Court Opinion

ID: 7985214
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-09-09 01:24:46.245352+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:35:10.904019
License: Public Domain

Simkall, C. J.,
delivered the opinion of the court.
The defendant set up the discharge of his intestate from further accounting in the proceedings of final settlement as res adjudicata, protecting him against the demand asserted in this suit.
The complainants attempt to obviate the effect of that *584order, because Mrs. Bailey, then the ward of the intestate, was not represented by a guardian ad litem.
In Burrus v. Burrus, ante, p. 92, the statutes reguating’ the mode of serving process, and upon whom, in proceedings under the probate jurisdiction of the Chancery Court, was very carefully examined, and the conclusion reached that those statutes unaffected by the Chancery Court law for ordinary equity suits must be exclusively looked to in determining how such process must be served, and upon whom. When minors were interested in and proper parties to such proceedings, the summons must have been directed to and served on their guardian, and where the guardian failed to appear, or was interested, the court must have appointed a guardian ad litem. Generally, if not universally, as there pointed out, the infant must be represented, either by his guardian, or the special guardian ad litem when the former is absent or interested; and service on the minor does not give the court jurisdiction to bind him by the decree, such service not being required by the statute. The infant is made amenable to the jurisdiction by the appointment of the special guardian, who in the suit, for all purposes, represents the infant. For several years prior to that decision that seemed to be the doctrine of the court. Winston v. McLendon, 43 Miss. 257; Mullins v. Sparks, 43 Miss. 129; Saxon v. Ames, 47 Miss. 566.
There was service of summons on the minor ward, in the proceedings for final settlement by the intestate, which terminated in his discharge, at the July term, 1865 ; but there was no appointment of, or defence by, a guardian ad litem. That did not constitute a mere irregularity which would render the decree voidable on appeal; but it was in reality a decree rendered when the ward was not legally before the court as a part}7. The summons to the ward was unmeaning and unnecessary. The decree was void. The thirty-second section of, the Probate Court law (Code 1857, p. 341) declares that on¡¡ decree shall be binding, or shall conclude a minor, unless the guardian is a party, if there be one, “ and, if there *585be no guardian, or if the guardian he personally interested, * * * the court shall appoint a guardian ad litem, * * * and its judgment then shall be conclusive on such minor.” It does not at all help the judgment that the minor has been summoned. If the guardian is interested, the judgment shall not “ bind or conclude a minor,” unless there has been appointed a guardian ad litem “ to defend for him or her.” If that has been done, “the judgment shall then be conclusive on such minor.” It is enough to say that the intestate, the general guardian of Mrs. Bailey, then a minor and unmarried, was interested in the settlement and discharge which he sought; and, although the ward was summoned, no guardian ad litem was appointed, and therefore the statute applies. The judgment does not bind and conclude her.
Art. 148, Code 1857, p. 462, has no adaptation to this case. That article deals with a final settlement with a ward who has attained his majority or married. In either event the powers and duties of the guardian cease. The marriage of a minor ward is, in the sense of this article, an emancipation, and capacitates the minor to receive the estate and become a party to the settlement.
But the defendant in error insists that the decree made at the September term, 1865, was cured by what transpired at the November term thereafter. At that term the intestate, Harvey, presented a petition to the Probate Court, suggesting the omission to appoint a guardian in the proceedings for settlement and discharge ; and prayed that such appointment should be made nunc pro tunc, to examine into his proceedings; and that the court would do what was proper in the premises. On the same day the prayer was granted, and Hugh L. White was appointed guardian “now for then,” with instructions “to fully examine the proceedings of said guardian in said guardianship, and report to this court, at its next,term, the result of such investigation.”
At the December term, White reported that he saw no reason why the guardian should not be discharged; that his pro*586ceedings had been in all things regular, and in compliance with the orders of the court and the law.
Thereupon the court, after reciting the former steps, in view of the fact that there was no longer any estate, and to continue the guardianship would be vexatious, grauted the prayer of the original petition, and discharged the guardian.
