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DENT, next friend, v. MERRIAM

Supreme Court of Georgia1901-03-26
113 Ga. 83

Summary

Holding. The trial court erred in directing a verdict based on the plaintiff's use of a next friend rather than a guardian, as state law permits representation by next friend for persons of unsound mind; the judgment is reversed.

Tamah Dent filed suit as next friend on behalf of her mother, Amy Merriam, seeking to void a deed conveying land to Amy's husband, Osborne Merriam. The complaint alleged that Amy was mentally incompetent at the time she executed the deed and that Osborne fraudulently induced her to sign it. The trial court directed a verdict for the defendant, ruling that Amy Merriam could not be represented by a next friend and must instead appear through a court-appointed guardian.

The appellate court found the trial judge erred on multiple grounds. State law explicitly permits persons not legally competent to appear by next friend, guardian, or guardian ad litem—a principle that applies specifically to individuals of unsound mind. The court also noted that even if a procedural defect existed in the pleadings, no demurrer was filed to challenge it, and such technical irregularities do not defeat an otherwise valid lawsuit. Most significantly, the trial court should have dismissed the case rather than directing a verdict if it believed a procedural problem existed, as the evidence presented was sufficient to warrant jury consideration of the fraud and mental capacity issues.

Summary generated by law.co from the public-domain opinion. The opinion text itself is public domain.

Key issues

  • Whether a mentally incompetent person can be represented by a next friend or must appear through a guardian
  • Effect of procedural irregularities in pleading when no demurrer is filed
  • Whether directed verdict was appropriate remedy versus dismissal for alleged procedural defect

Procedural posture

The trial court directed a verdict for the defendant at the close of evidence; the plaintiff appealed.

Authorities cited

No cited authorities resolved to law.co cases yet.

Cited by (1)

Opinion

majority opinion

Lewis, J.

Tamah Dent, as next friend of her mother, Amy Merriam, brought suit in Wilkes superior court against Osborne Merriam, husband of Amy. The petition alleges that Amy Merriam is old, feeble, and of unsound mind, being incapable of asserting her rights; that her husband, Osborne Merriam, being acquainted with her unsound mental condition, at a named time fraudulently induced her to convey to him title to a described piece of land; that Amy Merriam, at the time of signing this deed, was incapable of comprehending what she was doing, and has now no recollection of having signed it. The prayers of the petition are, that the deed in question be delivered up and canceled, that the defendant be enjoined from selling or encumbering the property, that process issue, etc. The answer of the defendant denies all allegations of fraud in procuring the deed, the execution of which is admitted; denies also that Amy Merriam is or has been of unsound mind, and claims that the purchase-money of the land in dispute, with the exception of a few insignificant amounts, was paid entirely by the defendant. No demurrer to the petition was filed. At the conclusion of the evidence, which was mainly upon the question of the sanity of Amy Merriam at the time of and since the execution of the deed to her husband, and which was quite conflicting, the judge without any motion directed a verdict for the defendant, “announcing that Amy Merriam, being of age and living, could not appear in this proceeding, even if insane and of unsound mind, hy next friend, but would have to appear by guardian.” _ To this ruling the plaintiff excepts.

The court below unquestionably erred in ruling that the suit was improperly brought because instituted by next friend instead of by guardian. Our law distinctly states that persons not sui juris may .appear either by guardian or next friend, or guardian ad litem appointed by the court (Civil Code, § 4843), and the case of Reese v. Reese, 89 Ga. 645, applies this section of the code directly to lunatics or persons non compos mentis. The first two headnotes to this opinion are quotations from the authorities cited, and set forth plainly the law on the point under discussion.

The strict rules of pleading would have required that this suit be brought by Amy Merriam, by her next friend, Tamah Dent, instead of by Tamah Dent as next friend of Amy Merriam. This court, however, has frequently held, in exactly similar cases, that such an irregularity is immaterial and will not affect the decision of the case. “ The more regular form of pleading is for the minor to sue by the next friend, but if the next friend sue as next friend of the minor, it is ttíe same thing in substance.” Lasseter v. Simpson, 78 Ga. 61. See also Van Pelt v. R. R. Co., 89 Ga. 706; Ellington v. Beaver Dam Co., 93 Ga. 55. At all events, no demurrer was filed to the petition in the case at bar, and in the absence of a demurrer we can not hold that the suit was improperly brought.

Even if the court had heen right in the conclusion that Amy Merriam must sue by guardian instead of by next friend, the proper procedure would have been to dismiss the case; not to direct a verdict. In no view of the case as presented to us was the latter, course permissible. There was ample evidence for the plaintiff to require the submission to the jury of the issues involved. In view of the manifest error committed by the trial court, we must, therefore, reverse the judgment of the court below directing a verdict for the defendant.

Judgment reversed.

All the Justices concurring.