222 Mo. 156 | Mo. | 1909
The plaintiff, Etta, whose name appears as Etta Larkin Renneman and as Etta Reineman (and in several other forms) in this record, is the wife of Isaac Renneman, or Reineman, and, claiming to be the widow of Andrew Larkin, sues for dower in certain real estate in St. Francois county of which Andrew died seized of an estate of inheritance — Lot 1, northwest quarter, section 6, township 35, range 4, being the, locus in quo.
The concluding part of the final judgment reads: “It is therefore adjudged by the court that the plaintiff have and recover of and from the said defendants the said sum of one hundred dollars, her damages so assessed, and that she have execution therefor; and it is further ordered and adjudged that the plaintiff be and she is hereby awarded writ of possession according to the report of the commissioners, and that is to say that she is put in possession of the following part of said lands assigned by said commissioners as her dower, to-wit: Lot one of the northwest quarter of section six (6) township 35, range 4 east.”
There was a sharp issue as to whether plaintiff was entitled to dower, and proof was put in pro and con. Defendants filed no motion to arrest the judgment rendered on that issue and no motion for a new trial, nor did they preserve (in a bill of exceptions filed during the term, or afterwards by leave then granted), the evidence introduced on the issue of dower or no dower, or the exceptions saved at that trial.
At a subsequent term, when judgment was rendered for the damages and execution was ordered for them and a writ of possession was awarded, defendants did file unsuccessful motions for a new trial and
Defendant Mamie is a minor and only child of Andrew Larkin, deceased. Defendant Moran seems to be in possession of the locus in quo, but how he holds, whether as tenant, purchaser or under some other claim of right, does not clearly appear in the pleadings or in the proof. While the pleadings are silent on the point, we gather from the testimony that defendant J. S. Larkin was a brother of Andrew. There is some faint evidence that he acted somewhat in loco parentis in and about taking charge of and renting the real estate for and on behalf of Ms niece, but in what legal capacity, if any, is dark.
At a certain time after the cause was appealed here, the death of J. S. Larkin was suggested. Thereat scire facias issued to one McLaran, administrator of his estate, for the purpose of revivor. The matter was not pursued, no order of revivor was made and the case was argued and submitted with the record in that condition.
Going back to the early stages of the case below, it appears that on a certain day plaintiff, by motion filed, suggested that Mamie was an infant served with process, that she had neglected to procure the appointment of a guardian to defend the suit, and prayed the court to appoint some competent person as guardian for her, as by statute provided.
On that same day an order was entered, vis.: “That Hon. W. S. Anthony be and is hereby appointed guardian ad litem for the minor defendants herein. ’ ’
No notice to such appointee is shown, nor was his written consent filed and no separate answer was filed on behalf of the minor — neither did the guardian ad
On that same day a general answer was filed for all the defendants, not naming them severally, but using a plural form. After a denial of each and every allegation, the answer concludes as follows: “Further answering defendants say that plaintiff was never lawfully married to Andrew Larkin; that at the time-plaintiff claims to have married Andrew Larkin she was a married woman and incapable of contracting marriage. Wherefore defendants pray to be dismissed hence with their costs.” Signed: “Smith and Anthony, Wm. H. Clopton, for Defts.”
To that answer plaintiff replied denying “each and every allegation, intimation and allusion'therein. ”
With the pleadings in this fix, the trial came on on the dower issue, the evidence was heard and, while the matter was in the breast of the court, plaintiff filed an amended petition, reading:
“Plaintiffs state that coplaintiff Etta M. Renneman, was at the date of her intermarriage with Isaac Renneman, the widow of Andrew Larkin, deceased, who departed this life on the — day of February, 1900, seized of estate of inheritance in the following lands, to-wit: Lot number one (1) of the northwest quarter of section six (6) in township thirty-five (35) north, of range 4 east, containing about one hundred acres, lying, being and situate in the county of St. Louis (sic) and State of Missouri.
“Plaintiffs state that Mamie Larkin is the only daughter of the said Andrew Larkin, and that J. S. Larkin and David Moran are in possession of said premises. Plaintiffs state that more than two years have elapsed since the death of the said Andrew Larkin and dower in said land has not been assigned' to coplaintiff Etta M. Renneman, formerly Etta M.. Larkin, the widow of said Andrew Larkin, although*164 she has never released said dower nor done any act to bar the same.
