15 F. 771 | W.D. Tenn. | 1883
This bill seeks to avoid certain conveyances from the ancestor of the plaintiffs to the ancestor of the defendants, for alleged fraud in their procurement. A receiver has been appointed, and the property is now in his possession. The defendants are taking proof before an examiner of this court. Application was made to require the examiner to await the final result for the payment of his fees, which was refused unless the defendants would take the oath proscribed for indigent suitors applying to sue without costs. This was declined, whereupon application was made to pay the examiner’s fees out of funds in the hands of the receiver, which was likewise refused. But it being stated that three of the defendants are minors, represented by their guardian ad ¿item, the application was reserved as to them.
The guardian ad litem is one of the adult defendants, a brother of the minors, and a lawyer of this court, making these applications, while the other adult defendant is their mother. There is nothing definitely shown as to the actual circumstances of these defendants, though the defendant making this application offers to produce affidavits of want of means to pay the expenses of taking the proof,—whether
If the allegations of the bill be true, the property in dispute belongs to the plaintiffs, and should not be burdened with the support of the defendants, either to pay their costs of defense or any other of their necessary expenses. Possibly, if both plaintiff and defendant were
This is as far, perhaps, as I need go in deciding the precise application made to pay the costs of taking defendant’s proof out of the funds in the receiver’s hands. It is apparent that if this be done in behalf of the minors it will result in benefit to the adults as well, while if what the plaintiffs say about their circumstances be true, their refusal or inability to take the pauper’s oath compels them out of their sufficient substance to defend this suit at 'tlieir own expense, and there is nothing wrong or unjust in allowing the minors to reap the benefit of this compulsion.
By nature and by law, these adults owe this duty to the minors under the circumstances of this case. It is possibly true, as urged by counsel for the plaintiffs, that, until the minor defendants appear to be indigent persons by their own oath or that of some one in their behalf, the question of their right to sue or defend as such does not arise. But it is the duty of the court at all times to watch over the interests of minors, defendants or plaintiffs, and the court is itself the guardian of their rights.
The plaintiffs deny that the minors, if indigent, can defend as paupers by guardian ad litem, but I have reached a different conclusion. If, therefore, these minors have been rendered really indigent by what would be a desertion of their defense by their mother or brother and guardian ad litem,—if these be able to pay costs apd expenses as alleged,—or by a deprivation of the possession of the property in dispute in this case, they should be let in to defend in forma pauperis, unless they be dispauperized by a showing to the contrary.
The common law, unlike the civil law, while allowing poor persons to sue informa pauperis, did not permit them to defend in that form. 1 Tidd, Pr. (3d Am.Ed.) 97, 98. And infant defendants were liable for costs, while the insolvency of a next friend did not throw the burden
In Tennessee practice it has long been settled that, under the statutes of this state, a minor can neither sue by his next friend, nor by his guardian ad litem defend in forma pauperis. 3 Meigs, Dig. (2d Ed.) 2099; Cargle v. Railroad Co. 7 Lea, 717; Sharer v. Gill, 6 Lea, 495; Musgrove v. Lusk, 5 Bax. 684; Green v. Harrison, 3 Sneed, 130; McCoy v. Broderick, Id. 201; Cohen v. Shyer, 1 Tenn. Ch. 192. But we have already determined in this court that even in practice at law we are not to be governed in this matter by the state statutes, and more certainly we are not so governed in practice in equity. The rule is the same in admiralty, both these courts following the more liberal rule of the civil law. Bradford v. Bradford, 2 Flippin, 280, and note.
The result is that the application to pay the costs of the minor defendants out of the funds in the hands of the receiver is denied; but they may have leave, if really indigent, to defend in forma pauperis, upon a proper application in that behalf.
So ordered.
Admiralty—Poor Persons Suing In—Juratory Caution. See note, collecting authorities and showing forms of proceeding for indigent suitors in admiralty in the case of The Ouachita Belle, 2 Flippin, 282, in notis.