287 S.W.2d 118 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1956
In this action for damages for alleged alienation of affections of one Ernest E.
On August -16, 1950, the Probate Court of Stoddard County adjudged Asalee “to be an insane person * * * in need of hospitalization at a state hospital for the insane” and issued a warrant commanding Ernest to deliver Asalee, as a'county patient, to the superintendent of State Hospital No. 4 at Farmington, Missouri. After Asalee had been under treatment at Farmington about two months, Ernest told her that “he no longer loved me (Azalee), that they (Ernest and Marie) were meant for each other and he was going to have her (Marie)”; but, after Asalee’s discharge from the hospital about November 16, 1950 (and she had no subsequent hospitalization or treatment), she nevertheless returned to her home and undertook to live with Ernest. During the latter part ■of November, 1950, Asalee found in Ernest’s pocket an envelope containing a three-page letter from Marie, then in St. Louis, which had been sent to Ernest at Brownwood, Missouri, a postoffice through which the Darr family did not regularly receive mail. Marie addressed this letter to Ernest as “my dearest darling,” freely interspersed it with other expressions of endearment, and, with the jaunty air of an exuberant and exultant huntress who already had ensnared her quarry, flippant- ’ 3y challenged Ernest to “just wait until I am Mrs. Ernest Darr, will I ever make you toe the mark — ha—aren’t you scared.”
In January, 1951, Ernest went to work in St. Louis, where Marie was living at the time, returning to Asalee on weekends ; and, in 1952, Ernest took Marie on a vacation trip to Michigan. On some date not fixed in the record (but prior to June, 1952), Ernest instituted an action for divorce against Asalee in St. Louis. After Asalee had retaliated by filing a similar action against Ernest in Stoddard County during June,. 1952, Ernest “begged (Asa-lee) to take him back” and she did so. But, continuing. his work in St. Louis, Ernest came home only “every two weeks,” and the parties separated finally, on May 30, 1953. .Asalee was granted a divorce by the Circuit Court of Stoddard County on October 19, 1953; and, on December 22, 1953, Ernest and Marie were married in St. Louis. Upon trial of this action, neither Ernest nor Marie testified.
Since we assume for the purposes of this opinion that, as Marie’s counsel contend, the adjudication of Asalee’s insanity on August 16, 1950, was not void (although Asalee’s' brief suggests meritorious questions raising substantial doubt as to the validity of that adjudication), the only complaint to be ruled on this appeal is that the trial court “erred in permitting plaintiff (Asalee) to bring the action in her own name, (she) having been adjudicated insane.” In Marie’s answer, the only pleading filed on her behalf prior to trial, she admitted the marriage of Ernest and Asa-lee on February 1, 1943, and denied generally all other allegations in Asalee’s petition. When the case came on for trial on May 11, 1954, the record shows that, after both parties had announced ready, after the jury had been qualified and sworn, after the opening statements i o'f counsel had been made, and after Asalee had been called to the witness stand, Marie’s counsel filed a “Motion to Dismiss” in which for'the first time Asalee’s insanity was suggested and it was asserted that the instant suit “can be prosecuted only in the name of a duly appointed guardian and next friend.”
There is no indication in the transcript before us that, in the insanity proceeding apparently instituted to provide hospital treatment for Asalee as a county patient [Sections 202.120 to 202.160; repealed Laws of 1955, S.B. 59], any guardian of her person or curator of her estate was appointed. Section 458.070. But, even if' any such ■ appointment were made, title to Asalee’s property, including her cause of' action against Marie for alienation of Ernest’s affections, remained in Asalee [Redmond v. Quincy, O. & K. C. R. Co., 225 Mo. 721, 126 S.W. 159, 161(2); Gibson v. Shull, 251 Mo. 480, 158 S.W. 322, 324(3); Williams v. Maxwell, Mo., 82 S.W.2d 270,. 274(10); Kleber v. Carlos, Mo., 202 S.W. 2d 865, 866(4)], and she continued to be the real party in.interest, in that she was-the one entitled to any damages recovered on such cause of action. State ex rel. Bell v. United States Fidelity & Guaranty Co.,, supra, 139 S.W. loc. cit. 167; City of Bevier v. Watson, supra, 87 S.W. loc. cit.. 614. The mere fact that one is of unsound mind does not make her incapable of suing or being sued [Beil v. Gaertner, 355 Mo. 617, 197 S.W.2d 611, 614; Burger v. Boardman, 254 Mo. 238, 259, 162 S.W. 197, 203;, Allen v. Ranson, 44 Mo. 263, 265(1)] ; and where, as here, an insane plaintiff has been “ ‘blest by success’ ”, a situation is presented which is quite different from that where the result is adverse to an insane defendant [Allen v. Kelso, Mo., 266 S.W.2d 696, 704(7) — cf. Cox v. Wrinkle, Mo., 267 S.W.2d 648, 652; Reineman v. Larkin, 222 Mo. 156,.
Marie having waived, as we have heretofore found, any objection, predicated on the alleged want of capacity of Asalee to sue in her own name, the judgment for Asalee, ns plaintiff, should be and hereby is affirmed.