“Wherefore, plaintiffs pray that coplaintiff’s Etta Eenneman’s dower in said land be admeasured, that she be put in possession of the part assigned to her and that she have and recover damages by reason of being deforced of her dower therein and for her costs in this behalf expended.”
There was no answer whatever to this amended petition and no leave asked to file one or to refile the former.
On such record defendants assign error, vie.:
(a) In that the petition does not state a cause of action.
(b) In that there was no guardian ad litem appointed as required by statute and the infant Mamie' was at no time represented by such guardian.
(c) In that the judgment is erroneous because it decrees that the widow be put into possession of all the land described in the petition.
(d) In that the evidence shows that plaintiff was not the lawful wife of Andrew Larkin.
(e) There is a preliminary question, not raised by counsel, vie.-, whether the cause may proceed on appeal after the suggestion of the death of one of the appellants and without a revivor in the name of the administrator.
Of these in reverse order.
I. It has been ruled that on the death of one of a number of appellants, a cause may proceed on appeal without a revivor. [Reed v. Colp, 213 Mo. l. c. 581.]
II. At the hearing leading up to the interlocutory judgment for dower one main issue was whether plaintiff was ever the lawful wife of Andrew Larkin, deceased. It seems Andrew was entangled in an alleged executory contract to marry, and had breached the contract. For that breach, he was sued. Pending
The point is interesting and grave, but the questions raised are reserved; since the evidence introduced at the first hearing is not properly preserved in the bill of exceptions nor is any exception thereto preserved for review. Defendants were not entitled to an appeal from the interlocutory judgment decreeing dower. This is so because an action to assign dower is not within the class of cases wherein inter
III. The judgment is self-evidently erroneous in awarding a writ of possession for the whole tract. If she was entitled to a writ, it was only for the part of the land admeasured and set off to her as dower by the report of the commissioners, as approved by the court. [R. S. 1899, sec. 2963.] It is further erroneous in giving a. personal judgment against defendants for the damages and in awarding execution against them personally. Section 2977 ordains that: “Execution thereof (vis., on the judgment for damages) shall be awarded only against the estate in which dower shall have been assigned.” [Griffin v. Regan, 79 Mo. 73.] The judgment should have been special and the award of execution responsive. But we would not reverse on this score as the point is waived by counsel for defendants.
IV. Is there reversible error to be predicated of the failure of the guardian ad litem to consent to his appointment, whether by filing his acceptance in writing and thereafter acting for his ward by filing an
The right determination of those questions can only be reached by considering our statutes and keeping in view the remedy advanced and the mischief to be retarded thereby.
Sections 558, 559 and 560 of the Revised Statutes of 1899, follow:
Sec. 558. “After the commencement of a suit against an infant defendant, and the service of process upon him, the suit shall not be prosecuted any further until a guardian for such infant be appointed.”
Sec. 559. “Such appointment shall be made by the court in which the suit is pending, or by the judge thereof in vacation, upon the written request of the infant defendant, if of the age of fourteen years or more, or, if such infant be under said age, on the written request of a relative or friend of the infant, and on the written consent of any competent person proposed as a guardian, and such request and consent shall be filed in the office of the clerk of the court before any answer by such infant shall be filed.”
Sec. 560. “If such infant defendant neglect, for one day after the first day of-the term at which he is bound to appear to the suit, to procure the appointment of a guardian to defend the suit, the court shall appoint some competent person to be guardian' for such infant in the defense of such suit.”
The three sections are strictly in pari materia, and have been the law for seventy-five years. The first and last have descended as live law without variation or shadow of turning from Revised Statutes 1835. The middle section (now 559) originally read as follows: “Such appointment shall be made upon the request of the defendant, and on the written consent of any competent person proposed as guardian by the court in which the suit is pending, or by a judge there
Sections 558, 559 and 560 of our present statutes appeared in the Revised Statutes of 1835 as sections 24, 25 and 26 (p. 456), save that in 1879, section 25, Revised Statutes 1835, was amended to read as it now does. The amendment obscures the sense a trifle, but we think there is no escape from the conclusion that the amended section retains the sense and purpose of the old one, and that all these statutes had a common purpose and must be construed together to effectuate that purpose. Those sections must be held to prescribe that a suit against an infant should not proceed without the appointment of an adult person of mature judgment to defend his rights. The appointment should be made at the very beginning of the proceeding after service of process and before answer. The statute says so (Sec. 658). Such, too, is the general doctrine and the reasons for the rule are obvious. [10 Ency. of Pl. and Pr., 638.]