It is not necessary to determine whether these transactions at the November term are null and void, or whether in reality they did not result in a final settlement. However we might dispose of it, we cannot evade the grave question of whether the intestate could shelter himself under the act of 1861, the petition, the order of the Probate Court, and the investment in Confederate bonds.
The administrator of the guardian affirms that the legality of the investment is vindicated by Trotter v. Trotter, 40 Miss. 704. The appellants affirm that the Supreme Court of the United States is paramount on that subject, and that that court has pronounced such legislation and judicial action void.
It is the settled doctrine of this court, declared in numerous cases, that the State, during the existence of the late civil war, could rightfully legislate upon all subjects of internal and domestic policy, and that its courts could exercise their ordinary and accustomed jurisdiction. There was no limitation or restriction .on the exercise of the powers of the State during that period, within the sphere just named, except that any law passed, or act done by its magistracy, in contravention of the Federal Constitution, and in aid of the Confederate struggle to subvert the authority of the United States, was null and void. The principle has been extended so far as to hold a tax-sale void, in a suit on the title, if any part of the taxes were for military and war purposes. Dogan v. Griffin, 51 Miss. 783'.
The second section of the thix-d article of the Constitution of the United States is : “ The judicial power shall extend to all cases, in law or equity, arising under the Constitution, the laws of the United States, and the treaties, etc. ; to all cases affecting embassadors and public ministers and consuls; to all *587cases of admiralty and maritime jurisdiction ; to controversies between two or more States, between a State and citizens of another State, — ” * * * continuing the enumeration. It then declares to what the original jurisdiction of the Supreme Court shall extend : “ In all other cases before mentioned the Supreme Court shall have appellate jurisdiction, both as to law and fact, with such regulations as the Congress shall make.”
The appellate jurisdiction extends to the cases, rather than the courts in which the suits may be brought. The subject of the suit and the nature of the questions involved must come within the grant of the judicial power in the Constitution, and the “regulations which Congress may prescribe.” Its necessity arises out of the sixth article of the Constitution, which declares that “ this Constitution, and the laws of the United States which shall be made in pursuance thereof, and all treaties made, or which shall be made, under the authority of the United States, shall.be the supreme law of the land; and the judges of every State shall be bound thereby, any thing in the Constitution or laws of any State to the contrary notwithstanding.” Congress has defined the conditions on which the Supreme Court of the United States may exercise appellate jurisdiction over cases originating in the State coui’ts, but involving rights claimed under the Constitution of the United States, the laws of Congress, treaties, etc. The Constitution contains grants of power to the Federal government, and limitations upon, or prohibitions of, certain powers to the States. No State shall pass “ any ex post facto law, or law impairing the obligation of contracts; nor make any thing but gold or silver coin a legal tender,” etc. If, in a suit in a State court, a plea of tender of State bank-notes were offered, the plaintiff would certainly have the right to the protection ■ of the Federal Constitution against a State law which authorized such tender. Plainly, the right which he asserts arises under the Constitution, and he would have a correction by the Federal judiciary if his writ of error come within the regulations *588of Congress ; for the State judges, in their official capacity, are bound to give supremacy to the Constitution, although the law of the State may be to the contrary.
