66 Neb. 847 | Neb. | 1902
On the 27th day of September, 1893, the defendant Mary W. Hay was appointed guardian of her codefendants by the county court of Douglas county, where the wards resided. It appears that the only property of the wards at that time was certain real estate in the city of Omaha, which was subject to five apparent liens, aggregating some $3,500, exclusive of interest. Afterward, an action was brought by the holder of one of such liens for its foreclosure, in which the defendant Mary W. Hay, as guardian of the other defendants herein, her wards, and the other lien-holders, were made parties defendant. ' In that action the defendant lien-holders filed cross-petitions, setting up their respective liens and asking a foreclosure thereof. After the commencement of that action the defendant
“1. The probate court of Douglas county, from which this action was appealed, had no jurisdiction of the subject-matter involved herein, and therefore this court has acquired no jurisdiction over it.
“2. The probate court of Douglas county had no jurisdiction of the parties defendant herein, and therefore this court has acquired no jurisdiction over them.
“8. There is a defect of parties defendant in that the alleged contract upon which the said McCoy & Olmsted seek to recover was signed by Hester O. Lane and Ellen Lane, minors, and by Mary W. Hay, as guardian of Hester O. Lane and Ellen Lane, and by Mary W. Hay individually, and no service has been made upon Mary W. Hay individually and she has made no appearance herein and is not before the court.
“4. The said amended petition does not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action in favor of the said McCoy & Olmsted and against the parties defendant herein.”
The demurrer was sustained, and the plaintiffs bring the record here for review by petition in error.
The arguments in this case are based on the facts here-inbefore stated. The petition and the contract therein set out are of unusual length. For these reasons, although the questions presented were raised by demurrer, we have omitted to copy the pleading assailed in this opinion. Tt will also make for brevity and clearness to disregard the order in which the grounds of the demurrer are stated. Therefore, we shall first proceed to consider the third ground, namely, that there is a defect of parties.
In this behalf it is urged that the contract in question is the joint contract of Mary W. Hay, personally as well as in her representative capacity, and that it is only in her representative capacity that she is a party to this action. It is true that the contract runs in the name of the guardian personally and in her representative capacity, but
The main contention of the defendants in this case is that a guardian has no power to bind either the person or the estate of his ward by contract, and, although the contract expressly purports to bind the ward or his estate, the guardian alone is primarily liable thereon. Such is the rule laid down in 1 Parsons, Contracts [6th ed.], 136. In support of the text the learned author cites Thacher v. Dinsmore,
Notwithstanding the array of respectable authorities just cited, the doctrine does not commend itself to us, nor do we believe it to be compatible with our constitutional and statutory provisions touching the relation of guardian and ward. Section 16, article 6, of the constitution, gives the county court original jurisdiction in all probate matters, the appointment of guardians and the settlement of their accounts. Such jurisdiction is exclusive. Williams v. Miles, 63 Nebr., 851. Within the constitutional limits of its jurisdiction, the county court may exercise all the powers of a court of chancery. Williams v. Miles, supra. Chapter 34, Compiled Statutes, provides for the appoint-
“This is a claim against the guardian founded upon what appears to be a perfectly legitimate contract with the guardian himself, and relating entirely to the estate of the ward. It is not only the right but the plain duty of guardians to seek for and recover the property of their wards, when held adversely, and to employ counsel for that purpose when necessary. And in our opinion, it can not be questioned that the estate of the ward is liable to make compensation for such service. It is’ equally clear that the guardian should not be held to a mere personal individual liability in such circumstances, and that the counsel should not be limited to the personal liability of the guardian in recovering their just compensation. That liability may be of no value whatever,- but even if it*854 were, it can not be considered as in any manner legally or equitably pledged for the service in question. It follows that if the claim in question is a proper one it is payable out of the ward’s estate. That estate is subject to the control of the orphans’ court and upon the settlement of the account of the guardian with whom the contract was made, and who has part of the ward’s estate in his hands, the orphans’ court having also control of the account, the claim in question can be most fully, thoroughly and conveniently heard and determined by that court.
“It is admitted that if the guardian had paid for the services and claimed credit for the payment of them in. his account, the orphans’ court would have had jurisdiction to determine the claim. It can not be that the jurisdiction of the court depends upon the giving or withholding consent to the payment by the guardian. We are aware of no legal reason for holding that the orphans’ court does not have jurisdiction to consider and determine claims against the estates of minors under their control. On the contrary, it seems to us that court is eminently the proper one for such purposes. Certainly, claims for necessaries furnished to the guardian for the support of the wards are valid claims against the estate of the ward in the hands of the guardian, and the right to recover them from that estate can not depend upon whether the guardian consents or refuses to pay them. It is no answer to say there is a right of common-law action against the guardian individually, or the minor individually, to recover such claims. If there is a right of recovery against the estate of the ward it ought to be, and in our judgment it is, perfectly competent to pursue it in the court which has control over the person and estate of the minor, and the person and accounts of the guardian.’*
The foregoing language meets our entire approval. It is peculiarly applicable, because the language of the statute conferring jurisdiction on the orphans’ court in matters of guardianship, is substantially the same as that of our constitution conferring jurisdiction on the county
In our opinion, the guardian in the present case had authority to bind the estate of her wards by contract for the payment of the services in question, and the county court has jurisdiction to allow the amount due thereon, as a claim against the estate.
It is also insisted that the contract of the guardian, in any event, can not be enforced against the estate unless reasonable, and that as there is no allegation in the petition to the effect that the contract in question is reasonable, it is therefore vulnerable to a demurrer. The question of the reasonableness of the contract was presented to the county court when the contract was submitted for its approval. This practice was not unusual in courts of chancery exercising jurisdiction in matters of guardianship. Cooley, Blackstone’s Commentaries, Book 1, p. 462. The practice is reasonable, and we can see no good reason why the county courts, as successors to courts of chancery in such matters, may not adopt it. The claimants, in a petition for services rendered under such contract, addressed to the court which approved it, or to the appellate court, should not be required to ask a review of that question. We do not wish to be understood to hold that the approval of the contract by the county court precludes all inquiry into its reasonableness in this case. The extent to which we commit ourselves on that question is that the plaintiffs, under the circumstances, are not required to tender an issue on that point.
The defendants also contend that the relief sought in this case is, in effect, to establish a lien on real estate. The contract was not for any share of the real estate. The value of the real estate was adopted as a standard for determining the limit of the fee to be received by the plain
It is urged by the defendants that the court has no jurisdiction over-them, for the reason that they were not served with summons. This case came to the district court on appeal, from an order of the county court in a matter of probate. When the jurisdiction of the county court attached in the matter of the guardianship of the wards, they being residents of the county, it attached for all the purposes of such matter, and the county court had authority to issue a citation for their attendance when required, as was done in this case, and to enforce such attendance if necessary.
It is recommended that the judgment of the district court be reversed, and the cause remanded for further proceedings according to law.
By the Court: For the reasons stated in the foregoing opinion, the judgment of the district court is reversed, and the cause remanded for further proceedings according to law.
Reversed and remanded.
4 Am. Dec., 61.
4 Am. Dec., 87.
7 Jones’s Law Rep., 14.
Cobbey’s Annotated Statutes, sec. 5378.
Ibid, sec. 5379.
Ibid, sec. 5393.
Ibid, sec. 5393.
76 Am. St. Rep., 826.