Robbins v. Cutler

26 N.H. 173 | Superior Court of New Hampshire | 1852

Woods, J.

It is objected in this case that the motion to dismiss the appeal comes too late. It was made at the *176term of the court next after the term at which the guardian was appointed. But it appears by the admissions at the bar, that at the term when the appointment was made the guardian had no opportunity to consider his new position, the duties devolved upon him by the appointment, or the rights and remedies justly and legally belonging to his ward. And we think if the remedy was open to him at all, it was not waived by any delay that appears in making the motion.

This brings us to the inquiry whether the remedy was one open to the infant at the time the guardian was appointed.

Barber v. Graves, 18 Vt. Rep. 190, was like this case in its facts, except that an erroneous judgment had been rendered in the court appealed to. The county court refused the motion of the defendant to dismiss the appeal. The ground of the refusal was that a guardian, after the appeal, and after the second judgment had been rendered, having been appointed, the incapacity of the defendant had ceased, and he had every ability for maldng every defence. Now we think that this view does not meet the necessities of the infant; it does not furnish him with the protection in-, tended. •

Instead of enabling him to protect himself against the consequences pf his own presumed indiscretion, it seems to us that it makes right what .was before wrong in the legal proceedings; it binds him to abide by his past errors and •indiscretions. The appointment puts an end to all error in past proceedings, and disables the party to avail himself of ■them,eor to object for that cause. .

We think the appointment of a guardian can have no such retrospective effect upon the prior erroneous proceedings as to correct the errors, and that without a waiver thereof,- or what will amount to a waiver afterwards, no .such result can follow.

A very different view is taken in Massachusetts. Valier *177v. Hart, 11 Mass. Rep. 300, cited at the bar. There it is holden that an infant cannot take an appeal. The case for decision was error to reverse a justice’s judgment. It was objected that error will not lie. where the party has the right of appeal. The principal of law was admitted, but the court held that the writ of error was well brought, because the infant could not appeal. In that case, the appeal would seem to have been regarded as a mere nullity. . Whether it was such or not, however, we need not now decide.

It may be safely stated, as a general rule, that the acts and contracts of infants are, at best, voidable at their election. Going no further, and applying that principle to the present case, how does it stand ? The claim of appeal was the act of the infant; he claimed and obtained it as a matter of right. Yet his acts, we have seen, are not binding upon him except at his election. Through his gurdian, he has elected to repudiate the act, and to treat it as having no binding force upon him. The case falls within the general principle, and we think the motion to dismiss the appeal should be granted. It is, perhaps, the only remedy which the party has to avoid the act of the infant, so as to let him in to his original rights and condition.

What effect this may have upon the justice’s judgment we do not decide. It may leave it a voidable judgment, or it may be that the appeal has vacated it, notwithstanding the dismissal of the appeal. We give no opinion relative to any further rights or remedies of the infant than what is immediately before us.

Appeal dismissed.