134 N.Y.S. 1018 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1912
Lead Opinion
■ In 1888 one Eugene Anderson was adjudged an incompetent by reason of habitual drunkenness, and his; brother, James M. Anderson, was appointed committee of his person, while one Walter Edwards was appointed committee of his estate. The incompetent was sent by the committee of his person to a “Home” at Amityville, L. I. There he Was allowed a large measure of personal freedom, which he took advantage of to have himself married ceremonially to a female inmate named Hicks, likewise there detained as an habitual drunkard under the direction of her committee. This happened in June, 1894. Tn 1895 the brother, James Anderson, applied to the Supreme Court in Westchester county for his appointment as “the next friend ” of the incompetent in order to bring an action for the annulment of the marriage on the ground that Eugene Anderson was a lunatic at the time of the marriage and so continued. The court at Special Term made an order that “ James M. Anderson be and he is hereby authorized as the next friend of said Eugene Anderson to maintain an action against said Josephine M. Hicks for the purpose of declaring void said marriage contract, and of annulling said marriage.” Thereafter James Anderson brought an action in the Supreme Court in Westchester county against the defendant Hicks for the annulment of the marriage between her and Eugene Anderson. The summons described the parties as follows: “ James M. Anderson, Committee of the person and next friend of Eugene Anderson, Plaintiff, against Josephine M. Hicks, Defendant.” The complaint alleged the marriage and the date thereof; it declared that Eugene Anderson was a lunatic at the time of the marriage and still remained so; it set forth that the plaintiff was a brother of the alleged lunatic and had an interest to avoid the marriage by reason of his relationship and his being entitled to a portion of the property of the alleged lunatic in the
In granting the petition of the defendant Hicks, the learned Special Term based its decision on one ground, namely, that the failure to make Eugene Anderson a party to the action rendered the judgment void so far as it affected his matrimonial status, and that where a judgment annulling a marriage was void and ineffective as to one party to the marriage it was necessarily void and ineffective as to the other party. It is contended by the appellant that Eugene Anderson was neither a necessary nor a proper party to the action and that he was bound by the judgment because he was in the action in the person of his brother,-the plaintiff, who was the committee of his person as an habitual drunkard. There had been no prior adjudication that Eugene Anderson was insane. He had been adjudged an incompetent by reason of habitual drunkenness. Habitual drunkenness does not always include necessarily insanity in a legal sense (Lewis v. Jones, 50 Barb. 645, 667), whether or not it would fall within the definition in a medical sense. Yet the effect of an adjudication of incompetency by reason of habitual drunkenness is largely the same as to subsequent acts of the
There are many cases to be found in the earlier reports where a lunatic was held to be represented in court when his committee was a party to the action, but in all of these cases the committee was á committee of the property, or of person and property, of the incompetent. The plaintiff, however, had the
It is urged, however, that section 1747 is susceptible of a construction which excludes the necessity of making the alleged lunatic a party to the action. This result is based upon the language of the section, which reads as follows: “An action to annul a marriage on the ground that one of the parties thereto was a lunatic may be maintained at any time during the continuance of the lunacy, or after the death of the lunatic in that condition, and during the life of the other party to the marriage by any relative of the lunatic who has an interest to avoid the marriage.” It is contended that if the action may be maintained when the alleged lunatic is dead, and as he cannot then be a party, it may be maintained while he is alive without making him a party. This contention is so plainly a non sequitur as to require no discussion. Whether this action was brought by the plaintiff as a relative or as. the next friend of the alleged lunatic, the incompetent should have been made a party, and as the action proceeded to judgment without his presence therein, the court had not before it the parties necessary for a complete determination of the only controversy involved.
I am not at all impressed with the further argument of the appellant that, because Eugene Anderson," the alleged lunatic, wrote numerous letters to the plaintiff urging him to bring the
The order of the Special Term should be affirmed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements.
Jenks, P. J., Thomas and Rich, JJ., concurred; Woodward, J., read for reversal.
Dissenting Opinion
Eugene Anderson was adjudged an. habitual drunkard in April, 1888, and in May of that year his brother, James M. Anderson, the plaintiff, was appointed committee of his person. Eugene was placed in an institution known as the Brunswick Home, in Amityville, L. I., and while there he met another inmate of the home, the defendant Josephine M. Hicks. It seems that this woman had ’ been adjudged an habitual drunkard, one James Pearson being her committee. These two incompetents, appear to have been accorded a large measure of liberty, and in June, 1894, they were joined in marriage by a colored clergyman of the locality. It appears from the record that Eugene soon wearied of the relation, and begged his brother, the plaintiff, to annul the marriage. The record is full of letters written by Eugene to his brother,' urging action. The plaintiff, as “ Committee of the person and next friend of Eugene Anderson,” brought an action for the annulment of the marriage, resulting in a judgment in favor of the plaintiff, which was entered in the office of the clerk of the county of Westchester on the 6th day of September, 1896. On the 21st day of November, 1910, the notice of motion for the vacation of the judgment was served, and upon the motion coming on for a hearing the defendant was granted the relief prayed for. The plaintiff appeals from this order.
The learned justice at Special Term, in granting the order, handed down a memorandum in which he holds that, as the
If I am right, in this position, then Eugene Anderson was not a proper party to the action to annul this marriage. Being adjudged a lunatic prior to the marriage, he was incapable, at the time of the ceremony, of entering into the contract; he had no more power to dispose of any portion of his property by means of a marriage contract than by any other contract ór will,, and his relatives had an interest' in avoiding this marriage because it interposed a barrier to their
In the cases relied upon as authority by the learned court below, the statute made different provisions from those relating to idiots and lunatics. In Coddington v. Lamer (supra) it was held, under the provisions of sections 1747 and 1750 of the Code of Civil Procedure, that an incompetent person, not so adjudged at the time of the marriage, was entitled to be ' brought in as a party on his own motion. In that case Mrs. Lamer was declared incapable of conducting her own affairs, and a committee of her person and property was appointed after her marriage. A daughter by a former husband brought an action to set aside the marriage on the ground that at the time of the marriage the mother was a lunatic and incapable of contracting the marriage. The mother asked to be made a party to the action, and this was refused. On appeal it was held that she was entitled to be made a party defendant. In that case, however, the marriage was contracted at a time when the mother was presumptively sane; there had been no adjudication that she was insane, and upon this issue — the question of her sanity at the time of entering into the marriage — she was probably entitled to a hearing. (Gridley v. College of St. Francis Xavier, 137 N. Y. 327, 330.) No one is in law a lunatic until that fact has been judicially determined, and when the plaintiff’s mother in that case entered into the marriage contract she was presumptively sane, and she had a right to be heard upon the question of her competency. This is quite a different case from the case at bar, where both
The - case of Fero v. Fero (supra) was likewise an action brought under the provisions of section 1750, where the mother of an infant brought the action to set aside the marriage on the ground that it was procured by force, fraud, etc., and it was held that the infant was a necessary party to the action.
The order appealed from should be reversed.
Order affirmed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements.