The decision of this Court in
Hoyt v. Sprague and in
Francklyn v. Sprague, 103 U. S. 613, so
far as applicable to this case, is affirmed and adhered to.
On the organization of the A. & W. Sprague Manufacturing
Company and the conveyance to it of the assets of the old
partnership, including the interests of minors conveyed under valid
authority derived from the Legislature of Rhode Island, the
property ceased to be partnership property; the partners ceased to
be partners and became shareholders; their lien on the partnership
property as partners ceased when their character as stockholders
began, and those who claim through a stockholder cannot set up such
lien.
A corporation, formed by and consisting of the members of a
partnership, for the purpose of conducting the partnership business
and taking the partnership property, takes the latter freed from
partnership equities, all of which are settled and extinguished by
the transfer.
While a person of unsound mind remains a minor, an ordinary
guardian is all the custodian of either his person or estate that
is necessary, and an act done by such guardian in relation to his
estate is as valid as if done by a committee appointed to take
charge of him and his estate as a person of unsound mind.
This was an appeal from a final decree of the circuit court
dismissing a bill in equity. The case is stated in the opinion of
the Court.
Page 121 U. S. 216
MR. JUSTICE BRADLEY delivered the opinion of the Court.
All the essential facts on which this case is based are the same
as those involved in the case of
Hoyt v. Sprague and
Francklyn v. Sprague, reported in
103 U.
S. 613. The evidence used in those cases was imported
into this by agreement of the parties, and only one new feature has
been added. This is the mental incapacity of the present
complainant, Edwin Hoyt, called Edwin Hoyt, Jr., in the former
cases. The bill of complaint contains substantially the same
statements as the bills in those cases, with the addition of an
averment that the complainant, by certain proceedings had in the
Supreme Court of New York in April, 1874, commonly called a
commission of lunacy, was declared to be of unsound mind, incapable
of taking care of himself or his property; that he had been in that
condition during all his life, and that said Charles G. Francklyn
and William S. Hoyt were appointed the committee of his person and
estate. The principal facts out of which the litigation grew are
stated in the report referred to, but it is proper to restate such
of them here as may have a special bearing upon the questions
growing out of the alleged incapacity of the complainant.
The brothers, Amasa and William Sprague, the elder, were engaged
as manufacturers in Rhode Island under the firm of A. & W.
Sprague, for many years prior to December, 1843, when Amasa Sprague
died, leaving a widow, Fanny Sprague, two sons, Amasa and William,
the younger, and two or three daughters. William, the survivor,
with the consent of his brother's widow, who became administratrix
of his estate, continued the business under the same partnership
name for the joint benefit of himself and his brother's family
until October, 1856, when he died, leaving a widow, Mary Sprague, a
son, Byron Sprague, and four grandchildren, being the children of a
deceased daughter, Susan S. Hoyt, wife of Edwin Hoyt, of New York.
This daughter had died in October,
Page 121 U. S. 217
1853, and her children were Sarah Hoyt, Susan S. Hoyt, born
October, 1845, William S. Hoyt, born January 1, 1847, and Edwin
Hoyt, the complainant, born July 16, 1849. Shortly prior to the
death of William Sprague the elder, he had taken into the firm as
partners with him his son Byron and his two nephews, Amasa and
William Sprague the younger, so that at the death of William
Sprague, in October, 1856, these young men were the surviving
partners of the firm. By the enterprise of William Sprague, the
property of the joint concern had greatly accumulated, being
estimated at the time of his death at several millions of dollars.
His widow Mary took out letters of administration on his estate,
and on the petition of her son-in-law, Edwin Hoyt, she was
appointed guardian of the property and estate in Rhode Island of
each of her grandchildren, who were the children of the said Edwin
Hoyt, and all under fourteen years of age. This was done in
February, 1857.
The parties then interested in the joint property of A. & W.
