47 N.H. 208 | N.H. | 1866
This was trespass for assault and false imprisonment. The plea was the general issue, with several special pleas, alleging insanity in plaintiff, and that the acts complained of were committed by defendants, in the attempt to take and confine him in the State asylum for the insane, by request of his wife and friends, and that defendants
Chap. 9, sec. 11, of the Rev. Stat., provides for the appointment of a guardian to take charge of the person and property of insane persons by the judge of probate. The sixteenth section of the same chapter provides "that the parent, guardian, or friends of any insane person may cause him to be sent to the asylum, with the consent of the trustees, and there supported on such terms as they may agree.” This section appears to be comprehensive and broad enough to embrace the case before us. It seems to include all insane persons within its terms, except those having no friends, or such as can exercise the office of a parental relation. The statute gives authority to the parent, or friends, to make a contract with the officers of the asylum. The wife may properly be regarded as the friend of the husband in this case, and whatever the law permits her to do, she may, if necessary, require the proper assistance of another to execute’.
Dr. Ray remarks, that by far the larger class of insane persons require no legal procedure at all for their commitment, and are better left to the management of the family or friends. To subject them to any legal formalities, beyond a compliance with a few simple rules, would be to inflict needless pain, and thus produce a certain evil, in order to avoid a contingent one. Ray on Insanity sec. 595.
In the case of Oakes, in Massachusetts, settled a few years since, Chief Justice Shaw remarks, "that the friends of an insane person are authorized in committing him to a hospital by the great law of humanity.” 8 Law Rep. 122.
So, in the case, Hinchman v. Richie & als., being an action brought against the relatives and others of the plaintiff, charging them with fraud, violence and other wrongs, in committing him to the Friends’ Hospital, in Frankford, Penn., tried before Judge Burnside, in 1849, the Judge, in his charge to the jury, among other things, said, that if the defendants placed the plaintiff in the asylum for the mercenary purpose of getting him to convey his property, it would be a foul conspiracy, but if it was honestly done for the purpose of restoring him to health, the friends conscientiously believing him to be diseased, it presents a case in which such patients may be properly taken in charge by relations and friends.
"If the jury should be satisfied that plaintiff was partially insane, so that it would be dangerous to himself, or to his wife and children, to be at liberty, and that the defendants acted from pure motives, and placed the plaintiff in the asylum for the purpose of restoring him to health, and returning him sound to his family, then I hold them justified. Or, if the defendants acted under circumstances, such as would have induced a man of ordinary intelligence to have believed the plaintiff insane, and requiring medical treatment in a hospital, then plaintiff cannot recover.” These principles were sustained by the whole court. 2 Law Rep. New Series, 180.
According to the report of the commissioners on lunacy, in England, a board of eminent men at the head of whom stood Lord Ashley, a
The report closes by the statement that a rule had been recently adopted in many of the large asylums in England, which proved satisfactory to the friends of the insane and the public, "that no person could be admitted into any lunatic asylum, without a certificate of his insanity, signed by two physicians, within seven days previous to his admission, stating also the facts on which their opinion is founded.” It is obvious that a regulation of this nature could be complied with readily, and without much expense, and would tend to allay doubts and suspicions of unfair dealing, and would prove practically a good substitute for a more expensive and dilatory legal inquisition into'this class of cases. Sucha rule of practice might be profitably adopted by the asylums here.
Under our practice in this State, where it becomes pretty certain that one of our citizens has become permanently insane, or is likely to be, and he has property, for the protection of his person and the community, as well as his property, a guardian is required, and may be appointed, agreeably to the requirements of the statute law. Where a guardian is thus appointed, he assumes the parental relation, and has generally the authority of a parent. Under our law, the guardian, having for the time being the legal custody of the person of the ward, may, of course, commit him to an asylum, and may make the requisite contracts with the managers of such institutions for their security, and bind the property of his ward to meet the same. Under the aforesaid 16th section of chapter 9, it was undoubtedly intended to confer upon the parents or friends of the insane the same power and duty to commit to an insane asylum, that a guardian legally appointed by the judge of probate would have. In this case, the nearest friend and relative of the husband is the wife. As before suggested, she, acting in good faith, would have the right to call in the aid of others, if found necessary.
It seems, she sought and obtained the assistance of the board of selectmen of the town of Orford for the time being. The law presumes that the men who act in this office would generally be capable of discharging a delicate duty of this kind, with due skill and discretion. It
Judgment on the verdict.