24 Vt. 424 | Vt. | 1852
The opinion of the court was delivered by
In this application for the writ of certiorari, the petitioner complains of a decision of the county court in dismissing an appeal from the award of commissioners in assessing damages for land taken by the corporation, in the construction of their railroad. The difference of between two and three hundred dollars in the second appraisal over that of the first, is quite satisfactory that the petitioner has reason to complain of injustice in the first appraisal; so that the case rests upon the question whether there was error in the proceedings.
The appeal was dismissed upon the ground that it was not taken within the time limited by the act. But it is insisted by this petitioner that he was, during that time, within the saving clause of the act as being insane, and that the appeal was taken in due season after that disability was removed. The 8th Sec. of the act of incorporation provides “that the owner of real estate, who “ feels aggrieved by the decision of the commissioners, may within “ ninety days from the making of such decision and notice thereof, “ or from the removal of the disabilities in the preceding section “ mentioned, appeal to the county court, &c.” The disabilities there mentioned “ are married women, infants, idiots or insane.”
In dismissing the appeal, the court evidently proceeded upon the ground that no case would fall within that provision, short of settled frenzy or positive distraction and delusion of mind, and when that state was not produced by the party’s own voluntary act or excess. That provision of the act should evidently be liberally construed, and should include all cases that are within its spirit, as well as its letter. Lunatics, and persons non compos, are not mentioned, and yet they would evidently come within its provisions. The term insane, by a distinct provision of our statute p. 68 Sec. 6 and p. 407 Sec. 11, includes “idiots, persons non compos, lunatics, and distracted persons,” and this definition of the term by statute, is declaratory of the common law. In Co. Litt. 247, there is given a classification of the different cases of mental derangement, and in that, express mention is made of those who by inebriation and drunkenness, have deprived themselves of their memory and understanding. And whatever may have been the rule formerly, that such a person was not within legal protection,, unless as -was afterwards held, that state was produced by practices of the other party, yet the law is now well settled otherwise,, and so far as legal capacity is concerned, it is immaterial from what causes such a state of mind arises, whether by the act of' providence, or the party’s own imprudence. It is the state and'i ocondition of the mind itself, the law will notice, and not the causes* that produced it. 1 Story’s Eq. 247 § 225. 2 Kent’s Com. 563. 5 Mason’s U. S. Rep. 28. 2 Aik. Rep. 167. 16 Vt. 335. And! as the object of this provision of the act was to save the rights off those who have not legal capacity to protect them, those- who*are deprived of that capacity, from whatever cause it may arise, are included within its provisions.
It is not, however, every stage of inebriation that is attended with legal incapacity. It is not so, when the individual is under
With these principles in view, we are led to the examination of the question, whether this petitioner was in that state of mind that places him within the saving provisions of this act. No one can read the depositions of Doctor Carpenter and Poole, and the statement of Edward P. Bliss, and have any misgivings on the subject, for they are full, as to the extent of his inebriation and the effect it had produced on his mind. We learn as facts in the case, that for a long period, the petitioner was not only excessively intemperate, but to that extent as to render him unfit and incapable of transacting business that required thought or memory. That for most of the time during the period in question, he was out of his mind, so crazy as to require close attention to prevent his doing mischief, threatening to commit personal violence upon others, to burn his buildings, and was necessarily held in restraint by force, that he was rapidly verging towards delirium tremens, and incapable of deliberating upon those matters and weighing their consequences, with which his interests were intimately connected. ■And in relation to the subject matter of this appeal, we also learn
It would be exceedingly inconsistent to say, that the law under such circumstances, will protect an individual from liabilities arising ex-contractu, and yet will not protect him in his title and enjoyment of his real estate, or will suffer it to be taken from him by proceedings purely in invitum for a greatly inadequate consideration, by a neglect to take an appeal within a limited time, when during that time, he was unable to understand the nature of the proceedings instituted for that purpose, or the consequences of his neglect. The right of the corporation to take this land is given by the legislature in the exercise of their right of sovereignty, and they
This renders unnecessary, the examination of the other questions presented, and on which we give no opinion. The result is that there is error, and that this writ must issue, and the judgment of the county court, in dismissing the appeal, must be reversed.