Sprague were the two families of Amasa and William Sprague, the
elder, in equal parts, that of the former being represented by
Fanny Sprague, widow and administratrix, and her two sons Amasa and
William (who had purchased the interest of their sisters), and that
of the latter being represented by Mary Sprague, widow and
administratrix, her son Byron, and her four grandchildren, the
Hoyts, whose interests were represented by her as guardian of their
property and estate. This made the property divisible into six
equal shares, each widow being entitled to one-third of her
husband's part and the two sons of Amasa being each entitled to a
third of his interest, Byron Sprague being entitled to one-third of
his father's interest and the Hoyt children being entitled to the
remaining third. As the factories were in successful operation and
as a division of the property was deemed undesirable, all the
parties concerned capable of exercising judgment, including Edwin
Hoyt, the father of the four minors, were agreed upon the
expediency of continuing the operation of the works as a joint
concern for the benefit of all in proportion to their several
interests, and it was so done, the factories and operations
Page 121 U. S. 218
being conducted by Amasa and William Sprague the younger and
Byron Sprague. In 1862, Byron Sprague sold out his interest to his
cousins Amasa and William for $600,000, which gave to each of the
latter a share and a half of the entire six shares.
Soon after this, two charters were obtained from the Legislature
of Rhode Island for the purpose of vesting the property of the
concern in corporate bodies, one to be called the A. & W.
Sprague Manufacturing Company, and the other the Quidnick
Company.
In January, 1863, Mary Sprague, as guardian of the estate of her
four minor grandchildren, together with their father, Edwin Hoyt,
presented a petition to the Legislature of Rhode Island,
representing that they deemed it advisable and expedient that the
interests of the said minors should be vested in such corporation
or corporations as should be organized under and in accordance with
the charters granted as aforesaid, and praying as follows:
"Wherefore your petitioners pray that whenever any corporation
or corporations shall be organized under either or any of the
charters aforesaid, and conveyance or conveyances shall become
necessary to vest the title of the parties interested in any of
said property in any such corporation or corporations, upon the
execution by said Mary and Edwin, as principals, or every such bond
or bonds in such penal sum or sums, and with such sureties as the
court of probate of Warwick shall require, conditioned for the
investment of the amount of the full value of the interests
hereinafter prayed to be conveyed in the capital stock of any such
corporation or corporations to which such interests shall be
conveyed as hereinafter prayed, in the names and for the use and
benefit of said minors, and on the delivery of such bond or bonds
to said court of probate, the said Mary in her capacity as guardian
may make, execute, seal, acknowledge, stamp, and deliver all and
any such conveyance and conveyances to any such corporation or
corporations as shall be necessary to vest the title of the said
minors in and to said property in any such corporation or
corporations, and that any such conveyance or
Page 121 U. S. 219
conveyances, so executed, acknowledged, stamped, and delivered,
shall be deemed and held as valid and effectual in law and equity
to vest the title of said minors in any such corporation or
corporations as though the same were executed, acknowledged, and
delivered by said minors after attaining their majority, and, as in
duty bound, will ever pray."
"MARY SPRAGUE,
Guardian"
"EDWIN HOYT"
In pursuance of this petition, the legislature, on the 9th of
March, 1863, passed a resolution, having the effect of a law, by
which it was enacted as follows:
"Voted and resolved that the prayer of said petition be, and the
same is hereby granted, and the said Mary Sprague, in her capacity
as guardian of the estate of Edwin Hoyt, Jr., Susan S. Hoyt, Sarah
Hoyt, and Wm. S. Hoyt, is hereby authorized and fully empowered,
whenever any corporation or corporations shall be organized under
either or any of the charters heretofore granted by the General
Assembly of this state, and conveyance or conveyances shall become
necessary to vest the title of the parties interested in any of
said property so held, owned, or managed by the firm of A. & W.
Sprague in any such corporation or corporations, to make, execute,
seal, acknowledge, stamp, and deliver all and any such conveyance
and conveyances to any such corporation or corporations as shall be
necessary to vest the right, title, and interest of the said minors
in and to said property, or any portion thereof, in any such
corporation or corporations, and that any such conveyance or
conveyances, so executed, acknowledged, stamped, and delivered,
shall be deemed and held as valid and effectual in law and in
equity to vest the title or said minors in any such corporation or
corporations as though the same were executed, acknowledged,
stamped, and delivered by said minors after attaining their
majority,
provided that before the delivery of any such
conveyance or conveyances, the said Mary shall have executed and
delivered to the Court of Probate of Warwick every such bond or
bonds with herself in her said capacity and said Edwin Hoyt as
principals,
Page 121 U. S. 220
in such penal sum or sums and with such sureties as said probate
court shall require, conditioned for the investment of the amount
of the full value of the interests of said minors which she shall
then be about to convey in the capital stock of any such
corporation or corporations, to which the same shall be conveyed in
the names and for the use and benefit of said minors."
This legislative act was adjudged by this Court, in the cases of
Hoyt and
Francklyn v. Sprague, before mentioned,
to be valid and effective to authorize Mary Sprague, as guardian of
the estate of the four minors, to convey their interests in the A.
& W. Sprague property to the corporations named.
The terms of the act were duly complied with, and by an
agreement executed on the 1st of April, 1865, by and between all
the parties interested in the property, in their various
capacities, including Edwin Hoyt, as father of the four minor
children, and Mary Sprague, as the guardian of their estate, and as
administratrix of her husband's estate, referees were appointed to
appraise the entire property and to report the amount of each one's
interest therein, with a view to adjust the several shares of
capital stock in the corporations to be formed to which each would
be entitled. This duty was performed by the referees, who brought
the accounts down to the 31st day of March, 1865, and reported that
on that day the cash value of the whole property and assets,
exclusive of the Quidnick Company property (which was appraised by
itself in consequence of outside parties having some interest
therein), was $6,732,906.69, and that the liabilities amounted to
$2,871,921.79, leaving the net value of the estate equal to
$3,860,984.90. The different interests in this amount they reported
to be as follows:
Mary Sprague's individual interest . . . . . . . . .
$624,984.69
Fanny Sprague's interest . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
625,511.69
William Sprague's interest . . . . . . . . . . . . .
978,867.42
Amasa Sprague's interest . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
978,867.42
Mary Sprague, guardian of children of Susan Hoyt . .
652,753.68
Page 121 U. S. 221
They then stated the result of the individual accounts of the
several parties with the firm, showing what each was indebted
thereto, and what was due to each; and, in this connection, the sum
of $188,333.33 was credited as due from the firm to Mary Sprague,
guardian of the heirs of Susan Hoyt, to equalize the amounts drawn
out of the firm by the two Rhode Island families for their family
expenses.
The stock of the A. & W. Sprague Manufacturing by the
referees to the various parties by the referees to the various
parties according to the value of their respective interests in the
property independently of the amounts due from or to them,
respectively, which last amounts remained as debts due to or from
the company. When the property was conveyed to the corporation, as
hereinafter mentioned, it was stipulated as an express condition
that the corporation was to assume all the liabilities of the firm
of A. & W. Sprague. There being found due to Mary Sprague, as
administratrix, for a dividend previously made by the firm, the sum
of $164,250.26, she elected to take stock for that, instead of the
liability of the company; which increased the total amount of the
stock to the sum of $4,025,235.16. This, being divided into 10,000
shares, made each share equal in value to $402.52, and gave to Mary
Sprague, as guardian of her children, including their portion of
the shares allotted to her as administratrix, 1,751 shares, or 439
shares each.
The Quidnick property was valued at $776,065, and divided into
5,000 shares, of which 489 shares were allotted to Mary Sprague as
guardian of her grandchildren, including their portion of the
shares allotted to her as administratrix, being 122 shares to
each.
