Court Opinion

ID: 8257426
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-10-16 15:33:15.318822+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:43:02.849234
License: Public Domain

HaNDY, J.,
delivered the opinion of the court.
This bill was filed by the appellee, as guardian of Jasper and Margaret Nance, to recover certain slaves belonging to the wards, and in the possession of the appellant. The appellee claims title *71in liis bill as guardian, under appointment from tbe proper court in the State of Arkansas, where the wards reside, showing no steps taken in this State to authorize him to exercise the functions of guardian in this State.
The appellant filed a demurrer to the bill, relying upon the want of capacity of the guardian to sue in this State, in virtue of his appointment in Arkansas; and the demurrer was overruled, and the case proceeded to final hearing upon bill, answer, and proofs, when a decree was rendered in favor of the appellee; from which this appeal is prosecuted.
It is clear that the objection to the capacity of the guardian to sue in this State, in virtue of his appointment in Arkansas, was well taken, such appointment conferring no power over the property of the wards beyond the jurisdiction where the appointment was made. Story’s Confl. Laws, § 504, a.
But the effect of this rule is attempted to be avoided on two grounds: —
1st. It is said that it appears by the bill and exhibits, that the guardian recovered possession of the slaves in an action of replevin in the State of Arkansas, and that he is thereby clothed with the possession, and is entitled to maintain an action to recover the same in another State, upon the same principle by which an administrator, having reduced personal property of his intestate to possession, is entitled to sue for it in another State. But this position is untenable for two reasons: 1st. An administrator, having obtained possession of a chattel belonging to his intestate in his lifetime, in the jurisdiction from which he derived his office, is thereby invested with the legal title, and is, to all intents and purposes, the legal owner of it, though as trustee, within the jurisdiction of his appointment; and having been clothed with such title within that jurisdiction, it will be respected in any other country, and in virtue of his title derived from the possession, he may sue for it in any other country. Story’s Confl. Laws, § 516. But as between guardian and ward, the legal title to the property does not vest in the guardian, but remains in the ward. The guardian is simply the agent or trustee for its management, with certain powers over it, the legal title being in the ward. In this respect, the condition of the guardian differs materially from that of an administrator. But 2d, it does not ap*72pear that the slaves were reduced to possession, by the guardian’ in Arkansas. The exhibit to the bill shows a suit in the name of the wards, ’ by their guardian, for the - recovery of possession, and a judgment in favor of the plaintiffs; but it does not show that possession was delivered under the judgment; and on the contrary, the bill alleges that the slaves were removed from Arkansas to this State by the defendant in the judgment, and were not delivered to the guardian.
2d. It is said that the record shows that the guardian was authorized to sue in this State, by having filed in the proper Probate Court in this State, his letters of guardianship granted in Arkansas, and the bond for the execution of the trust given there, and having executed bond in the Probate Court in this State according to the Statute of 1854, ch. 2, § 14. The record shows, that several months after the demurrer was overruled, a copy of the bond executed in the Probate Court in this State was filed in the cause; and this bond bears date after the filing of the bill. It was not, however, set up by way of amendment to the bill, and could not, therefore, aid the defective title set up in the bill. The demurrer was taken, relying on the incapacity of the complainant, who claimed solely as guardian under an appointment in Arkansas. If the bill had been amended so as to show the subsequent execution of the bond in this State, the objection might have been obviated. 1 Daniel Ch. Pr. 367. But without such amendment, the bill was clearly insufficient, and the demurrer to it should have been sustained.
The decree overruling the demurrer must, therefore, be reversed, the demurrer sustained, and the bill dismissed.