57 Ga. App. 106 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1937
The petition of Oliff T. Walraven, filed in the court of ordinary on December 9, 1933, alleged that when he was sixteen years of age he had obtained a verdict for $30,000 against the Georgia Railway and Power Company; that on June 13, 1923, Mrs. W. D. Akin was appointed guardian of his property by the court of ordinary of Fulton County; that the petition for guardianship papers recited that he was entitled to considerable property, by reason of said verdict, in the sum of $10,000; that the guardian gave bond in the sum of $20,000, that the application for guardianship failed to show that he was entitled to $20,000 (after deducting counsel fees), and that the guardian’s bond should have been $40,000 instead of $20,000; that the guardian received from the sheriff of Fulton County $10,000 on June 19, 1923, and $10,000
The guardian filed an answer admitting some paragraphs of the petition and denying others, and alleging that before she obtained letters of dismission the plaintiff went over the accounts at least eight or nine times, examined and inspected the checks and each item thereof, and ratified and approved each of the expenditures; that she had furnished a full, true, correct, and accurate statement of her acts and doings as guardian, that the plaintiff had carefully checked over the same and agreed that her expenditures were proper, and had examined all receipts and vouchers and admitted that they were correct and proper; that a copy of her statement was furnished to the plaintiff when he became of age; and that on July 13, 1989, he entered into an agreement with her concerning a house and lot on Gordon Street in the City of Atlanta, agreeing to give her $1000 of her money which went into the house and lot, and he took the house and lot and gave her a complete release and ratified every expenditure made by her on the property, and all other expenditures made by her, and thereafter, at least five or six times, he checked over these expenditures, looked at the checks, acknowledged the receipt of all moneys, and at such times requested that the money he had left be handled as it was theretofore.
■ Exhibit A attached to the petition was as follows:
• “Final Return. Mrs. W. D. Akin, Guardian Oliff T. Walraven,
June 19, 1923, Sheriff Fulton County, $10,000.00
March 28, 1928, Sheriff Fulton County, 10,000.00
Interest upon investment, 11,091.80
Or. By cash paid Oliff T. Walraven 31,091.80
"“Received of Mrs. W. D. Akin, Guardian, the sum of $202.82 which is the balance of the $20,000.00 principal, $11,091.80 interest, total of $31,091.80. I having received heretofore principal and interest in the amount of $30,888.68.
'“Witness my hand and seal this 17th day of October, 1931.
O. T. Walraven.
“Witness: C. J. McBride.”
The petition was sworn to by the plaintiff on December .5, 1933. The order to show cause was granted by the ordinary on December 9, 1933. At the January term, 1934, of the court, the ordinary refused the prayers of the above petition,- and the plaintiff appealed to the superior court, where by consent of the parties the case was referred- to an auditor. The auditor heard evidence and made a report to the court, filing therewith the transcript of the testimony and certain documentary evidence. The report contained thirty-five findings of law on objections to testimony, one ruling on a motion to dismiss the case, and ten other rulings of law. His findings of fact numbered forty-eight. The net result of the report was the finding by the auditor that the defendant owed the plaintiff $4116.24 on October 17, 1931, and that judgment should be entered for said sum with interest at 7 per cent, from October 17, 1931. The defendant moved to recommit the report to the auditor, on several grounds. The court refused this motion, and the defendant excepted pendente lite. Both parties filed exceptions to the auditor’s report, which need not -be specifically stated. The court overruled all the exceptions of law of both parties, and referred the exceptions of fact to a jury. The jury sustained the auditor’s findings of fact, except as to four unimportant particulars. Both parties filed exceptions pendente lite to the overruling of their exceptions of law to the auditor’s report. The defendant made a motion for new trial on the general grounds, and on certain special-grounds. The court overruled the motion, and the defendant took a bill of exceptions which assigned error on the overruling
The petition to vacate the guardian’s letters of dismission and require her to account alleges that the order dismissing the guardian “is void, on account of the facts set forth herein.” The alleged facts were: giving bond for $20,000 instead of $40,000; failing to give a full and complete statement of account; failure to exhibit vouchers and receipts before her dismissal; failure to obtain from the court of ordinary orders authorizing the expenditures; failing to make the annual returns required by law; and representing that the sum of $202.82 was the balance due to the ward on October 17, 1931. Since the plaintiff’s petition alleges that the guardian had been dismissed by a judgment of the ordinary, and the evidence shows that the proceeding was regular as to the filing of a final return and the issuing and publication of the necessary citation, the first question to be determined is whether the finding of law by the auditor to the effect that the judgment of the ordinary was void can be sustained. The only ground on which the judgment is attacked is fraud. The plaintiff in error contends the allegations of fraud were not sufficient in law, but no demurrer was filed. Consequently the question must be decided under the allegations of the plaintiff and the evidence in the case. It appeared that the guardian, in applying for her letters, alleged that the ward was entitled to $10,000 as the proceeds of the settlement of a suit for personal injuries, and the ordinary ordered her to give bond in the sum of $20,000, which was doné. On receiving the $10,000 the guardian turned it over to her attorney to invest at 8 per cent, interest. Subsequently the guardian received another $10,000 from the same source as the first, the settlement of the damage suit having provided for the payment to the ward of $20,000 in two instalments. The guardian turned this second amount over to her attorney as before. Thereafter all the expenditures by the guardian were made through the attorney, who gave his personal checks for the amounts