The precise interests of the parties having thus been
ascertained, in August, 1865, Mary Sprague, as guardian of the Hoyt
children, applied to the Probate Court of Warwick (the proper
jurisdiction) for an order to authorize her, in pursuance of the
act of assembly, to convey to the respective corporations the
interest of her wards in the properties of the firm of A. & W.
Sprague, and of the Quidnick Company, in exchange for the shares to
which they were entitled by the report of the
Page 121 U. S. 222
referees. On the 5th of August, 1865, an order was made
accordingly, and on the 9th of August, 1865, an instrument was
executed by all the parties, including Mary Sprague, as guardian of
the Hoyt children, by which, after reciting the powers given to her
by the act of assembly and the order of the probate court, they
conveyed and transferred to the A. & W. Sprague Manufacturing
Company all their respective right, title, and interest in the
entire property of A. & W. Sprague, except the Quidnick
property, including all the right, title, and interest of said
minors, with the following stipulation, to-wit:
"It being expressly understood that this conveyance is made upon
condition that the grantees are to assume the liabilities of said
firm of A. & W. Sprague, in accordance with said agreement of
reference hereinbefore referred to."
A similar deed of conveyance was made to the Quidnick Company
(corporation) for the Quidnick property and assets.
Thereupon, after adjusting the fractional shares, each party was
credited on the stock ledgers of the respective companies with the
shares to which they were severally entitled, the Hoyt children
being each credited with 439 shares of the A. & W. Sprague
Manufacturing Company, and 122 shares of the Quidnick Company.
In June, 1866, Mary Sprague, as guardian of her said
grandchildren, presented to the probate court a petition for the
appointment of appraisers to appraise the property of her wards in
her hands in order that she might return an inventory thereof.
Appraisers were accordingly appointed and performed the duty
required of them, and presented inventories and appraisements of
each ward's estate, which were sworn to by Mary Sprague and filed
and approved by the court on the 13th of August, 1866. That of
Edwin Hoyt, Jr., with which the others substantially corresponded,
was as follows, to-wit:
Page 121 U. S. 223
124 shares National Bank of Commerce, $51 . . . . . . $
6,324.00
1 U.S. 6 percent bond . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 108.50
2 N.Y. Prov. & Boston R. Co. bonds, $950. . . . . . .
1,900.00
439 shares A. & W. Sprague M'f'g Co. stock, 402/525 .
176,707.82
122 shares Quidnick Co. stock . . . . . . . . . . . .
18,935.98
Cash. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 387.44
-----------
$204,363.74
Dividend due from A. & W. Sprague, as cash, March 31,
1865, with interest from that date. . . . . . . . .
47,083.34
-----------
$251,447.08
Mary Sprague, in her answer, states that the bank stock and
bonds had been purchased by her, before the organization of the
corporations, with moneys drawn by her from time to time, as
guardian, from the firm of A. & W. Sprague. The dividend of
$47,083.34, "due from A. & W. Sprague, as cash, March 31,
1865," was one-fourth of the sum of $188,333.33, allowed to the
Hoyt children, as before stated. At the same time, Mary Sprague
presented her account, as guardian, with each of her wards, based
on the appraisement, notice of such presentation having been duly
published in pursuance of a previous order, and the accounts were
severally allowed on the same 13th of August, 1866.
After these proceedings were had, Mary Hoyt resigned her
guardianship, which resignation was accepted by the court, and on
the application of Edwin Hoyt, the father, stating that it was the
desire of his three younger children, Susan S. Hoyt, William S.
Hoyt, and Edwin Hoyt, Jr., that William Sprague should be appointed
guardian of their estate in Rhode Island (Sarah having become of
age), the appointment was made as requested, and William Sprague,
as guardian of the estate of the three younger children, on the 1st
of September, 1866, gave the requisite bonds, and filed an
inventory in each case, the same as had been presented and filed by
Mary Sprague, with the addition of a further dividend made by the
corporations on the 1st of September, less amounts paid for the
benefit of the wards, respectively. The account in the case of
Page 121 U. S. 224
Edwin Hoyt, Jr., the complainant in this case, duly verified by
appraisers and by the oath of William Sprague, guardian, was as
follows, to-wit:
124 shares National Bank of Commerce, $51 . . . . . $
6,324.00
1 U.S. 6 percent bond . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 108.50
2 N.Y. Prov. & Boston R. Co. bonds, 950 . . . . . .
1,900.00
439 shares A. & W. Sprague M'f'g Co., 402/5275. . .
176,707.82
122 shares Quidnick Co., 155/213. . . . . . . . . .
18,935.98
Dividend due from A. & W. Sprague, as cash,
March 31, 1865. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 47,083.34
Dividends due from A. & W. Sprague Mfg. Co.,
cash, Sept. 1, 1866 . . . . . . . . . 6,585.00
Less payments by above company. . . . . 2,979.60
-------- 3,605.40
Dividends due from Quidnick Co., as cash
Sept. 1, 1866 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1,220.00
No real estate -----------
$255,885.04
At this time, Edwin Hoyt, Jr., the now complainant, was
seventeen years of age, Susan nearly twenty-one, and William S.
nineteen.
The record shows various accounts rendered to Susan and William
after they became of age and various amounts paid them. Whether any
further sums were advanced on Edwin's account beyond the $2,979.60
charged in the inventory does not appear. He lived with his father
in New York, who was a member of the firm of Hoyt, Sprague &
Co., a firm intimately connected with the Rhode Island companies,
and may have had no occasion for advances on account of his
interest.
In the fall of 1873, the A. & W. Sprague Manufacturing
Company became embarrassed and suspended payment, and on the first
of November, 1873, the said company, together with Amasa and
William Sprague and the said Fanny and Mary Sprague, made an
assignment to Zachariah Chafee, of all the property, real and
personal, of said company and of the said parties individually, and
of the firm of A. & W.
Page 121 U. S. 225
Sprague (excepting shares of capital stock in any corporation),
in trust for the benefit of such creditors as should accept, in
payment of their debts, the notes of the company payable in three
years from January 1, 1874, with interest. Subsequently, on the 6th
of April, 1874, a further assignment was made by said A. & W.
Sprague and the A. & W. Sprague Manufacturing Company to said
Chafee, of all of said property, in trust, first for the benefit of
such creditors as should come in and take said notes in payment of
their debts, and secondly the residue for the benefit of all other
creditors of said parties.
In December, 1873, Susan S. Hoyt, who came of age in October,
1866, and who afterwards married Charles G. Francklyn, received
from her guardian, William Sprague, the stocks and bonds mentioned
in his inventory of her estate before referred to (except the
shares in the A. & W. Sprague Manufacturing Company, which were
probably deemed worthless), and William S. Hoyt received the stocks
and bonds mentioned in the like inventory of his estate. It is also
to be inferred from the pleadings and evidence that Edwin Hoyt,
Jr., the complainant at the same time received the stocks and bonds
mentioned in the like inventory of his estate. The bill admits that
William Sprague, the guardian, delivered to the complainant, Edwin
Hoyt, Jr., "123 shares in the Quidnick Company and certain other
shares of stock," to which he informed the said Francklyn and
William S. Hoyt the said Edwin was entitled. It also appears that
on the 9th of December, 1873, Edwin Hoyt, stock (122 shares) to
said Charles G. Francklyn for the sum of $34,000; stock (122
shared) to said Charles G. Francklyn for the sum of 34,000, and on
the same day executed a power of attorney to his father, Edwin
Hoyt, to transfer the same. Both of these instruments were
acknowledged by said Edwin Hoyt, Jr., before a commissioner for the
State of Rhode Island in the City of New York. A week previous to
this, namely on the 1st of December, 1873, William S. Hoyt went to
Providence to get the various stocks transferred by the guardian to
the parties for whom they were held, but, not finding him there,
wrote him the following letter, to-wit:
Page 121 U. S. 226
"Providence, December 1, 1873"
"HON. WILLIAM SPRAGUE:"
"DEAR SIR: I come here to get you to transfer to the respective
owners the Quidnick and bank stock which you hold as guardian for
my sister, brother, and me, but, as you are absent, I leave with
Mr. Greene the power appointing me attorney for my brother and
sister, and enclose power appointing Mr. Greene attorney to make
the necessary transfer, which please execute, and send to him by
return mail."