So, too, if the defendant in the State court sheltered himself under some State statute which the creditor insisted impaired the obligation of the contract, a constitutional guaranty is appealed to, and the appellate judicial power of the United States would reach that case. It must be invoked in accordance with the regulations which Congress has presci’ibed. These are contained (for the purposes of this contestation) in the Judiciary Act of 1789, chap. 20, viz., where “ a statute of the United States was drawn in question, and the decision of the State court was against its validity; or the validity of a statute of the State was drawn in question as repugnant to the Constitution of the United States, and the decision was in favor of its validity.” If the decision of the highest tribunal of the State is in favor of the validity of a State statute, which statute is alleged to be repugnant to the Federal Constitution, and the statute is sustained, a review on writ of error by the Supreme Court of the United States may be had, if the record shows that such question was fairly presented and decided. This court has been prompt to follow the judicial leadings of the Supreme Court of the United States in “all cases to which the jurisdiction of that court extends, under the Federal Constitution;” But at the same time it will maintain the full measure of its right to declare the rules of law on all subjects arising under the Constitution, statutes, and customary laws of the State, in which the Constitution of the United States, statutes passed in pursuance of it, and treaties are not involved, and will adhere to its own convictions and judgments, though at variance with the Federal judiciary. In this domain this court is supreme; in the other, the Supreme Court of the United States. These were the considerations which prevailed with this' court, in Lessly v. Phipps, 49 Miss. 799, to overrule the judgment in Stephenson v. Osborne, 41 Miss. —. Since that decision had been announced, the *589Supreme Court of the United States had made utterances which clearly pointed to the invalidity of the statute, as being repugnant to the clause of the Federal Constitution denying to the States power to “pass a law impairing the obligation of contracts,” which Stephenson v. Osborne held to be valid. But this court, as announced in the opinion, “ was (in that class of cases) subordinate to the Supreme Court of the United States, and must receive the expositions of the Constitution from that tribunal as authoritative and binding.” It would have been obstinacy, merely, to have adhered to the former judgment of this court, when that judgment, in effect, bad been condemned by the Supreme Court of the United States.
In Ford v. Surget, 46 Miss. 149, which was an action of tort for cotton destroyed during the war, under a Confederate military order, the court recognized its obligation to decide the questions contested, in “ consonance with principles to be deduced from adjudications of the Supreme Court of the United States.” That premise was correct, since the jurisdiction of the Supreme Court to review that case on writ of ei'ror has lately been sustained.
We find ourselves in the same category, in respect of Trotter v. Trotter, 40 Miss. 707, that the court was placed in Lessly v. Phipps, supra, towards Stephenson v. Osborne. In the former case, the court held an investment in Confederate bonds, under the order of the Probate Court, as allowed by the statute of 1861, to have been rightfully done, and a protection to the administrator. The court proceeded on the idea that the act of 1861 must be respected as valid until the restoration of the authority of the United States, when it ceased to be operative. Since that decision, the Supreme Court of the United States, in Horn v. Lockhart, 17 Wall. 570, had the precise question before it, under the Alabama statute, and held that such investment of the trust funds contributed to the financial resources of the Confederate government, and was in aid of its cause, and that neither the statute nor the judgment *590of the Probate Court could give it any validity. The language of the court was, “ that no acts of the Convention, no judgment of its tribunals, and no decree of the Confederate government could make such transaction lawful.”
The statute which authorized the investment, and the decree of the Probate Court which sanctioned it, were, in the estimation of the court, acts done by the State, in its legislative and judicial departments, in aid of the Confederate cause, and no predicate of right could be founded on them. In the case before us, the guardian petitioned the court for leave to make the investment, and the court directed it to be done. The chancellor so recites the fact to be, in his decree. In Hanauer v. Woodruff, 15 Wall. 442, the same tribunal had declared a promissory note, given for the purchase of the bonds of the State of Arkansas issued by its convention, for military uses in the late war, to be invalid. The reasoning of the court was, that those who bought these bonds were participants in the unlawful purpose for which they were issued, and gave them credit. The case of Tharington v. Smith, 8 Wall. 1, ivas pressed, at the argument, as a precedent in principle and analogy. But the court distinguished the circulation of Confederate notes as a moneyed currency used by millions of people in their daily transactions, and constituting their only “ money,” from a purchase of bonds issued for war purposes. The former was characterized as an “ enforced currency, arising out of paramount authority.” It is to be inferred, from the observations of Mr. Justice Miller, that the court had great difficulty in sustaining Confederate money as a consideration for a contract, but felt constrained by the urgent necessity so to hold, and the inconveniences that would arise from a contrary ruling.
We are constrained to follow the decisions of the Supreme Court of the United States in these adjudications.
Decree reversed, and cause remanded for further proceedings.