-father of the plaintiff’s deceased child, through whom he claims. Joseph Hunter died in 1877, leaving a will
After the death of his wife, in 1884, the plaintiff took his child, then but a few months old, to her maternal grandfather, Samuel Slater, and gave her to him to keep and care for, and he did so, the child living with him until her death in 1893. "When the child was first given to Slater in 1884 all the parties named resided in Lincoln county. In July of that year the probate court of Lincoln county appointed Slater curator of the estate of the child and he qualified as such, but the child had no estate except her expectancy in this land. Later in the same year Slater moved to Howell county, and carried the child, with him, where they resided until her deatih in 1893, and where he continued to reside. The records of the probate court of Lincoln county show no proceedings in the matter of the curatorship after the appointment. In 1891, after the death of the great-grand-mother and the termination of the life estate, the child being then entitled to possession of her share of the land, the probate court of Howell county appointed Slater curator of the child, he qualified as such, and regular proceedings in that matter were thereafter had in that court, in the course of which the court ordered the curator to sell his ward’s interest in the land, which he did and made the deed under which defendants claim. The regularity of the proceedings in the probate court of Howell county are not questioned, but the point is made that those proceedings, though regular on the face of the
The trial was by the court without a jury and the finding and judgment were for tbe plaintiff, from which this appeal is regularly taken.
I. Erom tbe written opinion filed in the case by the learned trial judge it appears that whilst in his opinion the judgment of the Howell county probate court was not subject to the collateral attack made on it, yet the plaintiff was entitled to recover because he had an estate by the curtesy in' tbe land, basing tbe conclusion on tbe decisions in Reaume v. Chambers, 22 Mo. 36, and Stephens v. Hume, 25 Mo. 349.
In those cases it was decided that an estate by tbe curtesy initiate, did not depend on actual seizin during coverture, for tbe reason that under our law, actual seizin in tbe ancestor is not necessary to cast descent. But tbe right of seizin during ■coverture is essential to an estate of curtesy initiate. The law on this subject is discussed and clearly shown in Martin v. Trail, 142 Mo. 85. Therefore, since tbe plaintiff’s wife died during the lifetime of her grandmother, who was a life tenant under tbe will of Joseph Hunter, there was no right of possession during the coverture, and hence no estate of curtesy.
II. But the point of plaintiff’s chief reliance is in his proposition that the probate court of Howell county was without jurisdiction, and all its proceedings in this matter void.
It is a well settled doctrine that if tbe subject of tbe adjudication is of tbe kind of which tbe court has no jurisdiction, its judgment is a nullity and may be treated as such, .even in a collateral attack. But if it is a subject of the kind of which tbe court has jurisdiction, and it appears on the face of the record that the proper parties were before it and that it
The probate courts of - this State, though they are of limited, are not of inferior jurisdiction, and when they have acted within their limits, their judgments “are entitled to the-same favorable presumptions as are accorded to courts of general jurisdiction, and are no more subject to collateral attack.”' [Sherwood v. Baker, 105 Mo. loc. cit. 475.]
There is no difference between the learned counsel in this-case on these propositions, but they differ in their application of them to the facts of this case.
This is a collateral attack on the judgment of the probate-court, and can not prevail unless it appeal’s that the court was without jurisdiction of the case. Sometimes the question of jurisdiction in a particular case is a question of venue, and that may be a question of fact to be decided in the first instance by the court whose jurisdiction is- invoked. Probate courts have jurisdiction to appoint curators for minors to administer their estates. When application for the appointment of a curator is made, the probate court is to satisfy itself if the minor is a resident of the county, and if the court makes the appointment the presumption is that it heard the evidence and found the fact to justify its appointment. Unless it appears on the face of the record, that the minor was not a resident of the county the proceedings of the probate court can not be attacked collaterally on that ground. In Lacy v. Williams, 27 Mo. loc. cit. 282, cited by counsel for plaintiff, the court say: “The county court of Polk county had no authority to appoint a curator for children who were not residents of the county. The order of appointment was void, and may be treated as a nullity in a collateral proceeding.” It would appear from the report of that ease that the fact that the children did not reside in Polk county, was shown on the face of the record of the county court. However that may be, there was really no occasion for the court to say that the-
Garrison v. Lyle, 38 Mo. App. 558, was also a direct proceeding, begun in tbe probate court to vacate tbe order •appointing tbe curator on tbe ground that tbe minor did not .reside in tbe county. Marheineke v. Grothaus, 72 Mo. 204, was a contest between two curators as to which was entitled to tbe management of tbe estate, tbe one having been appointed by tbe probate court of St. Louis county, and tbe other by tbe probate court of Franklin county. What is •said, therefore, in those cases as to tbe proper venue, or juris-diction as governed by tbe venue, is no authority for a collateral attack on tbe judgment in question in this case. Starbuck v. Murray, 21 Am. Dec. (N. Y.) 172, is also cited in support of plaintiff’s contention. That was a suit in New York on a foreign judgment which recited that the defendant bad appeared in tbe case; be filed a plea denying tbe fact, and denied tbe jurisdiction of tbe foreign court of bis person, and tbe New York court held that it was a good plea. But that was no collateral attack.
It appears from tbe evidence here that this child was in fact residing in Howell county when tbe probate court there made tbe appointment. True, tbe child’s father at that time resided in Lincoln county, but tbe evidence shows that be had surrendered tbe child to her grandfather, and that tbe latter stood in loco parentis towards her, and therefore bis residence was her residence.
It is contended that tbe probate court of Lincoln county had in 1884 appointed this same person curator for tbe child and that therefore tbe act of tbe probate court of Howell county was void. If there was a valid appointment- and an - existing curator under the jurisdiction of the probate court of Lincoln county that might be sufficient cause in a direct pro
Since so far as can be determined in a suit of this kind, all the title that the plaintiff’s child ever had to this land passed under the curator’s deed there is no necessity for a retrial of this cause.
The judgment is reversed and the cause remanded to the circuit court of Lincoln county with directions to enter judgment for the defendants.