The plaintiff himself testified that he was given or shown a statement of account by the attorney in 1926, another just after he came of age, and again on October 17, 1931. As vouchers he was also shown the checks of the attorney for various expenditures. The auditor in the forty-second finding of fact said: “At the time referred to in the forty-first finding of fact, plaintiff had an opportunity of making a thorough inspection and examination of the books and statements of account kept by Mr. Hewlett.” Soon after the ward had become of age he requested the attorney who had been handling his money for the guardian to retain what he had in his hands and to continue handling it as before. He also went to the attorney’s office in 1929, and looked over some of the attorney’s checks, saw the checks there just like they were, who they were payable to and the amounts. On July 13, 1929, the ward then being twenty-two years old, he arranged with his mother to deed to him a house and lot which had been purchased with his funds, but without any order of the court, and that he would pay her $1000 which she claimed to have paid on the property out of her own money. The mother and son entered into a written agreement to this effect, and the son received a deed to the property and the attorney paid the mother $1000 as agreed between them. On October 17, 1931, the plaintiff, then being twenty-four years old, went to the attorney to get the balance of his money and was shown an itemized statement of account, the books of account, and the checks which had been given by the attorney for the various expenditures listed on the statement. On this account the attorney
Giving to this petition the construction most favorable to the plaintiff, it attacks the judgment of the ordinary dismissing the guardian, on the ground of fraud. The fraud alleged is in obtaining the judgment by means of a receipt in full, signed by the plaintiff, which he says did not truly represent the status of the account between him and the guardian. No irregularity of court procedure is alleged. The petition does allege an irregularity in the administration of the estate, in that the guardian’s original application for letters represented the estate to consist of the sum of $10,000, whereas in fact the guardian afterwards received another $10,000 to secure which no additional bond was given, and which was not reported to the court until the time of the final return. But in the final return the guardian charged herself with the full $20,000, and more than $11,000 of interest thereon. The irregularity and disregard of law in that the guardian did not make annual returns to the court of ordinary would have been good ground for removing the guardian if any application had been made to that end. The evidence also showed expenditures which were not proper on account of not being authorized by an order of the ordinary, or on account of not being shown to have been made for the ward. When all is said, the plaintiff’s ease must rest on the allegation that the guardian procured the judgment of dismissal by filing a final return which was false in fact. The documentary evidence shows that the guardian regularly applied for a discharge from the guardianship, and at the January'term, 1932, the ordinary passed an order reciting that the guardian has applied for a discharge and that “citation therein was issued and published as the law requires, and it also appears from the exami
In Little v. West, 145 Ga. 563, 568 (89.S. E. 682), the Supreme Court said: “Of course, the judgment of dismissal of the guardian in this case is a final judgment, and includes anything back of it, unless it can be opened for fraud in its procurement. The judgment granting letters dismissory to the guardian is a bar to any contention as to an accounting back of it, unless it is opened; but if it is opened so that an accounting can take place, then the question of what items are proper to .be allowed arises.” From decisions hereinafter cited, and the provisions of the Code, it appears that a court may set aside its own judgment on account of fraud in its procurement; or a court of equity, on a petition filed for that purpose, may decree a judgment of 'another court to be void on account of fraud in its procurement. But there are limits.to this power. The Code, § 37-220, declares: “Equity will interfere to set aside a judgment of a court having jurisdiction only where the party had a good defense ’of which he was entirely ignorant, or where he was prevented from making it by fraud or accident, or the act of the adverse party, unmixed with fraud or negligence on his part.” § 110-710, provides: “The judgment of a court of competent jurisdiction may be set aside by a decree in equity, for
It appears from the testimony of the plaintiff that before he came of age a question was presented as to the legality of his guardian buying an automobile for him. He also testified that he had owned three automobiles before he became twenty-one years of age. Also, in 1929, when he was twenty-two years of age, it appears that he learned that the title to the house and lot which his mother had bought mainly with his funds was put in her name,
The judgment was in substance an adjudication that the guardian did not owe the ward anything. It is a conclusive bar to any recovery by the plaintiff.
It is unnecessary to consider whether the court erred in refusing to recommit the ease to the auditor, or in overruling any of the
<Judgment reversed on the main bill of exceptions. Gross-bill dismissed.