"We know the appointment of a guardian ad litem has not infrequently been looked upon in practice as a bare technicality and that the office of such guardian has been deemed to involve perfunctory and shadowy duties, but such theory is unreasoned and such practice indefensible. The reason of the thing and the office and duties of a guardian ad litem are set forth with precision and felicity by Hays, president of the court, and received the sanction of no less an oracle of the law than Chief Justice Gibson, in the case of Mercer v. Watson, 1 Watts l. c. 348-9, viz.: “What then is meant by an appearance and defense in an action, and particularly, when it is said that an infant shall appear and defend by guardian? This is considered as an important privilege of the infant: justly so, for it is evident that his privileges with regard to contracts and other transactions would be of slight
Keeping in mind the significance of the office and appointment of a guardian ad litem and the live and important duties in respect to the infant’s rights devolving upon such appointee, our present-statutes (as did the earlier) require his consent to serve. He
In this case there is no record showing' that Hon. W. S. Anthony ever heard of his appointment, or acted under it in any step in the case. It seems that a firm of attorneys, “Smith and Anthony,” filed an answer to the first petition before the appointment of any guardian ad litem. It seems that after the appointment the same firm filed an answer for all the defendants, uniting with themselves Mr. Olopton in the defense. But such record facts do not aid us. It would be audacious, absent light from the answer itself or elsewhere from the record, to take judicial cognizance that the “Anthony” of the firm of Smith and Anthony was the identical Hon. W. S. Anthony appointed guardian ad litem by the court. There may well be more than one person bearing the honorable name of Anthony in that region, and quite learned in the law. Courts take judicial notice of facts of current history, of geographical and scientific facts and of facts commonly known to all mankind. This, because courts should not admit themselves more ignorant than the rest of mankind. We might, if enlightened by subject-matter or context in a document held in judgment, assume that the surname of a given Washington was George or a given Lincoln, Abraham — this because the subject-matter or context pointed to George Washington or Abraham Lincoln, hut no court has ever arrogated to itself such all-pervading and all-embracing knowledge of the facts of local history as would be assumed in taking judicial notice of the surname of an individual member of a partnership in the practice of law at any particular time in any given town in the State of Missouri. Not
The general doctrine is announced in the work last cited (10 Ency. PL & Pr., p. 662-3-4) to be that a guardian ad litem must consent to act under his appointment in order to render the appointment complete and effective. To quote: “There must, however, in all cases be either an express assent to the appointment or some action taken by the guardian denoting his assent. Thus he may manifest his acceptance by appearing in the suit, and filing an answer for the infant. The acceptance of the appointment should appear of record and where acceptance is not shown a judgment against the infant will be reversed. . . As a general rule, no person can appear as guardian ad litem unless he has been in fact appointed by the court, and the appointment should appear of record. An answer or defence interposed by one acting without appointment will not support a judgment against the infant.”
It has so been ruled, in effect, by the St. Louis Court of Appeals in a memorandum opinion. [Creech v. Creech, 10 Mo. App. 586.]
An entirely different question would be here if the judgment had been in favor of the infant. In such case an appearance by attorney, blest by success in maintaining the infant’s cause, would put the matter on another basis. [R. S. 1899, sec. 672; Padgett v. Smith, 206 Mo. l. c. 313, and cases cited.]
This being an appeal from the judgment it is in the nature of a direct attack upon it. Accordingly, we rule:
First, that the premises considered, the judgment is erroneous and must be reversed;
Second, that the error is manifest on the face of the record and does not depend on matter brought here in the bill of exceptions.
Y. The remaining question is the sufficiency of the amended petition in stating a cause of action. It is scant in allegation. It does not directly allege that the infant inherited the locus in quo as the only heir of Andrew, her father. There is no averment that Andrew died intestate. There is no averment as to the interest or estate of Moran, nor how he holds, nor any averment of similar import as to J. S. Larkin. The statute contemplates that under certain contingencies and circumstances damages for the deforcement of dower do not begin to run until demand is made. [R. S. 1899, sec. 2955.] But shadowy and vague as the petition is in direct allegation, it is aided by reasonable inferences and we shall not hold it bad after verdict. As the judgment must be reversed and the cause remanded for another trial, plaintiff might better amend and may do so if she elect.
In view of conclusion reached and legal propositions ruled, the judgment is reversed and the cause remanded to be proceeded with in accordance with this opinion. It is so ordered.