"Yours truly,"
"W. S. HOYT"
From these statements and proofs it is not only fairly to be
inferred that the complainant actually received the bonds and
stocks held for him by his guardian, William Sprague, but that his
father and the said Charles G. Francklyn and William S. Hoyt, his
brother-in-law and brother, who now appear as his committee in this
suit, dealt with him as a person capable of transacting business as
late as December, 1873.
Indeed, in view of the decision of this Court in the cases of
Hoyt v. Sprague and
Francklyn v. Sprague,
103 U. S. 613, the
appellant, by his said committee, does not claim, before this Court
anything but his one-fourth part of the sum of $188,333.33, which
was allowed to the Hoyt children by way of compensation for the
amounts drawn out of the concern by the Rhode Island families for
their family expenses. The contention is (and that is the matter
now presented for consideration) that this sum was never converted
into the stock of the corporation, but remained a lien on the
partnership property, and followed it as such in the hands of the
corporation, with priority over all other claims against it, except
the debts of the firm then due and owing. Can this proposition be
maintained? There is no doubt that in 1865, before the property of
A. & W. Sprague was conveyed to the corporation, Mary Sprague,
as administratrix of her husband's estate, had a lien on the
partnership property (subject to the debts then due) for the whole
amount of her interest therein, and it was then in her power, had
she thought fit, to have demanded a settlement and distribution of
the partnership property according to the
Page 121 U. S. 227
several equities of the parties concerned, including the just
share of herself and her wards, and in that share and as a part of
it, the said sum of $188,333.33. But she deemed it more for their
advantage (as well as her own) that the property should be kept
together and vested in the corporations proposed to be formed, and
in this view she was supported by the opinion and advice of Edwin
Hoyt, father of the minors. The Act of the legislature of March 9,
1863, gave her power to convey all the right, title, and interest
of the said minors in and to the property, to the respective
corporations. And this she did. By her conveyance and that of the
other interested parties, the entire property and assets of the
partnership were conveyed to and vested in the corporations, those
of A. & W. Sprague in the A. & W. Sprague Manufacturing
Company, and those of the Quidnick Company in the Quidnick
corporation, subject, however, to the debts and liabilities of
every kind and description. The debts and liabilities of the firm
of A. & W. Sprague thereupon became the debts and liabilities
of the A. & W. Sprague Manufacturing Company. The property
ceased to be partnership property and became consolidated in a
unity of interest in the corporation. The partners ceased to be
partners, and became holders of shares in the capital stock of the
company. Their lien as partners ceased when their character of
stockholders began. The mutual accounts showed that various sums
were due to the several partners from the firm or from them to the
firm. They might have adjusted these individual balances by stock,
adding an equivalent in stock to those who had balances of credit
and deducting an equivalent of stock from those whose balances were
against them. But they preferred that these balances should stand
as debits and credits against or in favor of the corporation when
organized, and they were all disposed of in that way except one
item due to Mary Sprague, as administratrix, for a dividend
formerly made by the firm, as before stated. This she preferred to
take in stock, and the others consented to it, and she afterwards
allotted to her wards their proper share of it. The sum of
$188,333.33, which had been credited to Mary Sprague as guardian of
her grandchildren to equalize the
Page 121 U. S. 228
sums drawn out by the other parties for family expenses, she
preferred to allow to stand as a debt of the corporation, as it had
been a debt of the firm. It was so arranged. The corporation, by
the terms of the transfer of all the property, succeeded to and
assumed all the debts and liabilities of the firm, this among the
rest. This liability was treated exactly like all others, whether
due to the partners or to strangers. It was treated as a debt.
