215 F. 867 | 2d Cir. | 1914
Chaloner, who was adjudicated an incompetent by the Supreme Court of the state of New York in 1899, brought this action in 1904 to recover damages against Sherman, who was appointed his committee in 1901, for alleged wrongful withholding of and refusal to turn over on April 4, 1904, Chaloner’s property then in Sherman’s custody as committee.
The numerous assignments of error, because of exclusion of testimony by the trial court, are based upon the theory that this court has power to set aside the judgment of the New York Supreme Court. The sole question is whether- that judgment is void or was procured by extrinsic fraud so as to subject it to a successful collateral attack in another jurisdiction.
On March 10, 1897, an ex parte order was made by a justice of the New York Supreme Court, committing Chaloner as an insane person to the institution known as Bloomingdale Insane Asylum at White Plains, Westchester county. This order was in accordance with the Insanity Law of New York (Daws of 1896, c. 545) which permits a commitment without notice and that statute has been held to lie constitutional. Sporza v. German Savings Bank, 192 N. Y. 8, 84 N. E. 406; Matter of Walker, 57 App. Div. 1, 67 N. Y. Supp. 647.
While an inmate of that institution under the commitment, a proceeding looking to the appointment of a committee was commenced by a petition presented by two' of his brothers to the Supreme Court in the rounty of New York. This petition was accompanied with the affidavits of several physicians as to the mental condition of the alleged incompetent, and a notice of motion that on May 19, 1899, the petitioners would apply to the court for ail order granting the prayer of the petition. Thereupon, on May 9, 1899, the court made an order requiring personal
On the same day, viz., May 9, 1899, personal service was made on Chalonet at the Bloomingdale Asylum.
On May 19, 1899, when the motion was returnable, no one appeared in opposition thereto, and the court, as provided by sections 2327 and 2328 of the'New York Code of Civil Procedure, ordered that a commission in the nature of a writ de lunático inquirendo be issued out of and under the seal of the court directed to three commissioners to inquire by a jury of the county of New York into the competency of the alleged incompetent, and it was also ordered that the sheriff be instructed to summon a jury in the manner required by law. It was further ordered that the commission be executed in the county of New York and that at least five days’ previous notice of the time and place of the execution of the commission be given to Chaloner and to the person having charge of him who, in this instance, was the medical superintendent of the asylum. It was further ordered that the commissioners might, in their discretion, dispense with Chaloner’s attendance unless the jurors or any of them should require such attendance.
Notice dated May 23, 1899, that the commission would be executed on June 12, 1899, at 4 p. m., at the New York county courthouse, was personally served on both Chaloner and the medical superintendent on June 6, 1899.
The commissioners took their oath on June 5, 1899, and it was filed on June 12, 1899.
The jury was duly summoned for and sat with the commissioners on June 12, 1899, at the New York county courthouse. Chaloner did not appear in person or by attorney. Counsel for the petitioners stated that, if after hearing the testimony the jury desired the presence of the alleged incompetent, he would be brought before them. Testimony was taken as to the mental condition of Chaloner and as to the property owned by him.
The medical superintendent testified that Chaloner said he was physically unable to be present.
Counsel for petitioners again said that he thought it entirely proper to take an adjournment to any day agreeable to the commissioners in order to produce Chaloner before the jury, but the jury stated that they did not desire his production. Thereupon counsel called the jury’s attention to the order of the court requiring the presence of Chaloner if any of the commissioners or the jurors so wished. '
Thereafter the medical superintendent was again called and stated that to produce Chaloner would temporarily do him harm mentally and that Chaloner “said he did not want to come down.” Dr. Carlos F. MacDonald then testified that to call Chaloner would “tend to aggravate his mental condition.”
Finally, the matter was submitted to the jury and a verdict was returned that Chaloner was incompetent.
A notice of motion for June 23, 1899, for an order confirming the inquisition and appointing Prescott Hall Butler, committee of the person and estate of Chaloner, was personally served on him on June 15, 1899, at the asylum.
Chaloner claims that he is and at all times was a resident of Virginia and for that reason his sanity could not be determined in New York; that he was lured into the state of New York in 1897 and was committed improperly without notice; that the inquiry de lunático in 1899, in any event, should have been in Westchester county; that the notice thereof was insufficient; that the decretal order and all the proceedings were void, among other reasons, because he' was not present before the commissioners and the sheriffs jury; that he always was and now is sane and was so declared in 1901 by a court of competent jurisdiction in Virginia; and that therefore the appointment of Sherman was void.
Then, if defendant had adduced some evidence of present incompcteucy as an affirmative defense, and then only would the present mental condition of plaintiff have been an issuable fact.
Section 2323 of the New York Code of Civil Procedure provides:
“An application for tire appointment of such a committee must bo made by petition, which may be presented by any person. Except as provided in the next section (relating to incompetents in state institutions) where the application is made to the Supremo Court, "the petition must be presented at a Special Term held within the judicial district, or to a justice of said court within such judicial district at chambers, where the person alleged to be Incompetent resides; or if he is not a resident of the state or the place of Ms residence cannot be ascertained, where some of his property is situated, or the state institution is situated of which ho is an inmate.”
The venue of a proceeding is entirely within the control of a state in respect of subject-matter over which a state court has sole juris
The question whether the alleged perjurious testimony was true was necessarily adjudged by the New York court in finding the plaintiff incompetent. This court cannot determine whether or not the testimony in question was perjured without trying over again the very same issue which the New York court decided when it made the decretal order complained of. It is well settled that the fact that a judgment is procured by false testimony does not open it to- collateral attack. United States v. Throckmorton, 98 U. S. 61, 25 L. Ed. 93; Freeman on Judgments (4th Ed.) § 334.
The record shows that scrupulous care was exercised in serving the various notices of motions and proceedings on Chaloner.
If the trial judge had received in evidence the excluded letter written in July, 1897, by Chaloner to Woods, a Virginia attorney, it would have appeared that he then wrote:
“It is unnecessary for me to say that nothing but the most unexpected and dire necessity could induce me to go before a ‘sheriff’s jury,’ the usual manner, in the state of New York, of carrying out a habeas corpus proceedings for a man who has been declared insane by a judge. I object to this for three .reasons. First, because it is not the right way to go about it. I am not a citizen of the state of New York, and therefore the ‘sheriff's jury’ does not apply to my case. Second, because I do not desire the notoriety consequent upon such a proceeding. Third, because my family are most anxious that I should go before a ‘sheriff’s jury’ in the desperate hope that the said jury would believe what they, and the doctors, said about me. In which case the jury would pronounce me insane, and hand me over to the custody of my family, who could then apply for and receive into their hands my property and the management thereof—under the name of a commission.”
And it further appears, from Chaloner’s deposition excluded by the trial judge, that he absented himself from the 1899 proceeding by his own choice. If therefore he knew at that time what he was doing, he deliberately failed to appear when full opportunity was afforded to him so to do.
But, however this may be, we think that this court has not jurisdiction to set asicte or annul the judgment of the state Supreme Court rendered in a proceeding in which it obviously had jurisdiction.
The judgment is affirmed, with costs.