72 So. 118 | Ala. | 1916
The bill was filed on April 10, 1912, by Mamie Lambert against Ola Smith, widow of William T. Smith, deceased, and other named respondents, minor children of said decedent, and J. J. Dunnavant, as administrator of the estate of the decedent. It is averred that on September 19, 1908, J. J. Dunnavant was appointed by the probate court of Coffee county, Ala., as administrator of the estate of William T. Smith, deceased; that Dunnavant filed an inventory of the personal property of the estate, which was duly appraised and returned to said court on October 21, 1908, at the value of $1,918.50; that there was begun in said court a proceeding to set apart $1,000 of the insurance money arid the homestead of the decedent as exempt to the widow, Ola Smith, and the minor children of the decedent, Eula, Otto, Thelma, and Ethel Smith, but that said exempt property was never so set aside; that said administrator has failed in his duties in prosecuting the due administration of the estate in the probate court, has not collected rents, nor accounted therefor, nor made any settlement of his administration. It is further averred that the real property of said estate aggregates amount 163 acres of land, of the value of $3,000, and that it cannot be equitably
Demurrers filed by the respondents were overruled; and, the 30 days given for answer having elapsed without answer, a decree pro confesso was rendered against Ola Smith, the widow, and Louis Smith, an adult heir, defendants. J. J. Dunnavant, as said administrator, filed his answer. A guardian ad litem for the minor respondents was appointed and accepted the appointment. The record does not disclose an answer by such guardian ad litem for the minors, yet it is shown that such guardian ad litem entered into a written agreement as to taking testimony, and the note of submission of complainant was on answer of the guardian ad litem, J. N. Ham, for Otto, Eula, Thelma, and Ethel Smith, minors. The record further contains an interlocutory order, of date May 5, 1915, allowing complainant “to amend bill, which is done.” This amendment made certain the description of the 36 acres “on south side” in the N. E. % of the S. W. % of section 8, township 7, range 22, and averred that there were 163 acres, more or less, of the lands in question. It amended the second paragraph of the bill by averring that complainant and each of the children of William T. Smith “is entitled to one-sixth undivided interest in and to the said lands, subject to the lower interest in said lands of Ola Smith,” and amended the fourth paragraph, by striking therefrom the averment of the failure of the administration in the administration of the estate. It amendéd also the prayer of the bill, by striking therefrom the qualification “that after separating the amount exempt to the widow and minor children for the homestead, and the amount of personal property exempt to them out of said estate,” and by striking the prayer for an accounting and final settlement by the administrator.
The appeal is by all of the respondents, Ola Smith, the widow, the adult heir, and the minor children, by their guardian ad litem, J. N. Ham. The several and separate assignments of error challenge the action of the chancellor in allowing a material amendment of the bill, and rendering final decree thereon, without notice to the respondents.
The rendition of the decree without notice was reversible error as to the minor respondents.
In Howton, et al. v. Jordan, et al., 154 Ala. 428, 46 South. 234, Justice Anderson said: “The only amendments which are authorized under the rule without notice are those applied for at the hearing. * * * The fact that a decree pro confesso was entered did not dispense with notice of amendments subsequently made, and it was reversible error to render a decree on the amendment.” °
In McClenney v. Ward,, 80 Ala. 243, the amendment, as in the instant case, was to correct a misdescription of the land sought to be sold, and it was held a material amendment. In the amendment in the case at bar, not only was the description as to the 35-acre tract corrected, but the calling to- account and final settlement of the administrator was abandoned, the prayer for separating the exemptions to the widow and minor children of homestead and personal. property was stricken, and the third paragraph was amended to aver that the lands were subject to the dower right of the widow; and the amended prayer asked a sale of the lands without reference to these matters. Thus the amendments were material as to the widow and the adult and minor children of the decedent. The issue between the parties was changed, and a different relief authorized.—Rosenau v. Powell, 173 Ala. 123, 128, 55 South. 789; Howton, et al. v. Jordan, et
In the case at bar the record is silent as to such notice, and does not disclose the actual presence of the respondents, who were not in default, either in person, or by their solicitors or guardian ad litem; and no effort to comply with subdivision 2 of rule 44, by service of notice on the resident respondents who were not in court, is shown.
When the several rules of chancery practice, and provisions of the statute as to amendments, are considered together, as providing a procedure that is expeditious, and at the same time just to the parties litigant, it cannot be maintained that a material
The decree is reversed, and the cause is remanded.
Reversed and remanded.