Now can it be justly contended that these debts due to the
several partners, when they became the assumed debts of the
corporation, continued to be liens on the property, as they had
been when it was partnership property? We think not. This would
have been subversive of the whole plan. The relation of the parties
to the property was entirely changed. Their lien as partners, as
well as their character of partners, was extinguished. A conveyance
or release of property by one who has a lien on it necessarily
extinguishes the lien. Mary Sprague, as administratrix and
guardian, after conveying to the corporation all her interest and
the interest of her wards in the property, parted with all right in
it, and accepted in lieu of it shares for her aliquot part in the
body of it, and the assumption and engagement of the corporation to
pay the balance due to her on the accounts. Having conveyed and
parted with the property by virtue of an authority conferred by
law, her lien upon it was gone, and those who claim through and
under her cannot set up any such claim.
It cannot be said that she sacrificed the interests of her wards
by retaining the claim as a debt instead of taking stock for it, as
she might have done, because a debt always has priority over
capital stock, and is a more favored claim in the law.
The argument that the corporation, being the creature of the
partners, was not a
bona fide purchaser and must be
considered as having taken the property subject to all partnership
equities against it is not a sound one. The constitution of the
corporation and the transfer to it of the property were authorized
by law, and were intended to settle and extinguish these equities,
and to place the concern on a new footing, and the
Page 121 U. S. 229
very parties entitled to equities were the ones who organized
the corporation and made the conveyance to it. Besides, it is not
the corporation alone which is concerned in the transfer, but the
creditors who trusted it after it was formed. They, or at least the
great mass of them, certainly stand in the position of
bona
fide claimants against its property and assets. They may not
be able to claim any precedency over the former partners having
debts due to them, but they stand on an equal footing with
them.
With these views as to the effect of the conveyance of the
interest of the Hoyt children to the A. & W. Sprague
Manufacturing Company, the proceedings taken in 1874 by C. G.
Francklyn and William S. Hoyt, to have the complainant in this case
declared to be of unsound mind from his birth, cannot have any
effect to change the conclusion which we reached in the former
cases. Whether he was of unsound mind or not, Mary Sprague was the
lawful guardian of his property and estate in Rhode Island from the
time of her first appointment, in 1857, when he was seven years
old, and continued such, with all the rights and powers of a
guardian, until she resigned that charge in 1866, and the act of
the legislature was just as efficacious in relation to his estate
as it was in relation to that of the other children. As long as he
was a minor, an ordinary guardian was all the custodian of either
his person or estate that was required. It was only after he became
of age, and the power and functions of the guardian ceased, that a
committee to take charge of his person and estate was needed.
In Shelford on Lunacy, it is said:
"It seems that a commission of lunacy may issue against an
infant; but as the court of chancery has power over infant wards of
court and their estates, such a proceeding seems unnecessary during
the minority of the ward except under particular circumstances,
when the more ample powers given in lunacy may be required for
managing their estates."
In Stock on Non Compos Mentis, it is also said that
"Infancy is not a ground for withholding [a commission of
lunacy] except insofar as it renders such a proceeding unnecessary
by subjecting the infant to another protective power of the
chancellor."
Both writers refer to
Page 121 U. S. 230
a case cited in argument in
Ex Parte Halse, 2 Ves.Sr.
403. In the present case, no word of the complainant's imbecility
was ever heard until after the insolvency of the company, and even
if it had appeared while he was a minor that he was of unsound
mind, the legislative act gave full power to the guardian to
dispose of his estate in the manner she did, and removed all
objections on that score.
The decree of the circuit court is therefore
Affirmed.
MR. JUSTICE BLATCHFORD did not sit in this case or take any part
in its decision.