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Subject:
From:
Virginia E Hench <[log in to unmask]>
Reply To:
Discussion of research and writing about Virginia history <[log in to unmask]>
Date:
Sat, 22 Jun 2002 07:07:45 -1000
Content-Type:
TEXT/PLAIN
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TEXT/PLAIN (28 lines)
On Sat, 22 Jun 2002, Diana Bennett wrote:
...
> I have some information about a Chancery Court case. She asks the
> sheriff to summon John Glass guardian "ad litem" of the children's
> names. This took place in Lawrence Co., AL in 1828.
>
> What does ad litem mean? ...
> Diana Kercheval Bennett
----------------------------------------------------------

 Hi Diana - a "guardian ad litem" is a person appointed by a court
 to protect the interests of the ward - in the case you mention, the
 wards would be the children.

 In a divorce case, for example, the children's interests might
 well be different from the interests of either of  the parents.
 I have not run across a guardian of a child's name, but I would
 guess that it was a petition in chancery (a court of equity)
 to change the children's names. Perhaps their mother was widowed
 or divorced, has remarried, and wants to change their names.
 Their father, if living, or his relatives if he was not living
 at the time, might have been contesting the name change.

 Virginia E. Hench

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